The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, March 27, 1908, Image 7
,A
' -V
WOMAN’S
BACKACHE
The back is the mainspring of
woman’s organism. It quickly calls
attention to trouble by aching. It
tells, with other symptoms, such as
nervousness, headache, pains in the
loins, weight in the lower part of
the body, that a woman’s feminine
organism needs immediate attention.
In such cases the one sure remedy
which speedily removes the cause,
and restores the feminine organism
to a healthv, normal condition is
LYDIA E.PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
.Mrs. Will Young, of 6 Columbia
Ave., Rockland, Me., says:
“ I was troubled for a long time with
dreadful backaches .and a pain in my
side, and was miserable in every way.
I doctored until I was discouraged and
thought I would never get well. I read
what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound had done for others and
Calmage
Sermon
By Rev.
Frank De Witt Talmatfe, D.D.
New York, March 22.—That each of
■a in his own sphere owes to the world
the duty of carrying out the great
plans and purposes of the noble minds
that are gone Is the theme of this ser
mon, the text for which is II Kings li,
14, “And he took up the mantle of
Elijah.”
We naturally grieve when a young
man of brilliant promise dies. There
are so few young men capable of fill
ing the places of the great men who
are passing away we can ill afford to
spare any of them. When that most
brilliant young minister of the Brick
church of New York, Maltbie Babcock,
during an attack of delirium resulting
from Roman fever committed suicide
In the capital of the Caesars the Pres
byterian general assembly was in ses
sion in Philadelphia. The moderator
announced the sad news. A hush fell
over that great assembly. It was al
most consternation. Gray haired min
isters looked at one another In sor
rowful amazement. They had expected
this young pulpit genius to take up the
work and lead their church when their
hands became too feeble to hold the
standard. That he should be taken be
fore them caused a sense of desolation
more acute than would have been
caused by the death of an older man.
decided to try it; after taking three y[ a ]tbje Babcock went as Arthur Hen-
^ ^r^ SaythatlUeVerfelt :^ lla " am 'vent and the young
y -r. i Ephraim Ellsworth went and the young
Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Earl, t liichard Kirk White went and the
x T\7TMrae rrv IVl t»cj I vt Irno iy*» • , __ r , ,
young L>r. Joseph Warren went and
Pa., writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
“I had very severe backaches, and
pressing-down pains. I could not sleep,
and had no appetite. Lydia E. Pink
Jean Reguault, the brilliant young art
ist, went. So the sharp scythe of death
ham's Vegetable Compound cured me continually mowing down some 6f
and made me feel like a new woman.”
FACTS FOR SSCK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, libroid' tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeding, flatulency, indiges
tion, dizziness,or nervous prostration.
Kodol For
Indigestion
Our Guarantee Coupon
If. after using two-thirds of a Jtr.oo bottle of
Kodol, you can honestly say it lias not bene
fited you, we will refund your money. Try
Kodol today on tbit guarantee. Hill out and
•igntbe following, present it to the dealer at
the time of purchase. If it fails to satisfy you
return the bottle containing one-third of the
medicine to the dealer from whom you bought
it, and we will refund jour money.
Town
State
Sign here.
* Cut This t>u: *
Digests What Y ouEat
And Makes the^ Stomach Sweet
B. C. DeWITT & CO.. Chicago. I1L
Fo P Ml* By Gaffney Drug Co*
SHERIFF’S FORECLOSURE SALE.
Notice Is hereby given that during
legal hours for sale on salesday In
April, 1908, before the court house
door in Gaffney, by virtue of a decree
of Hon. Ernest Gary, Presiding Judge
Court of Common Pleas, In the case
of J. S. Vinesett, plaintiff against
Henry Thomas and T. Robbs, defend
ants, I will sell at public auction, for
cash, to the Highest bidder, the fol
lowing property, to wit:
All that certain piece, parcel or
tract of land situated in Limestone
township, just outside the town limits, humbk
and bounded as follows. Beginning j s W el! <b>n •
on iron pin on alley and Coil road and
the brightest autl the most promising
of young artists and physicians and
lawyers ami ministers. We cannot ex
plain their premature departures. We
shall understand the reason in the next
world.
One generation passes away and an
other comes, it is difficult to realize
that in another fifty years at most the
work now being done in the world of
religion, of letters, of medicine and of
art will be in the hands of new men.
There will lie new men not only among
the leaders, hut among the ordinary
workers, and it is just as essential to
the world’s progress that these hum
ble men should he found faithful as
i that the lenders should be men of gen
ius. Our concern is not only that the
conspicuous pulpits of the church
should lie ably filled, but with the
character of the men who will be call
ed to the thousands of ordinary pulpits
scattered over llu* broad land in which
valiant service for the Master’s king
dom Is now being done. Where there
is one chief justice’s seat in the su
preme court of the United States that
will need an occupant there are thou
sands and tens of thousands of ordi
nary lawyers and justices who are
true to their profession and are seeing
that might is not triumphing over
right. And where there have been In
this generation a Lr. Rush and a Dr.
Sayre and a Marion Sims and a Pas
teur and a Lorenz, who, as great sur
geons and physicians, have been hon
ored all around the world for their
brilliant work in the medical profes
sion, ^there have been thousands and
hundreds of thousands of ordinary, lit
tle known ply sicians who as humble
family doctors have cared for the sick
and have come to our bedsides to alle
viate our pains. Aye. these ordinary
men of the,past generations have been
just as essential to the progress of the
world and of civilization as have been
the great men. I want to direct your
thoughts today to the falling mantles
not only of the great men. but of the
ordinary men. Who of us will he will
ing to pick up their mantles even as
Elisha picked up the fallen mantle of
Elijah? Every man lias ids work. The
Important tiling for us and for the
world is not so much whether It be
or <• en picuous, but whether it
If we take up the man-
running with road N. 56 E. 1.56 3-4
chains to iron pin in road; thence N. 1 . ..
56 W. 3.73 1-2 chains to stake on back i 0 ™,?'' lf
line; thence s. 34 W. 1.45 1-2 chains
to stake on alley; thence with alley
S. 56 E. 3.12 1-2 chains to iron pin,
beginning corner and containing one-
half acre, more or less. To he sold
as the property of Henry Thomas.
TERMS OF SALE CASH,
chaser to pay for papers.
W. W. Thomas,
Sheriff Cherokee Co.
Mch. 20-27, Apr, 8.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
tie of :m Elij: h, let us see to it that,
! like him, we are bold and dauntless In
v e take up the mantle of a
humbler prophet, let us see to that at
least we are true and faithful.
Mantlcr, of the Old Pastors.
Who, in the first place, is going to
wrap about his shoulders the mantle
Pur- one "l 1 H lf ‘ old fashioned Christian
pastors, scon and hundreds of whom
i might nam if I would? These men
were noble preachers in their day, but
1 they held their pulpits and deepened
their Christian influence year after
! year not only by the two great ser-
j mens they preached before audiences
which filled the church auditoriums on
the Sabbath day, but by the hundreds
Notice is hereby givefl that on
salesday in April, 1908, at 12 o’clock,'of little serm »ns preached during the
noon, (being April 6) at the National week days before audiences made up
Bank in Gaffney, by virtue of a de
cree of Hon, Ernest Gary, Presiding
Judge, in the case of R. A. Hawkins
against Will Walker, I will sell at
public auction to the highest bidder
for cash, the following property, to
wit: One white or cream colored
milk cow about 4 years old; one sew
ing machine; two bureaus; one wash-
stand; three bedsteads; 1 cook stove*
one clock; lot cooking vessels and
utenclls; 4 chairs; i table; l chum;
lot bedding; lot table ware and fur
nishings* consisting of, cups, saucers,
plates, knives, forks, spoons, pitch
ers, dishes, spraid; bedding, consist
ing of, pillows, sheets, counterpains,
quilts; also one ope*, top buggy.
W. W. Thomas,
Sheriff Cherokee Co.
Mch. 20-27, Apr. 8.
of one or tw > or at Ihe most three or
four auditern by the family fireside.
These ministers found their way Into
the affections of their people not so
much because they were pulpit kings
ns by bring devoted, loving and inde
fatigable pa*} ral friends.
These men of God preached Christ
on Sundays to the accompaniment of
singing choirs. They preached Christ
during the week to the accompaniment
of the cheerful talk and laughter of the
home, and without any doubt the most
powerful sermons they ever preached
were their talks on Mondays and Tues
days and Wednesdays and Thursdays,
Fridays and Saturdays, which they de-
Itysrsd upon the streets to the mem
bers of their congregations as they met
them by the wayside.
Who shall fill the places of these
men? Is the call for old fashioned
Christian pastors to fall upon unheed
ing ears? You tell me that the greatest
need of the church of God Is for great
preachers and not for great pastors.
I think not. my brother. There may be
need for groat preachers. There can
not he too many George Whltefields in
tlie world, but I believe there is Just as
great if not greater need for the Chris
tian pastor’s handshake ns there is
for the pulpit king’s eloquent periods.
More need is there for the loving min
ister who will affectionately throw his
arm about a waywardjbrother’s neck
than for the graceful gesture of the De-
mosthenean pulpiteer. More need is
there for a noble pastor’s sympathetic
prayer by the sickbed than for a pulpit
orator who can deliver a classic eulogy
by the bier of a dead president. More
need is there for a loving ministerial
friend than for one who is trying to
bnild up his church through the Influ
ence of his Sunday services alone, and
yet. ns our cities are growing larger
and larger each year, as the need of
pastoral work is becoming greater and
greater, because there Is more danger
of men and women becoming lost in
the crowds, the fact remains that the
pastoral work of the minister Is be
coming less and less. TYho will make
pastoral visitations a life passion?
Who will say, “Lord, make me a hunt
er for single souls during the week and
not simply a great preacher on the
Lord’s day?” Young men about to
leave our theological seminaries, will
you pick up this mantle which some
old fashioned pastor has dropped at the
brink of the grave?
The Modern Doctor.
As w'e see the individual work of the
ministers for individual souls being
neglected on account of the congesting
of large numbers of people In our
towns and cities, so we find the moral
and the spiritual work of the old fash
ioned Christian doctors is also passing
away. The modern physician is as
unlike his predecessor of the past gen
eration as the work of the average city
minister is different from the old fash
ioned country pastor who used to move
in and out among his people in the
small villages where our grandmothers
and grandfathers were born.
There are many reasons for this
change. The electric cars and the ele
vated trains and the suburban rail
road have made the neighborhood
family physician a relic of the past.
The family physician twenty years
ago always had his office in his home.
He never thought of having an office
downtown in some big office building,
as the physicians do now. The result
was the old family doctor, because he
was a neighborhood doctor, became a
personal adjunct of every family. He
had his patients’ individual interests
at heart. The hoys tmd the girls of the
street were his boys and girls. They
were all his children.
Not only has the old fashioned
neighborhood physician passed away
through the introduction of the tele
phone and the electric cars and the
downtown offices, but also because of
the specializing of the different depart
ments of medicine and surgery. Once
you felt that the family physician
knew* a great deal, but now you have
come to the conclusion that ene phy
sician can know but very little. If
you have anything the matter with
your eye you must go to an oculist; or
with the throat, to a throat specialist;
or with the lungs, to a lung specialist:
or with the skin, to a skin specialist;
or with the nerves, to a nerve special
ist. We have made a fad out of this
specialist business. Thus, instead of
today having one doc-tor whom we call
a family doctor, most families have
four or five doctors on their payrolls.
They have one doctor for the babies
and another for the father and another
doctor for the mother and another doc
tor for the sister. The result is, in
stead of a physician being a neighbor-
liood doctor and being part of that
neighborhood, he is but one In a pro
cession. Ills patients come to him one
day and do not come to him the next.
Thus, instead of having the strong
personal interest in his patients which
he used to have, the average doctor
looks at his patients simply as cases
with so many sores or so many coughs
or with so many stomach complaints
or with so many skin diseases. When
he lias cured the physical ailments his
interest in the patient ceases. The
physician of the past was generally a
pious man. He knew how to speak the
sympathetic word to the sufferers and
ar he stood by the bed of the dying to
breathe a word of faith and hope. Who
knows the good ho did? Now, my
friends, who'Is going to do the work
of the old fashioned Christian physi
cian? You and I know that the W'ork
the old fashioned Christian physician
did w’as second only in eternal impor
tance to w'hat was accomplished by
the Christian minister himself.
Dr. Livingstone’s Way.
When David Livingstone wanted to
become a missionary to darkest Africa,
what did he do? Did he say, “I will
enter a theological seminary and learn
how to preach?” No. He said: “I will
enter the medical school and learn how
to be a doctor. Then when I can stand
by the sickbed of the black man I will
bind up his wounds, and as I bind them
I will tell him about Christ, who was
wotinded for. us. When the lifelong
sufferers come to me for relief I will
tell them about that Christ who can
cure them of their sins as well as their
pains.” O Christian physician, are
you willing to be an old fashioned med
ical missionary to the sufferers of the
slums of the poor, as David Livingstone
was a medical missionary to the heath
en of darkest Africa? Will you, in
Christ’s name, administer medicine to
the soul ns well as to the body? When
that youpg man and that young woman
come to you with physical ailments,
will you tell them about Christ who
elll save them from their sins? When
fou pour out the medicine, will you
kneel, like the old Christian physician
used to kneel, by the sickbed and ask
God’s blessing upon that Invalid? In
this age of medical specialists will you
become the noblest of all specialists, a
medical missionary for Christ? Who
among the young men in our medical
schools will take up the fallen mantle
of the old fashioned Christian family
doctor? Will you, young man? Will
you, young woman?
Having sought successors to the old
fashioned Christian pastors and the
old fashioned Christian doctors, shall
we not lovingly speak about the fallen
mantles of the old fashioned Christian
lawyers? The Christian lawyers both
In the present and in the past have too
often been sneered at and Jeered at
with words of contempt. When Rome
was overthrown by the barbarian con
querors the latter flung all the Roman
lawyers into jail; then thqf cut out the
tongues of some and sewed up the
mouths of others and sent them forth
Into the world with this fiendish com
ment: “Now we have drawn the adder’s
fangs and choked the viper’s hiss, and
they can no longer do us harm.” Thus
some people of the present generation
are like those ancient barbarians. They
class all lawyers in one great group.
They call them vipers and destroyers,
busybodies and fomenters of strife.
TIs true, some lawyers of the past
generation may have been bad, yet
there have always been honest lawyers,
and have we not a right to desire a
succession of them—men who will
worthily wear the mantle of the old
fashioned Christian lawyer as well as
men tq_ don the honored robes of the
old fashioned Christian doctors and
Christian ministers?
The Old Fashioned Family Lawyer.
Who was the chief hope of the old
grandfather in a time of great family
trouble? The family lawyer. You
think of the old man’s sou as an hon
orable man. He was after he married
and settled down. Wben he died he
was respected by the community in
which he lived. He was loved by
every one. But if I should go back in
the family history I could find a time
when he was not what he was when
you knew him. Once as a young man
he w’as led into an aw’ful temptation.
He would have been sent to the peni
tentiary had ills crime been dealt with
in the courts. But that Christian law
yer went to the district attorney and
pleaded with him for mercy. He him
self signed the hail bond. He himself
went to the judge and had the matter
fixed up. You never knew. The world
never knew’. The old father and moth
er knew’. The young man knew. The
Christian lawyer knew. Who was it
when the young girl went astray per
suaded her parents to take her back
and restore her to the fireside of a
pure home? Who was it when your
father In anger wanted to disinherit
you on account of your escapades per
suaded him,‘to let bygones be bygones
and let the children share and share
alike? It was the Christian lawyer
who did all these things. Oh, the In
finite Influence for good of the old
fashioned Christian lawyer! Is there
any young man willing to take up the
fallen mantle of the old fashioned
Christian lawyers who worked for
Christ and who did just as valiant
service for their Divine Master as did
their contemporaries, the Christian doc
tor and the gospel minister?
Will you, as future lawyers, try to
save men instead of for mercenary re
wards or for fame trying to destroy
men? Will you be like the great anil
good Judge Nye, who was many years
ago appointed one of the judges of the
New York bench? One day a young
boy was brought before him for steal
ing. He inquired into the case, and he
found that the boy had formerly been
an honest hoy, but his mother was
starving, and he stole bread for her to
eat. Judge Nye sent for the district
attorney and said: “This boy has suf
fered enough. You must not prose
cute him.” But the district attorney
said: “I will prosecute him. Let his
lawyer save him if he can.” Then
Judge Nye said: “I will appoint his
counsel. I will be his lawyer.” At the
trial he turned to the jury and said:
“Gentlemen of the jury, look at this
boy. Is there one among you who will
blast his life and refuse to give him
another chance in the world?” Of
course the Jury acquitted him. Then
Judge Nye’s influence got the lad up
pointed to the Naval academy at An
napolis. Years later this judge l>e-
came Senator Janies Nye of Nevada.
He was in Washington. He was being
entertained In the White House, and
there at the president’s table one of
the most honored heroes of Admiral
Farragut’s fleet came up and grasped
his hand as he said, “Senator Nye, do
you know me?” “No,” answered the
great senator. “Well, sir, I am the boy
you saved from jail and sent to the
Navai academy.” Do you think that
boy was worth saving? Do you believe
that lad ought to have been saved?
Then, ye living lawyers, go forth and
do likewise.' In Christ’s name lift up
the fallen mantles of the old fashioned
Christian lawyer even as Elisha took
up the fallen mantle of the prophet
Elijah.
The Old Fashioned Merchant.
W’ould that 1 had time to speak at
length alxiut the fallen mantle of the
old fashioned Christian merchant, but
I have not. The old fashioned Chris
tian merchant's heart was not naturally
very much different from the heart of
the modern merchant, but that heart
was every day brought into close touch
with the lives of his employees. There
fore bis employees’ Joys were his Joys,
and their sorrows were his sorrows
Now the modern store or factory Is a
great human beehive. Unless the mod
ern merchant makes a special effort
each day to work for Christ among his
employees he can never hope to do the
work for Christ which the old fash
ioned Christian merchant did among
hls employee?. Why, there are so
many that he does not know them, nor
do they know him. Thus there Is Ig
fcornnee on Iwjth sides.
O modern merchants, are you ready
to do this Individual work for the Mas
ter among those who are working for
you day by day? Do not say you have
no opportunity. Give the boy that
comes into your employ kindly greet
ing. Ask him about hls home and
friends. Gain his confidence and let
him regard you as ids friend. He will
serve you all the better for it. and you
may save him from the temptations of
the city. The merchant who seeks op
portunities of serving Christ is sure to
find them. There was one shoemaker
of a past generation who had the grand
record of saving 500 boys for Christ,
and they were not his clerks either,
but strange boys whom he coaxed in
from the street. Ills name was John
Pounds, a humble mender of shoes in
Portsmouth, England.
John Pounds’ School.
He wanted to do something for Christ.
So with a little money he earned by
mending shoes he bought some school
books. Then he went out into the
Portsmouth alleys and gathered into
his cobble shop the dirtiest, raggedest
and most forlorn street arabs he could
find. Then while be worked at his
bench he taught his scholars out of
these schoolbooks and told them the
story of Christ It was sal$ that this
poor, humble cobbler was the means
of starting the whole system of the
“ragged schools” which are now to be
found In all the large cities of Eng
land, Scotland, Ireland and Wales. O
you modern merchants, cannot you be
modem John Poundses? In your stores,
In your factories, cannot you take a
few moments of each day to talk with
some of your employees about God and
about consecrating themselves to the
Master’s work? Who of all the young
business men will start out to take up
the fallen mantles of the Christian mer
chants of the past generations?
Thus, my friends, I would set before
you high ideals. As I think of that
scene In the far east and see Elisha
taking up the fallen mantle of Elijah
I want to see all men and women reach
ing forth for some one of the fallen
mantles of the noble Christian men and
women who are gone and have finished
their life’s work. By God’s help make
the most you can of your Christian op
portunities. Reach high. Strive hard.
Bring out the best that is in you.
There are mantles falling every day.
The Christian worker who has toiled
for Christ and the world’s betterment
through the years of bis life is caught
up to hls rest in heaven. Do not stay
looking after him, but take up the
work that has fallen from his hands
and continue that. Be not diffident or
unbelieving. Who knows but the an
gels looking upon you may say, as was
said about the ancient worker, “The
spirit of Elijah doth rest on Elisha?”
[Copyright, 1908, by Louia Klopsch.]
That our American rorests abound In
plants which possess the most valuable
medicinal virtues is abundantly attested
by scores of the most eminent medical
writers and teachers. Even the untu
tored Indians had discovered the useful
ness of many native plants before the
advent of the white race. This informa
tion, imparted freely to the whites, led
the latter to continne investigations until
to-day we have a rich assortment of most
valuable American medicinal roots.
Dr. Pierce believes that our American tor*
eats abOund In moat valuable medicinal roots
if most obstinate and fatal dls-
.properly investigate them:
of this conviction, he
the almost. msm»lniis
euras effectori hv
-DlSi
CO very.which has proven Itself to he the
most cftlcittnt. Momarh tonic, ilvcr Inviiror-
ator. heart tonic and regulator, and blood
regu
Cleanser known to medical science. Dyspep
sia. or indigestion, torpid llverT 'Tunctiona!
and even valvular and other affections of
the heart yield to its curative action. The
reason why it cures these and many other
affections, is clearly shown in a little book
of extracts from the standard medical works
which is mailed free to any address by Dr. R.
V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., to all tending
request for the same.
-O O
Not less marvelous, in the unparalleled
cure* it is constantly making of woman’s
many peculiar atTections, weaknesses and
dlstrffcsJng denTrs^rnents, is Dr. Pierce’s
Fa voiitesPrcscripUolvas is amply attested
by thousands oNaj^bikmbdJestlmonlals con
tributed by'c/’n'.-ful pattemfc who have been
cured by It of catarrhal neJvlc c'iraljj^alnfirT
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after many other advertised medicines, and
physicians had failed.
•NN’
Both the above mentioned medicines are
wholly made up from the glyceric extracts of
native, medicinal roots. The processes em
ployed in their manufacture were original
with Dr. Pierce, and they are carried on by
skilled chemists and pharmacists with the
aid of apparatus and appliances specially
designed and built for this purpose. Both
medicines are entirely free from alcohol and
all other harmful, habit-forming drugs. A
full list of their ingredients is printed on
each bottle-wrapper.
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Kershaw, p. CL, will entitle you to tan
days treatment which cures lenoor-
rhea, ulceration, displacement, tailing
at the womb, menstrual
tumors, etc. Mar. IT
Is made in three
grades: for mill,
store and home use.
The kind used on
mill and store floors
will not do on your
home carpet. : :
i Dustdown
In household size
at 25c a package
I can be had only at
S Cherokee
■Drug Comp’y
| It will do what is claimed
.
, I, j Vi* /iAw