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I I OY©lLi>) ^®y Cahnage Sermon Py Rev. Frank De Witt Talmatfc. D. D. s / Arbuckles* ARIOSA comes in one pound packages ' only, sealed for your protection to insure your , getting the genuine old- , fashioned Arbuckles’ ARIOSA Coffee every time. Be real angry if they send you a substitute, which k net as good and may in time ruin your digestion and nerves. Compile* with all requirement* of the National Pu«a F cod Law, Guarantee No. 2041. bled at Waibingtoo. CLERK’S SALE. By virture of a decree of foreclosure i and* -ale of the Court of Common Pleas for Cherokee county in the case of T. Hobbs, as administrator of the estate of Andy Champion, deceas ed. plaintiff, vs. Medora Archer, Ella Davir Vicy Wilson, Ed. Champion, a mint r, and p. W. Humphries, defend- antt i will sell at Gaffney, s. C., be-! fore the court house door, during the legal hours for sales on salesday, Monday, December 2nd, 1907, the fol lowing described property, to wit; All of that certain lot, parcel or tract of land, lying, situate and be ing in the town of Gaffney, and front ing Southwest on Gaines street. Be gin r.ng on a stak-e on said street, cor ner of church lot, and running N. •15 1 ■ _ E- 4 chains to stake on Carroll’s line thence with said line S. 54 1-2 E. 2.1-T-10 chains to stake, Lipscomb’s corner; thence S. 35 1-2 W. 4 chains to stake on Gaines street; thence with sa d street N. 54 1-2 W- 3.12 1-2 chains to a stake, beginning corner, contain ing one and one-fourth acres, more ess, as appears by plat of R. O. >ams surveyor, divided the same in to four lots, dated January 18th, 1900. Being the same property conveyed to Andy Champion by Peggy Littlejohn by deed dated June 1st, 1901, record ed in office of R. M. C. for said coun ty m Rook, “E.,’’ page 4C2. Also that other lot or parcel of land lying in the town of Gaffney, said county and State, known as lot No. 7 on plat made by R. O. Sams on January 2G, 1893, fronting on Mills *Gap road; Commencing at stake on alley and running S. 37 E. 1.10 i chains; thence N- 53 E. 2.50 chains U stake, corner of Wesley Jones lot; I thence N. 37 W. 1.10 chains to stake on alley; thence with alley S. 53 W. I 2.50 chains to beginning corner, con- taming 27-100 1-2 of an acre, more or 1M-. Being the same lot of land di-uJed to A«dy Champion by R. S. Lip-comb on November 24th, 1894. The lot described first herein shall be sold in four separate lots in ac cordance with plat thereof on file in this office by R. O. Sams, surveyor, dated January 18, 1900, and then as a whole, and whichever way it brings the most shall be construed as ths legal sale, anj a deed or deeds made accoidingly. TERMS OF SALE: Cash. Pur- tiouFer to pay for papers. J. Eh Jefferies, Cl’k. C. C. Pi’s. Pub. Nov. 15, 22 and 29- | l.os Angeles. Oil., Nov. 17.—In these fires of finaueinl disturbance the ! Teacher In this sermon shows us I 1 many reasons for thankfulness. \vliic!i come to all men and which panics and buxine s disaster cannot take away. The text is Job vi, r». “Doth the wild as> bray when he hath grass or low (Mil the ox over his fodder?’’ Some people have a false reputation for being gold natured that they may easily lose. No man can be confidently pronounced good natured until he has been tested by adversity. No credit is due to a prosperous man for not com plaining If when he is poor and un fortunate and sick he does not <•0111 plain, then he lias given proof of the -trength and sweetness of ids charac ter. His true nature is shown not when he is basking in the sunshine, but when he is deluged by the storm. It is really revealed not when condi tions are going the way he wishes, but when all bis desires seem to be thwart ed and lie is compelled to do what la* ' es not wish to do. He is not tempt- I t 1 g "liable when lie is prosperous. “Doth the wild ass bray when he hath „rass or loweth the ox over his fod der?” There is a quaint legend told b.\ Dr. Knight that many years ago an ■asicrn I dug vas sailing in a ship with 1 Persian peasant. The peasant began lo bitte'dy ( . ipiain of being shut up a the r: coniines of the boat. Tb -c complaints irritated the king. . •n a philosopher who was traveling T tlte same boat said, “I can silence Milder grumbler if thou wilt let me." , in* kina gave Ids consent. The phi- iso] b-T ordered tin* sailors to throw die peasant into the sea. After thei ,11 !;" i gone down a couple of times V e :b,rs caught him by tin* hair and , ;> :!!■ d Him back into the boat safely, idiei) w re all bis bitter complaints -i- >nn-d. d he king asked the philoso pher why ibD was so. The sage re pii d: “\t :ts? yonder man had hevei 11cing'it of Hi ■ danger of being drown j ed; neither did he appreciate the safe j r m the ship. As soon as he fmud out 1 ■ ' tter experience the value of (: - ship as c refuge from s imetldug worse he v as contented to slay there ! .1 in until h • '- luld reach the short like manner lie best knoweth the vaiiu of prosperity who hath encountered adversity. <:h, thou who hast satis lied thine hme it, thou de-pisesi a bar ley loaf, but 1 » me. n hungered, a bar lev loaf means life. To the nymphs of paradise purgatory would be bell, but tin* inhabitants of hell would hail pur gatory as paradise.” In I'tic-r wii iis. the eastern phlloso- n'n •• was t \ cl ing tic* lesson til: I when a man's wish is satisfied then In* does not complain. He complains llu.Ut what be lias Hot. blit not of what In* has. Dues the wild ass find fault because In* is wading kliee deco ili'i'l 1 of sweet scented clover? la anger batter his stall wood w hen after a hard .11 a i mes the ox lu-o kindling day’s toil he is allowed to munch his grain at a manger filled to overflowing? The book of Job Illustrates this truth. There were three distinct epochs in lob s career. The liVst was when ev ery desire of Ids heart was satisfied. ;reut was In* in brain, great in finan- ial resources, great in domestic hap CLERK’S SALE. plncss. IDs pasture land extended on every side. Ills sheep and cattle and horses gran d upon a thousand hills. His ham* t fields, like the surface of 1 hi* sea. stretched away as far as tin* i*ye could see. old age mellowed him, | but did not deplete his physical strength, ills children were his pii l -j i and joy His friends were around him I ! evervwhere. Even his enemies were I disarmed by liD love and generosity. By virtue of a decree of foreclosure n,. „«. V er omitted to thank God for his ar,(j sale in the Court of Common |,|e-shigs in the morning and at noon /Z 9, he j; okee t coun , ty , tte *"fl at night, for everything that his case of W- C. Carpenter, plaintiff, vs. , . , , , . , , W .7 Wilkins, defendant, I will sell deshed was gi\eu unto him. at Gaffne/, S. C., before the court Wheel of Fortune Turn*, house door, during the legal hours Rut suddenly tin* wheel of fortune for sales on salesday, Monday, De- turns. Crush goes his son's home, and cember 2nd, 1907, the folowing de- in an hour ail Ills Isdoved children are scribed property, to-wlt: dead. Down swoop the robbers, and Those two certain lots of land, [,j s herds are scattered and driven fronting on Georgia roaii and rimnlng allJ |, h m . rvuIll „ „„ t ‘Tlyi °z h 'II,on over bis bo.ly break (formerly Richmond and Danville) , . tl . .., . . ... line of rails and known as lots 14 and t,lu ,,, ’ rr i , 'le carbuncles. His 16 on plat made by R. O- Saras. Be- as vv '* 11 il * hls wealth and do- glniiing on stake,' center of Georgia mest lc happiness is gone. Though he road and running S. 4614 W. 2.08 does not sin "nor charge God foolish- chains to stake, center of said road; !y," he does curse the day of his birth. thence S. 32 3-4 E- 3.45 chains db No sooner does he do this than his Ftake near railroad track; thence N. 1 three friends gather about him and 5, i-4 E- 2.00 chains to stake near remiud him of Ids past profession. I thence N. 32 3-4 r j | u .y commence to fling hls former T* 1 ”" 1 ”* COrner 1 Iivowalh „l fulll, 1,1m. -Aha!" tboy % a 7h.TZ ' r. -v..» an- a molly aorvant of or less, and being the lots deeded to • tl .. . 1 „ . .. J. 1 Richards by Miss Jane C. Nott " * ,t * n weie all going on December 7th, 1891; said deed re- j J’ ol,r w »y y ,a) were very willing to tell corded In office of Clerk and R. what they should do. But when C. 1o r Spartanburg county. S. C., on things go wrong with you you lose January 6th, 1892, In Book “E. E. E.,” your faith In God Just like other men.” page 796. ! "1 know it." answers Job. “Alas for TERMS OF SALE: Cash, purchas- ei to pay for papers. J. Eb. Jefferies, Cl’b. C. C- Pi’s. Pub. Nov. 15, 22 and 29. NOTICE OP DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that I will appear before the Probate Court of Cherokee county, on Saturday, No vember 80, 1907, at 7 o'clock a. m., and make final settlement with .v Elma L. Sams, nee Wood, end make application for discharge as guardian. Moses Wood, Nov. fi, 16, 22, 29. Guardian. the weakness of the flesh, God help me! Alas, I was like the ass standing knee deep hi sweet scented clover! 1 was like the ox munching at the abun dant grain In hls inanger. O God, help me in this time of trouble!" Now, In applying tills principle to ourselves I am not gtdng to catalogue your misfortunes. You can easily do that yourself You have complained about them enough You have harped upon them day hi and day out. But I am going to speak about your “si leuces.” 1 would remind you of tbe blessings you have In life Perhaps the thought of these blessings, about which you are apt to be silent, may strengthen your heart to liear adver sity should it come upon you. Virtues of Parents. In the first place. I have never heard ; you complain about your father and mother. They must certainly have beoii I a great blessing to you. If they bad' ni*t been, you would certainly have talked tllspnrairingly of them. And thi- is a very marvelous fact to me. be cause they were not very wonderful jteople from a human standpoint. I do not think your father had much of an education. Then he certainly was not wealthy. He lived on a farm most of his life. And your mother was not a very beautiful woman. I saw her pic ture In your home the other day. She had just a plain, good, motherly face. Sin* was just the kind of a woman we would have supposed your father would have married. She would not have shone as the queen of a ball room. She was the queen of the needle and tlie best cook you have ever known. Your father spent most of liD time in the* liedds; she spent most of her time In the* kite-hen and the nurs ery. And vet you honor your mother just as min li as though sin* had been the most beautiful woman that ever lived and as if tier fingers had been lustrous with diamonds. And you pro nounce your father’s name with as much reverence as though his wisdom had governed a nation instead of being devoted to making a straight furrow with a plow. Why Is all this? Why dc you not find fault with the cradle h, which you were rocked? Surely there must have been something very mar velous about your parents’ lives for you not to complain about them. “Well,” you answer, “the reason 1 j love the dear faces of my father and ' mother so much is because they were 1 so good. Why, I am no child. I am 1 nearly fifty years of age. I have been ; thrown witli all classes of people. I I have lived in the homes of the rich as i well as of the poor. And after nearly half a century’s experience I can truly say that I have never met a man or a woman who was more truly trying to live the t'hrist life than were my j old father and mother. Why, their ! faith was so simple and true that it v 1 • <D' no. I remember well the tinn* when financial troubles threatened to make us sell the farm. Father had worked very hard that year, but just before harvest time there came an aw- i fill cyclone and battered down tin* ! grain. Then i! was an off year for | fruit. Then mother, while nursing one i of the neighbors, was taken down witli j fever. To cap tin* climax father had i an ugly horse, and one day it kicked him and broke Ids leg. There we were, a lot of little helpless eiiiidret), witli both parents sick. I can remember as though it were yesterday when father called me into the room. lie said: •Harry, my bay. I am afraid you mtisf give iqi your s'-haol for awhile. I do not know how God will lead us out] from tills difficulty Rut ho can and i lie will. ID* lias never failed me yet. and In* will not fail me now.’ Then | you look at me in a peculiar way as j you say: ‘And God never did desert him. He never did. Oh. my father and mother were so good. They were so truly good.’ ” Thu Gist Inheritance. I am giad to hear you say that, my brother. It means more than gold and silver. It menus more titan fame or social prestige. I would sooner have a father and mother such ns you had than to have any other inheritance. The heritage of your cradle is today teeming with manifold blessings. No wonder yeti do not complain of your parents Why, by every word they uttered, by every‘act they did. they were leading you to the higher life and their Inllueuce Is potent yet. When you think of your parents and think of the blessings of your old home stead, you are content and grateful There Is nothing left in that respect for you to desire. “Doth the wild ass bray when he halh grass or loweth the ox over his fodder?” Rut there is another momentous fact in the record of your life that Impress es me marvelously. 1 have never heard ; >011 complain I eeause you did not have] brain enough 01* opportunity enough t n earn the daily bread for yourself and j your family. Now, I have often beard ] some of you complain because you could not dress as well as some one else. I have heard you complain be cause you could not live in a grand home, owy a summer cottage and run an automobile. But I have never heard you complain that you did not have enough food to eat and enough cloth ing to keep you warm and a weather tight ruirf to cover your head. Not once have you been in such straits that you had not a five cent piece to buy a loaf of bread. Not onee has your ward robe been so empty that you did not have an extra coat hanging there to keep out the cold. As far as I can make out, God lias fed and clothed you and housed you for fifty years. Having done this, has he not a right to ask you to trust him to the end? With such a past and with such a God to care for your future are you not content? Why should you complain? “Doth the wild ass bray when he hath grass or loweth the ox over his fod der?” But there Is rdill another fact that impresses me about your life. You never complain about your wife and children. Though there are scores and hundreds and I sometimes fear even thousands of unhappy homes in this city, yours is not one of these. You are like the patriarch Job in his earlier and later days. You think you have about the finest wife, the b«*st sons, tbe prettiest tnd smartest daughters In all this land. And tin* trouble is that your children know how highly you think of them. Why, they can get anything out of yon they desire Your wife has Mime coMiiicn sens,- as to raising the children, but you have ab solutely none. But. though you may be so fond of your children that you allow them to get anything out of you. are you doing all you can for their best Interests? Your children love you so much that you can lead them to enter the Christian life. Now, in your great love for your home and family you have every incentive to be faithful to your God. As a parental undershepherd are you going to prove recreant to your trust? A Heathen Mother’s Idea. There Is a sad story told that near the burning ghats of Benares some years ago an Indian missionary was walking. There lie saw a poor Hin doo mother weeping by the ashes w’here a couple of days before the body of her child had been burned. But In the night a hideous serpent had crawl ed in among the ashes to sleep. While tbe woman was w»*cping the serpent began to uncoil itself. Then, the heathen's superstitious belief in the transmigration of souls passing through her mind, the horror stricken mother flung herself at the feet of the white man, crying. “O God, has my little ba by come to that?” of course that was only the result of her pagan teaching. But. tell me. father and mother, have you no fear that such a horror may one day Ik.* yours if you fall to lead your children to Christ? They seem to you pure and good now, but If they go out Into tiie world without the pro tection that Christ alone can give you may be startled and agonized at see ing the serpents of sin and vice rear their heads out of the breasts of those loved ones. Y'ou can now mold them as you will, but the time is short, and unless you make the most of It they will pass front under your influence unprotected by Christ's love. Now, summer they ceased to gather honey. Instead they spent most of their time tiding around, stinging the natives. So I sometimes think it is with some of us. We have what can lie called spirit ual degeneracy. God lias surrounded us with so many blesdngs that instead of working for his glory and for the good of our fellow men we spend most of our time in living for self. We thrust the sting when we should be gathering the sweetness of the gospel life to give out again to starving men. Art* we not standing knee deep amid the clover tops of multitudinous opportunities which we can use for the good of those who have never learned to hnnor the name of our Christ? But lastly 1 remark that I have nev er heard you complain that God is not willing to place the hands of ordina tion and consecration upon your head now for tiie glorious work of the gos pel if you are only willing to surrender your hearts to him. I cart* not what your [iast has l>een. I care not wheth er you have sinned seventy times sev en Though your sins are as scarlet, yet if you will come to him they will become whiter than snow. Though they are like crimson, yet they shall become white as wool. Oh, my broth er, with so many of your gospel oppor tunities wasted, will you not make your last days your best days? Will you not pray that the eventide of your life may shine with the golden sunset of God’s smile of lienodiction? Today I have been telling you about your silences. For years you have been complaining that you could not do Gils, that and the other thing. To day I have lK*en telling you a few things that you could do if you only wanted to do them. The mercies of God about you are infinite. The great fields of the sweet scented clover tops Sour Stomach N > appetite, loss ot strengt 1, nenrou*- nevs, headache, constipation, had breath, general debility, sour using*, and catatrh of the stomach are all due to indigestion Kodol relieves ind gestion. Thus new discov try represents the t r.tural juices of dlge> lion as they exist in a healthy stomach combined wMh the grer.tr'-t known tonif • ..j reconstructive propertie Kodol to* t cepsia oes not oniy re!;e/e indigestion and dyspepsia, but ‘.his la nous remo ••e ps all stomach troubles b • cleanslr c sur/ying. sweetening and strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach , M 3. S Ba!!, cf Ravf-rw .* W. V«.. sajrj:— * I '< , ai ’roubled with scur sumacb f r r twenty year* <;►- - red me arid we are now using It In mA lor • eoy." Kodol Digests What You Eat. Vyt e* cmy Rel'-ves i-'di: j e-:tor, snir stomach be chirg ci pas, etc < *rep^ r- ,| by E. C. DeWlTT & CO.. CHICAGO For Sat* by CHtrakao Drug Ciwpsny while the opportunity Is yours, by your i of ,lis lovo are spiral out before you. example and your teachings, do your utmost to place tliein under Christ’s protecting cure. Rut then* is another matter of which I have never heard you complain. It is your religious privileges. I have never heard you complain because you had no Sunday school to which you could send your little children, no prayer meeting in which you could as semble with God's disciples to pray, no church altar at viilch on tiie Sabbath day you could kneel and worship. Thousands upon thousands today are living so far away from church that it is an impossibility for them to go there on tiie Sabbath day. But this Is not the case with you. Here you are liv ing practically under the shadow of the walls of our church. Here is a place in tie* family pew always wait ing you. Here are good men and wo men ready and willing to pray with you. Wheuevi r you eomc within these walls a spirit of love and consecration creeps over you such as you find in no other place on earth. A Church Home. Oli. how sorry I feel for tiie man or the woman who has no church home! I feel almost as sorry as for the man who has no domestic fireside and who. Instead of eating at ids own family tu ble, is compelled to eat at boarding houses and in restaurants. Home, home, home! It is tiie sweetest word In all tiie English language. Home, home, home! It means tiie laughter of children and tiie frolic in the nurs ery. Home, home, home! It some times means a very humble roof and very plain fare upon the table. Home, homo, home! It may mean struggle and poverty and sickness and death. But home means love, home means a tender place, home means human hearts clinging to us as we cling to them. So in tie* household of faith, called the church. \Ve may not seem to the outside world to amount to much, but we are one family gathered In God’s temple, which is our spiritual home. Here we are living for each other. Here we are praying for each 1 other. And here, as in no other place, 1 we feel tiie spiritual magnetic touch | of our fellow men. My friends, as a church we ought to try to live more for God. For the sake of the love we hear each otli**r we should try to do It. Are we not us tin* wild ass knee deep in the field of sweet scented clover? Are we not us the ox before the manger filled to overflowing with richest grain? But there is another fact that I have never heard you that Is your oppor The Bethlehem manger is filled to over flowing with the divine sacrifice. Oh. hungry, starving sinner, will you not come to the cross today and cat your fill. "Ho, every one that thlrsteth, come ye to tiie waters, and lie that hath no money, come ye, buy and eat! Yea, come, buy wine and milk with out money and without price!” [•©pyrlght, 1907, by Louis Klopsch.] The Modecfy of Women .Naturally makes them shriiu (run fho indd icato questions, tin* obnoxious . x- animations, and unpleasant local treat ments, which some physicians consider essential in the treatment of disease- of wom<*n. Yet, if help can lie hud, it is better to submit to this ordeal than h t the disease grow and spread. The trouble is that so often the woman undergoes all the annuyanco and shame for nothing. ThotrsandsSj "omen who have been cured uv Dr. Bierce’s Favorite Prescrip tion wriux in^Npreciation of the cure which dispt^tiPsVHh the examinations and local treatnu-ut^TherL* is no oil * r medicine. >0 -ur. - ■ m! .safe (or duluuiM; women as "Fa\'>riie Prescription." It cures debilil.itmg drains, irregularity and female weakness. It always helps. It almost always cures. It is strictly non alcoholic, non - secret, all its ingredients being print' d on its bottle-wrapper; con tains no deleterious or habit-forming drugs, and every native medicinal root entering into iD composition has the full endorsement of those most eminent in the several schools of medical practice. Some of these numerous and strongest of pro fessional endorsements of its ingredients, will be found in a pamphlet wrapped around the bottle, also in a booklet mailed free on request, by Dr. R. V. Pierce, ot Buffalo, N. Y. These professional en dorsements sliould have far more weight than any amount of the ordinary lay, or non-professional testimonials. The most intelligent women now-a-ilays in*i*t on knowing w hat they take as med icine instead of opening their mouths like a lot of young birds and gulping down whatever is offered them. "Favorite Pre scription " is of KNOWN COMPOSITION. It makes weak women strong and sick women well. Dr. Pierce’s Medical Adviser Is sent free on receipt of >taiiips to pay expense of mailing onh/. Send to Dr. li. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y„ 21 oue-cent stamps for pa per-covered, or 31 stamps for cloth-bound. If sick consult the Doctor, free of charge by letter. All such communications are held sacredly confidential. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets Invigorate and regulate stomach, liver and ixiweis. NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE. Lincfer Lands. By virtue of a decree In partition, signed by Hon. R. C. Watts, presid ing judge, in the case of Mrs. Nannie Smith and Mrs. Edna Littlejohn, plaintiffs, against R. E. Linder, defend ant, I will during legal houre of sate, on salesday, in December, 1907, (be ing December 2nd,) at the court bouse door In Gaffney, S. C., sell at public auction to the highest bidder the fol lowing real estate, to-wit: All that tract of land, lying, being and situated in Limestone township, Cherokee county, said State; com mencing at a ford on Cherokee creek at or near the old mill place; thence with the road in the direction or Broad river to a point where the line crosses said road; thence in the di rection of Stony Knob; thence with the bearing of said line to said creek; rhence up said creek to the beginning or starting point; said lot being known or designated as lot No. 3. Also lot No. 2. beginning at comer on east side of said creek; thence with the bearings of said line south ward to the Magnetic Iron Company » line; thence nearly west to or past a point on said line; thence noa; north to a point near the Indian Mound; on a line running from the starting point first named on this lot: thence with the first supposed line nearly east to the beginning point: said two tracts, being the property described in deed from Mrs. Mary Linder to the said R. E. Linder, bear ing date March 15, 1895, and record ed in office of R. M. C. for Spartan- burg county in Boot? page and being all the lands embraced and contained in deed executed by M's. H. V. Ross to Mrs. Mary A. Linder on the 19th day of February, 187b. recorded in Book N. page 419, office of R. M. C. of Spartanburg county, and being more particularly describ ed in a plat thereof, made’by R. O. Sams, surveyor, dated Octob/r 26, 1907, on file In the office of the clerk of court for Cherokee county; which said plat shows the meets and bounds thereof and divides the same Into twelve separate lots, which plat 1* rerered to as part hereof. Said lands will be sold in seperate lots in accordance with said plat of R. O. Sams, surveyor, on file in th* office of clerk of said court, which ; plat is subject to the Inspection of the public. TERMS OF SALE: One-third cash and ballance payable one year from day of sale; credit portion to be »e- cured by bond or note of purchaaer and mortgage of premises purchased; credit portion to bear Interest from date of sale; purchaser to have leave to pay all cash; and upon production of deed, to be put Into possesilon of premises purchased; upon failure of ' purchaser to comply with terms of sale,' such property to be re-sold on same subsequent salesday at risk of such defaulting purchaser. Purchas er to pay for papers. W. W- Thomas, Sheriff Cherokee Co., S. C. Nov. 15, 22 and 29. CLERK’S SALE. By virture of a decree of partition and sale of the Court of Common pm.inlnhi 7t7oii*t and 1>,ea8 for Cherokee county in the case complain abnit. and, ga i lle Reynolds, Salatbiel Little- -tunlty for doing good john Mol , ie McDan , e l. Chester Lit- In the great outside world in which tIe j ohn and Robe rt Littlejohn, plain- you live. I have never heard you huj; , t [ ff8 vg> Btta Littlejohn and Charlie that there were no people In trouble; ijttlejohn, defendants, I will sell at near your home. As I was writing this j Gaffney, S. C-. before the court house sermon I looked down from my study, door, during the legal hours for sales into the street and saw a couple of on salesday, Monday, December 2nd, young ladles walking past. They were; 1907, the following described proper- dressed from head to foot in black. 1 . * * * * They had sweet faces. But I was not ^Jat piece, or t ‘^ ct h ,° f . ... , , ,, land lying In Draytonvllle township, looking at them so much as looking Cherokee county, and State afore- beyond. I said to myself: I wonder ga y be | n g a par t of the estate lands who has lately gone out of that family of g e lathiel Littlejohn, deceased, sold circle. Was it a father or a mother?' un( i er decree and proceedings had in Was it a brother whom those sisters the probate court of Union county, were helping to educate at college? by Robert McBeth, sheriff, at public God pity them.” And as I spoke thus outcry on salesday in February, 1876, 1 thought of how many aching hearts! an d the same being one of the three there were about me, bleeding fronD tracts Into which said land was sub- (h. or C. Kravedigger's »„ad, , ^Mor’^ ‘on The Bee* In the Barbados. file in the probate court of said Then the poor and the slck-ob, how ] Union county, and said tract convey- many there are! And the young people ed by Robert McBeth, as *herlff, of BRIDGE TO LET. On Friday, November 29th, at 11 o’clock I will be at the Tom McCraw place on Cherokee cree’: to receivo bids for the erection of a bridge across Cherokee creek. I reserve the right to reject any and all bids. E. F. Lipscomb, Supervisor Cherokee Co. Nov. 15 to 29. THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE CO'/it* SYRUr* KENNEDY’S LAXATIVE iitDEY-TA : led Clover Blonom •nil Homy Bi; oi. Lvry BoU.g BANKER 8 A LVf the mor.t heolinf) ealvs in the wrorle POimHONET^EAK Owm Ooldst Prevents Pneumonia DeWItt's M Salve For PUst, Burns, Fores* being led forth Into a life of sin—you see them all around you. Then tbe old Union county to Charles Littlejohn, by deed probated the 6th day of FeN folO-how they non d love to h.ve ue “lo “ d , "wV.™? TjZ^mb come ami tisit them and read to them. ! 0Q the an( j eaBt . on (h e south Yes, the opportunities are all about us ^ ^ q_ jjttlejohn, and on the west for doing good. You have only to by estate land of Moseg Littlejohn, stretch forth your hands to touch deceased, anl containing fifty-nine (59) them. Are we so happy, so contented,! acres, more or less, so selfish, that we help not one about 1 TBRMB OF SALE: Cash. Par- us? Charles Darwin, the great physl-! chaser to pay for papers. RjunrSKiwreYCOK Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right Kodol Dyspepsia Sure Digests what yo*j efst* cist, tells us tb it there is a degeneracy which often follows great prosperity. Many years ago quite a number of bee swarms were carried to tbe island of Barbados, in the West Indies. At first they went diligently to work to gather honey to prepare for tbe coming winters. But when those bees found that they were In a land of perpetual J. Eb Jefferies, Cl’k. C. C. Pi’s. Pub. Nov. 15, 21 and 28. Barkers HAIR BALSAM iCUssMi sod team. r«j Hi* hair. IPr.xnute* * liimriant fruvth. I Never Fall* to Britor* Oray I Bair to lu Vcuthful Color. ICurv* *caip i! ■ .1 j, hair fvlUoa. FOLETSm^^CAI ' ihlldr+nt tar*, rc--o Dr. King’s Ncn Life Pill The beat In tbs w h ’d. • •/* 9 * •a ’ Tl, a . ... •to»atl**eoougl& «*