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/ IkHUidt Bate Kidney Tinble and Beyer Sispect it Pre aleury of KidneT Diit-iise. Most people do not realize the alarm ing increase and remarkable prevalency of kidney disease. While kidney dis- diseases that pre vail, they are almost the last recognized by patient and phy sicians, who con tent themselves with doctoring the effects, while the orij- Mtimd disense undermines the system. ■What To Do. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer s Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, fulfills every wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to hold water ! and scalding pain in passing it, or bad / effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant ne cessity of being compelled to go otten during the day, and to get up times during the night. Ihe mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most, dis tressing cases. If you need, a medicine you should have the best. Sold by drug gists in fiftv-eent and one-dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle and a book that tells all about it, both sent free by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing hamton, N. V. When Homo of Swamp-Root. FLOWER WEDDINGS. How tho Insects Are Lured and the Parts They Play. The tulip as a coy lover and the wild arum as deceiver and murderer were among some highly Interesting exam ples of little known phases of plant and flower life described by Professor Bot- tomley, M. A.. In a recent lecture at the botanic gardens. Professor Bot- tomley, who is professor of botany at King’s college, entitled his lecture “Va rious Marriage Customs of Plant Life.” He explained how flowers entice In sects into their service In order to get married and so propagate their spe cies. Most flowers are dependent for their fertilization upon Insects, and so the plants develop In such a way as to attract the custom of members of the insect world. The first means of attraciing insects, said Professor Bottomley, was a very human one and consisted of providing free drinks. Every flower has secreted somewhere about it a large or small store of honey, to which the Insect be it midge or butterfly is attracted. But as an additional attraction flowers de velop a beautiful scent or a fascinating appearance so as to attract the Insectp’ attention. It Is also interesting to note that the simple flowers are married by simple insects, mere curates, as the lecturer described them, while the more elab orate flowers require more highly de veloped insects, such as bees or butter 1 Hies—bishops. Since the poor flower cannot go a-wooing itself and must be dependent PHOTOGRAPHS ON APPLES. EATERS OF HUSKS. name the address, Binghamton, N. V ; Don’t mtiKe nnv m’stske, but r*- member the name, Swamp-Root. Dr i Kilmer’s S vamp-Root, ami r he »4 dress. bottle. Binghampton. N. ▼., on ‘ivery Cities Have Most Babies. It used to l>e held, says the Medical Times, that city families would die out in three generations were they not constantly replenished from eountry stock. But modern sanitary science is certainly changing all that. The state department of health report of New York for October shows the city fuor- tality of IC.b per 1,000 as compared with n country death rate of 15.9 per 1,000, but the city birth rate is 28, and the country only 18 per 1,000, showing a net increase of population in the writing mention this paper and don’t make any mistake but remember the h klndl errands of ins e Cts . it ie. Dr. Kilmer s Swamp-Root, and J ^ ^ ^ attractiye t0 those messengers of love, but provides them with comforts in the form of convenient resting places, some orchids even providing a little stool upon which bees may sit and sip the honey. Uf course the whole object of attract ing insects is to make them bear the pollen powder from one plant to an other, the Introduction of the pollen making the fertilization of the seeds possible. All plants are so arranged that while the insects they attract are drinking their honey the pollen powder is either l»eing scattered over their bodies to lie taken to another plant or tho pollen already scattered on the insect is being swept off by the stigmas of the seed boxes. It is also interesting to notice that those plants which attract moths, which are night flying insects, are near- j cities of nine per 1.000. Of late years ( jy always white and highly scented the city dea'h rate has declined faster than the ce intry. although it is still somewhat greater. But the country Is safer than f e elty for Infancy and old age. A great many people imagine they have heart troubles when the fact is that the whole trouble lies in the sto mach. The pains in the side around the region of the heart are not neces- sarily heart trouble. We suggest that you start with the stomach and when ever you feel a depression after -eat- ^irig or whenever your food seems to nauseate take Kodol. It will not be very long until all these “heart pains” will disappear. Take Kodol now and until you know you are right again. There isn't any doubt about what it will do and you will find the truth of ♦hi* statement verified after you have used Kodo! for a few weeks. It Is ous to birds, and so a bird, having sold here by The Gaffney Drug Co. | eaten of the berry, dies promptly, falls 1 to the earth and decays. The decaying | flesh forms the liest possible manure j for the growth of the arum seed re- ! maining undigested in the bird's car- Surprising Richness of Color and Wealth of Detail Secured. It is a simple matter to print photo graphs upon the ordinary red apple, the tomato and smooth skinned pump kin if one goes about it in the right way. In addition to the process being most simple, there is no expense in curred, not even for so cheap a chem ical as hypo, as no chemical or water is required, while the resultant prints can only be said to be as permanent as the support on wbicb the image Is formed. The skin of an apple, tomato or pumpkin, particularly at a certain stage of its ripening, bears a strong resemblance to our photographic plates and printing paper for the reason that It Is sensitive to light. It is this sensi tiveness to light that causes the side exposed to the sun to burn red or yellow, and, as one can often notice, where a leaf intervenes to cut off the light close to the pumpkin, apple or tomato it will print an outline of it self, a silhouette, as it were, in green upon the red or yellow ground. It was through noticing this that I conceived the idea of printing from a negative upon the same surface. My first at tempt was with apples. I first hunted out an apple having a leaf close to its surface, placed a piece of glass be neath the leaf and on it cut my initials with a sharp knife. 1 then removed the glass and pasted the leaf firmly to the apple so it would not be blown away by tho wind and left it for a week. At the end of that lime I took the apple, soaked off the leaf and found Hy Initials in bright red on a light green ground having tho outline of the leaf. My success prompted me to try an actual photograph or one printed from a photograph negative. To this end I selected some apples of the red variety that were yet green and en cased them in bags made of the black paper in which plates and paper are usually packed. These bags were left on for ton days to exclude the light and add to the sensitiveness of the surface. At the end of this tlme’tbe bags were removed and film negatives were pasted in position by using the white of an egg. This white of an egg I found later to lie the only adhesive that would not show In the print. In order that all except the image when printed might be green the apples were again inclosed In the protecting bags, this time an opening a little larger than the portrait being cut opposite the film. This acted much as would a vignetting device over a printing frame and groii;:;- - nba: cel the results. Oth er apples were given negatives made by scratching monograms, initials and sketches in spoiled films with an etch ing knife olid attached in the same manner ami provided with the same protection lor the remainder of the sur face. Tlie richness of color and wealth of detail that can lie secured in tlfis way are really astonishing. 1 am tempt ed to say that the results are superior •o any that could be obtained on pho tographic papers. A week was allowed for printing. The fine deep red of the not content with this demoralization, it picture upon the delicate green of the develops berries which attract birds. ground must lie seen to be fully appre- But these berries also prove poison- j fiated. Only nature could give just the exact tones of the two colors that would harmonize so perfectly. The Loeust Beans Are Used as Food b/ the Arabs and the Moors. Are the “husks" of the parable of the prodigal son still extant in the coun tries bordering on the MediterraneanV Consul General Ravudal, writing from Beirut, says that they are and that they are now called “carets” or “lo cust beans.” He continual “Arabs and Moors eat them. In the south of Europe they are employed as food for horses, cattle and swine. In Cyprus, next to barley, they constitute the principal article for export. The totai yield of the island of carobs or locust beans (not to be confounded with St. John’s) in 1900 amounted to 09,000 tons, dn August the carob tree is seen bear ing both flowers find ripe fruit. The latter is a pod, brown and leathery, four to eight inches long, a little curved and containing a fleshy and at last mealy pulp of an agreeably sweet taste, in which lie a number of shin ing brown seeds. These are bitter ami of no use. “On account of the abundant sugar contained in carobs the latter form a nutritious and fattening food for horses and cattle. England, for th>. feeding of cattle, imports large quan titles of carobs from Spain. Italy. Crete, Samos and Cyprus. I urn in formed that a considerable quantltj of this cattle food is exported from Great Britain to the United States. Carobs are also used in considerable quantities, especially in France, for distillation, and the spirits obtained are deemed choice. Carobs are also employed for the production of a semi liquid substance resembling molasses, largely used in the manufacture of oriental sweets. “The carob tree, which is quite dis tinct frrm the locust tree of America, seems to prefer the mild climate of the southern seacoasts and islands of the Mediterranean. The produce is ex ceedingly abundant, some trees yield ing as much as 900 pounds of p ids. The wood is hard and much valued, and the bark and leaves are used for tanning. One variety of tho carob is called in Cyprus npostolik*^ Tlii-, however, is not so named after the apostle. It means that the trge is "sent by God’—I. e., self sown.”—Chicago News. Peculiar to Itself In combination, proportion and process, Hood’s Sarsaparilla is therefore Peculiar to Itself in merit, sales and cures. It is made from the best blood-purifying, alterative and tonic ingredients by such original and peculiar methods as to retain the full medicinal value of each and all. The severest forms of scrofula, salt rheum, catarrh, rheu matism, dyspepsia, and debility are cured every day by Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by druggists, ioo doses $i. Begin to take it today. ^ rSat O bS Fur those who prefer | *(iino curative properties as the liquid form. Wide-- tuedieine in tablet form, Hood's .Sarsaparilla i“ now put up In choco lated tablets called Snrsatabs, as well a in the usual liquid form. Samitubs have identically the King Alfonso’s Horoscope. Repeated rumors concerning King Alfonso’s death bring to mind his horoscope of twelve years ago. This was said t<» In* almost as fortunate as Queen Victoria's. “Spain will become very prosperous tinder his reign, and he w ill live to be tin old man. He will enjoy good health, but be liable to weakness of tli<* stomach, liver and in testines. lie will also have some kid ney trouble if lit* does not lead a tem perate lift*. He will marry early in life and w ill be \ cry fortunate in his marriage. Ills wife will live to a good old age. but lie will outlive Iter. She nitty bri ig hi:, three chiidron. only one of w hich may live. He will meet with many accidents, particularly to the head, fact* a ml abdomen, and is very likely to get a scar on his face vliat lie will carry through life. His horoscope Is fortunate for overcoming his ene mies bo! h in war and diplomacy.”— New York Press. liccuracy of dose, convenience, economy. — there iK-inu no loss by evaporation, breakage, or leakage. Sold by druggists or sent promptly by mail. C. I. Hood Co.. Lowell Mann. Carolina, on the waters of King's creei:-, and bounded by land of Mary Weston, anA^ lands of others, begin ning at a large hickory, the said B. O. Jenkins’ corner, and running 801-2 B. 2.50 to a willow my old corner; thence N. 55 W. 1.20 to a stake on branch at bend; thence up branch, N. 7 W. 9.00 to a stake at ford in branch, with road 1.000 chains to a stake on side of road; thence S. 171-2 E. 6.00 to a persimmon old corner; thence 8. 73 WL 1.10 to the beginning, contain ing one and one-half acres (11-2) more or less. (c). All that piece, parcel or tract of land in Cherokee county, lying on the waters of King’s creek, known as the tract of land conveyed to Mar tha Morrow end Mickle Whisonant, situated in the county and State aforesaid, and containing two bun dled and- twenty (220) acres, more or less, beginning on a rock In the North Carolina line, and running with said line S. 87 E. 65.50 chains to a The pollen of a plant is most jealous ly guarded. That is why many flowers close their petals on dull days, the idea being to keep the pollen from rain. This is particularly noticeable in cro cuses. Not only insects, but birds, snails and the wind, help the plant world to make love. The pollen grains of the pine treeWhich are spread by the wind have tiny balloons attached to them. The lecturer concluded with a de scription of the wild arum, which was described as a really wicked plant, committing even murder in its love- making. The wild arum secretes a honey that intoxicates insects, and. Lausii today; you may run a nail into your foot tomorrow. Disturbed the congregation. T , The person who disturbed the con- ' cass.—London Mirror. gregation last Sunday by continually coughing is requested to buy a bot tle of Foley’s Honey and Tar. Chero kee Drug Co. Be good; it is the only safe invest ment that pays ten per cent on the dollar. The trouble with most cough cures is that they constipate. Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup does not con stipate, but on the other hand its laocative principles gently move the bowels. It is pleasant to take and it is especially recommended for child ren, as it tastes nearly as good as maple sugar. Sold by The Gaffney Drug Co. Be kind; it makes your life like a June day. attracts friends, and con founds enemies. Where Do the Old Pianos Go? What becomes of all (in* old pianos? Any piano dealer will take your old piano when you want a new one and will allow a substantial credit on it, even if it is of another make. From time to time the dealers announce sales of used pianos. All dealers have large stocks of them on hand constantly. One piano firm has on i*xhibilion an old fashioned square piano which was made at least half a century ago. This piano bears a placard to the effect that any one who will pay tho cartage may have it for the asking. No one has ac cepted the offer. Suppose no one ever takes that piano the? v "flow off the hands of the dealers who want to get rid of it. What will the dealers do with it? Obviously with rents as method for printing on tomatoes or pumpkins is the same as for apples. I hope that others will try the experi ment, and 1 can assure them that they will lie amply repaid for their trouble. —St. Nicholas. An Eloquent Sicilian. Cavaliere Grasso, one of the Sicilian actors now in London, at a luncheon given in ids honor recently made a speech to his hosts, a part of which has been translated as follows: "Would that I were a dove, its wings laden with diamonds, that I might scatter them over you. Fain would I lie your dawn, herald of a golden future. Fain would I lie your twilight haunted by happy memory. I would be your sun. to hold nil in my embrace, to melt the snows of your winter with the fire of my art into limpid streams, chiming as I would be tilt* springtime, bringing to you fresh happiness and tenderness of love. I would be the Notice to Ou r Customers. We are pleased to announce that/ Foley's Honey and Tar for coughs, colds and lung troubles is not affect* ed by the National Pure Food and Drug law as it contains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and we recom- tnend it as a safe remedy for children and adults. Cherokee Drug Co. ,, , , , ,, ,„ . , spring, the twilight, the dawn, the sun. high as they are it wouldn t pay to | th(? dove nl| togetber-vour Giovanni!’ store u piano you can’t give away. j So the question remains. What In the last stage of undesirability becomes of all the old pianos? — Washington Post. IT’S YOUR KIDNEYS. The “Make Sure” Movement. An engraved circular bearing on the outside a reproduction of “Burled Don’t Mistake rthe Cause of You Troubles. A Gaffney Citizen Shows How to Cure Them. Many people never suspect their Passing of a Dickens Thoroughfare. The chapel and the golden dog and pot are still at the entrance to Char lotte street, as are also some of the “low browed old shops" and possibly the one where the unhappy lad used to buy boot laces on Saturday nights and on one occasion "sat down on a sto<d to have a pair of ready made half boots fitted on.” But the show van. with the fat pig. wild Indian or littk* lady that attracted and "seduced" him to enter with the motley assemblage, comes there no more, though tlie "smell of ha.‘ liieiting ' I'eiuaiuH. Charlotte street. Blackfrlars road Southwark, whieh is shortly to disap pear so far as its present name is eon cerued by absorption in I’nipn street, is a thoroughfare that must always be reg iii.ed >•. • • h ::ileiv. l b\ lovers o! Dii kei,:- hi - l.ani iioyhood. w hen lie worked in the llungerford stairs bhukiug warehouse, it was along Char lotte slice! that he went to lii> lodg ings in the back attic in Lant street, near the Maislulsea prison, where his parents wi re confined. "My usual way lioine." said Dickens when recalling this period, "was over Blackfriars bridge and down that !!inii..g in the Blackfriars road which nas Rowland hill’s chape! on one side :nd the likeness of a golden dog lick ng a golden [lot over a shop on the other" Loudon Standard. Ciwabcc a Cartconi&t. Few persi ns who are acquainted with Bear Admiral Charles i». Sigs iM*e. L’. S X.. retired, know that he is i cartoonist of no mean ability. Ids work indeed, having appeared anony- iiously in certain periodicals and it was paid for too. The admiral in an interview at tin* Hotel imperial, where he is living, smilingly admitted the barge. "Cartooning is merely pleasure an 1 recreation to me." said he. "for I con fess my compensation has never been large in any instance. I am keenly Interested In popular illustration and cartooning nod consider the improve ment made along these lines in re cut years remarkable. The b«*st of the cartoons published a generation ago are. generally speaking, worse than the average wiyk in the same Held to day.”—New York Globe. rock; thence S. 57 E. 10.40 chains to a Spanish oak; thence S. 65 W. 24.50 More News from the Ne w Errand I chains to a pine stump; thence due g t3tes> I South with the meanderings of the lj any one has any doubt as to the , bianch to Deals line, 2165; thence virtue of Foley's Kidney Cure, they | 55 W. 17.40 to a stone and point* need only to refer to Mr. Alvin H. 1 rs i thence N. 58 E. 4.00 to a small Stimpson, of Willimantic, Conn., v/ho, j walnut at mouth of ditch; thence after almost losing hope of recovery. : c'tmh with the meanderings of the on account of the failure of so many | bianch 24.00 to a point a little above remedies, finally tried Folev's Kidney I wild cherry; thence North 691-2 W. Cure, which lie says wa s "just the 25.50 to a stake and white oak point- tiling" for him. as four bottles cured ; <1 *’ 8 ! thence N. 14 1-2 W. 24.40 to a him oompletelv. He is now entirely 1 R tone at the beginning, except one- liclf acre in West corner, which be longs to Southern Railway. (d) . A certain piece, parcel or tract of land lying and being in said Slate and county, and beginning on the State line in B. O. Jenkins’ line cn a stake, and running with C. C. Hughes’ line down the branch to the York road; thence up said road West rearly to another road that runs nearly north to follow in said back to State line; thence with said line to the beginning, containing two (2) acres, be the same more or less. (e) . A certain tract or piece of land, situated in Cherokee county, and State aforesaid, adjoining the lands of B. O. Jenkins, J. F. Jenkins well and free from all the suffering incident to acute kidney trouble. Cherokee Drug Oo. Be thoughtful of others; later in life, when we realize that we have of ten been neglecteful of those who loved us. come the vain regrets for what ‘'might have been.” Mr. John Riha. of Vining. la., says, “I have been selling DeWitt's Kid ney and Bladder Bills for about a y#ar and they give better satisfac tion than any pilj I ever sold. There are a dozen people here who have used them and they give perfect sat isfaction in every ease. I have used __ _ ^ them myself with fine results." Sold (and W S. Wells,'deceased. beginning by The Gaffney Drug Co. in the Antioch road, leading from B. | O. Jenkins’ and running nearly North Be careful; otherwise trouble may | with said road to J. F. Jenkins’ line, follow in your wake; the “con' man i about thirty-nine rods; thence South will sell you gold bricks and the pro- 2 4 1-2 W. thirty-one rods to a small I nioter will brand you as an easy i gp an j g ]j oak; thence South 88 East ma '*' k - 41 poles to the beginning in said An- 1 tioch road, containing four and one- half acres, be the same more or less. Jn tllffeC ri r h r we’ on, or .bow p,e„ a „ unjust will have the screws on you. n group of men and women in New York with the view to arousing senti ment against premature burial. “We Hdney complaint kills more peo- than any other disease. This is to the disease being so insidious iat it gets a good hold on the sys- Brussels gallery, is being circulated by 0 [ achin K back they think that • 4t Is only a muscular weakness; when urinary troubles sets in they think it. will soon correct itself. And so it Steel In Place of Leather. Steel bands or-belts as a sulistittre for ordinary leather belts or mpe drives have been introduced i»y 11 fai ls with all the other symptoms of j tory of Cburlottcuburg. Germany The baby is taught u lot of “cute’ things that are awfully impudent and saucy a few years later. insist Upon DeWitt's Witch Hazel • Salve. Thefe are substitutes, but there is only one original, it is heal ing. soothing and cooling and is es pecially good fop piles Gaffney Drug Co. do not ask you to Join a society," they i kidney disorders. That is Just where say, "and want no money contribution, the danger lies. You must cure these . „ , . . .leak or diseased kidneys. Gaffney words to mal c sure that you are dead ; people testify to permanent cures, before they consign your body to tho , ... „ • p “ red -“' 4 !o^ s s c cr»y.?°T 1 rji ssss v e t( . ou \ hat. Kidney Pills to be a valuable remedy — for any trouble arising from the kld- Copper Mirror*. neys and I willingly recommend Mrs. S. Joyce, 180 Sullivan St., Claremont, N. H-, writes; “About a years ago. 1 bought two bottles of Fo ley’s Kidney Cure. It cured me of a severe case of ki^ey trouble of sev eral years' standing. It certainly is a grand, good medicine, and I hearti ly recommend it.’’ (f)- A certain lot or piece of land, situated in Cherokee county, South Carolina, bound on the North and West by said B. O. Jenkins, on the South and East by my own line; be- glnidng on a stak-e in Ponder’s branch on ih£ If you do smoke, smoke good ci gars and fewer of them. When you think of Indigestion think of Kodrtl, {or it is without doubt the only preparation that completely di gests all| classes of food. And that is what you need when you have indi gestion or stomach troubles—some thing that will act promptly but thor oughly: something that will get right at the trouble and do the very work itself for the stomach by digesting the food that you eat and that is Ko dol. It Is pleasant to take. It is sold by The Gaffney Drug Co. Some people are very careful not to let their pocketbooks feel a re ligious thrill. e State line my old corner, and runs with said line Eastward 3.87 chains to a stake; thence South 131-2 East 6.10 to stake in York road: thence with road South 84 W. 4.50 to a stake in Ponder’s branch in my old line; thence with my old line North 10 West 6.50 to the beginning, containing two and one-half (21-2) acres, purchased from C. C- Hughes. (g). All that piece or parcel of land, known as the William Borders land lying on the West side of King's creek, bought of Pinkney Houser, Jane Goforth. L. C- Wesson and wife and H. K. Roberts, to wit: Fifty acres, more or less less from Pinkney Houser, three and one-quarter acres from Jane Goforth, more or less, forty-two acres, more or less from L. C. Wesson and wife, twenty-two across from H- K. Roberts, as shown Risers are b y dee(i * rorn Pinkney Houser, Jane DeWitt’s Little Early „ small, safe, sure and gentle little I GofortlL L. ^C. Wesson and wife, and pills. Sold by The Gaffney Drug Co. Caneer can be cured without cut ting. Simple plaster need. Cure guaranteed or money refunded. R. A. Cnrlstenbury. Box 277, Gastonia. N. C Nov. 12-tf. CLERK’S SALE. Such belts may be reduced t<» about one-sixtb of tbe size required for lent ti er belts, they do not stretch, pulleys may lx* made narrower, ami in so^iu* cases shafts may be smaller, Either ordinary pulleys or pulleys with a ( special covering to increase frictiou may be used. A belt four inches wide and one-fifth of an inch thick trans mitted 200 to 250 horsepower at a belt speed of 0.400 feet a minute, and tests have shown that steel belts may run H. K. Roberts. (h). So much of all that certain piece or parcel of land, known as the “Collins tract,” which may lie in Cherokee county. South Carolina, the said tract of land being supposed to lie in the State of North Carolina. TERMS: The purchaser or pur chasers to be required within one hour after the gale to deposit with the clerk of court, a sum equal to not less than one-fifth their bid, and take tbe receipt of the clerk therefor, as so much of the purchase price of the land purchased by the respective pur chaser or purchasers. On January 1st, 1909, the respective purchaser or Notwithstanding many efforts, in* Several years ago I suffered i^ooo feet a minute. — Philadelphia Sold by The eluding those of Faraday fifty years f 101 ! 1 P a Ins through the of m 7 1 Record aco, t„ oMalu mirror, roaled will. cop. I > 11 al “° ha<l and ; per InHtca.I of ,l,c materials common!,' «* "♦"•’"“d 1 Whar. South Carolina, York county. In the Common Pleat. Martha E. Robinson, Catha J. Adams and Wade H. Jenkins, Plaintiffs, against J. F. Jenkins, Thos. C. Jenkins, J.; purchasers will pay to the clerk of Harrison Jenkins, Birdie Jenkins, court, as aforesaid, a sum. which to- B. O. Jenkins and Ethel Jen- 1 gether with the sum paid upon the kins, Defendants. oay of sale, will be equal to one-third Bv virtune of a decree of partition, the purchaser’s bid or purchasers’ in the above stated case, I will expose bid, and will then execute to the clerk to public sale, before the court house his or their bond, secured by a mort- door in Gaffney, S. C., on Monday, gage on the premises purchased for May 4th, (salesday) 1908, between 11 the balance of the purchase price, a. m. and 3 p- m., the real estate de- payible in one and two years from scribed as follows. January 1st, 1909, bearing the legal (a). A certain piece or parcel of rate of Interest, and will then receive land, bounded by the estate lands of ( big deed of conveyance from the J. M. Deal, deceased, J. F. Jenkins, B. clerk, for the premise purchased; any I)on t over cat. Success, money nor used for the films, no grout success has fame ever brought a womoiit man a { KH , n attained until recently. Now It is ew s omac . claimed that a process invented by Orino laxative Fruit Syrup is best!** ^* ( hattuuay successfully solves fo r women and children. Its mild tbe problem of producing mirrors with action and pleasant taste makes It ; a film of metallic copper which gives i preferable to violent purgatives, suck ' os brilliant reflection as that from a * as pills, tablets, etc. Get the booklet silver mirror. The use of this process and a sample of Orino at Cherokee for coating gins* with thin layers of fc Drug Oo. copper to la* used for other purposes •ubssrlbs for Ths Lsdfltr, $140 • than those of mirrors is anticipated.— Youth’s Companion. ambition or ene’gy. I believe all this suffering was cause d by the failure Multitude of Covsrod. of my kidneys to remove the arlc ^ 4 M- poison from m y system. When I saw <ln previous^palntlngs^*Pd Doan's Kidney Pills advertised, I ob tained a box at a drug store and af ter using them a short time was en tirely relieved." for 10 to 1| If. la pan oxide of sin O Jenkins, Elijah Hardin and E. E Hardin, known as the Aaron Wihlso- •re nnnt plantation, on waters of King’s [creek, in Cherokee county, covers de-; The above described premises, or plantation originally contained one fine veers, because tho L. 4 hundred and fifty-nine acres. Seven Qnaood oil hinder pn~f> acres of the above were sold and con- white land, and veyed to Elijah Hardin in the year “ ‘ " ‘ the deed Fore sale by all dealfs. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn C Buffalo, Ne w York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name- Doan's—and take no other. OXlde Of Kino—- j pure White lead, and vtyeu 10 unjan nnram in you help to "«*** the paint by mix- 1£97, which wag excepted in Ing three quarts of linseed oil with of conveyance from Callle purchaser or purchasers being privi leged. however, to pay all of the re maining portion of their bid, which shall remain after the first payment herein directed to be made in cash cn January 1st, 1909. Purchaser to pay for all papers, and be let into possession under the clerk's deed. The sale of the premises will in no wise effect the rents arising from the Jenkins, lands for the year 1908. nor in any- eaoh gallon of paint Ita done in 2 the widow of B. O Jenkins, deceased, wise effect the occupation of tbe pre- minutes. Makes coat only $1.10 per gallon. Smith Hardware Oo. L. 4 M. Paint Agents. Subscribe to The Ledger, $14$. to the plaintiffs and defendants, dated mises by ths parties now in posesslon, until January 1st, 1909. pj&j Novemwr 1st, 1907. hereinafter men tioned. (b). A piece or parcel of land, situate in Cherokee county, South J. A. TATE, . Pi's. C. C. C April 17, 24 and May 1.