The weekly Union times. [volume] (Union C.H., South Carolina) 1871-1894, December 02, 1887, Image 4
CODDLING ANARCHY. t
The execution of 'lie four Anarchist c
wretches who suffered Friday list in Chi- i
cairo is, whatever we may say of its justice cr i
necessity, a very solemn event in American f
history. It would, fifty or even thirty, i
years ago, have been considered wildly iui- ?
probable that, within this century, at least i
five men yvould have t) be hanged in (
the most prosperous city in the American (
Union for running amuck against the whole ?
community with bombs and pistols, and
that they would have tens of thousands cf
sympathizers in various parts of the couu- !
?r? A ...u .i.:? .i... 1
streets of Chicago nuy year before the war
would undoubtedly li?.ve bccu cousidercd '
insane. Nevertheless, it has conic to pass, '
and we must, dreadful as it is. try to gtt 1
gome profiler warning out of it, individual
as well as National. The lesson it conveys
is, in our belief, one which it behooves our
social philosophers, including under that
term philanthropic clergytnoD, and college
professors, and labor speculators, uo less
thau the poor Auarchistq to ponder diligently.
Some of them?we say it advisedly?-have
gone .'.nd are going far to
Bharc in the blood-guiltiness of this diabolical
Anarchist agitation by the encouragement
they give in their lecture sand essays
aud ''conferences" to the notion that
every man who saves or acquires in any way
more money than his neighbor, docs wrong
to that neighbor, aud that in short the
owners of accumulated property are a
band of robbers. What professor, or
preacher, or philanthropist, except McGlynn,
we shall be asked, has preached any
such rtrocious doctrine '{ Kvery professor,
and preacher, and philanthropist, we answer,
who tells crowds of ignorant and poo/
meu that there is something wroug in the
present constitution of society without
showing what the wrong is and how it is to
be remedied; and every professor r.nd
preacher who gives poor and iguorant men
to understand thar lu his opinion tho earth
supplies tho means of "abolishing poverty"
if its products were only fairly distribute!.
Every ignoraut aud poor uian who hears
this vague talk from this source treats it as
a confession of guilt on the part of the
people who own anything or arc not dependent
on daily wages. It keeps him in
a constaot state of bitterness and unrest.
It uiakos honest labor 1 atjful. aud the
very sight of pcoplo richer than himself a
cause of irritation to hiui. It makes listening
to tho blathcrski to of Socialist agitators
the great distraction and sol ice of
his life. It fills him with suspicion of or
hostility to everything which good men and
good women trv to do. either in leoishitinn
or admioUtratioD, or in charity, to cultivate
hia ambition and self-dependence, and to
incrcaso bis chances of rising in the world
by 'Jris own exertions. And, dually, it
prep&rcs him for the arrival of the bold and
desperate fanatic like Eiugg, who tells hiui
that be ha9 talked enough, that the time
has couie' for action, and that lie will show
^ I ?
him how to get his due froui the "capitiists."
Nothing can well be more instructive
than tho history of this ruffian's couucctioa
with tho Chicago crime. Anarchism |
in one form or aoothcr had been simmering
and stewing i 1 that city for ten years, I
and was every year reinforced partly under I
the influence of the indifference or contjmpl
of the local authorities and partly !
under the influence of the encouragement i
given it by social speculates and labor j
reformers in other parts of the country.
The Anarchists met, aud paraded, nud
harangued a good deal year by year, hut
nobody took them seriously, though the
duty of murder and ars#n wa-> one ot the
favorito themes at their meetings and in
their periodicals. Finally Lingg, the man
of action, nrtived from Europe with the
art of making bombs, and acted as tho
spark which was to produco the explosion.
He found the materials all ready for him ?
that is, a horde of excited uieu, who h id
worked themselves into the belief that they
. were the victims of intolerable wrong for
which there was no legal remedy. To nine
months after his arrival he had them ready
to uso his bouibs ; we know with what resu'.t.
Now, there is not a citv in the mnnlH
in which a little circl-j of malcontents of
this description may not be found?that is,
of men who think there is a fund belonging
to the publio iu general which the
owucrs of property have got hold of and
refuse to divide wit!: the poor, and who aro
gradually learning to hate every man who
eaves and wears good clothes.
Morcovor, there aro demagogues, both
native aud foreign, spriuging up in every
direction, some sincere and some knavish,
ready to make a living out of their d- lusior.s,
or to express them iu some sort of
crime.
Into the hands of these social pests clergymen
among us in their pulpits and pr< fessors
iu their lecture looms arc every
day playing, either by vague intiuiatious
that there is shortly going to ho a great
"social revolution," iu which we shall all i
have a good time, plenty to cat, drink, aud I
wear, and hardly any work to do; the i
"State" to find ur ad a living and to take i
a!' chic and anxiety "If our minds?and i
more nouseuse ol the same sort What i
the remedy is, how humau Saeicty is ever ,
o be at any litre anything but the product
if lsuutaii character a nil culture, they
level tell us ; but they intimate that if the
uduslrious d? cot promptly divide more
xecly with the idle, the frugal with the
niprovideut, the workers with the blathtrskiics,
there will be trouble, mysterious
u its nature and tin known in amount. If
he Chicago tragedy teaches anything it
teaches most impressively that this fooling
should cease.? iYvtr York Sun.
? - -?.
The Preservation ok Manure.?All
intelligent farmers now recognize the rapidity
with which land i< rendered more and
more unproductive by the constaut succession
of grain crops. They also recognize
in the manure pile the remedy for this
evil. But while farmers all agree on the
value of the manure, they very often,
through custom, treat their manure pile in
a slovenly and careless manner, while they
pay careful attention to minor details of the
farm yard. Too great strccs cannot be
laid on the importance of this subject.
The first mistake commonly made is that
of pitching the manure out beside a building
and allowing the water from the caves
to carry off the most precious part of the
fertilizer. It is rcmnrknbl i how utany
farmers there arc who are intelligent aud
thoughtful in other res-wets, but who year
alter year lose hundreds of dollars by this
neglect. Another mistake, frequently made,
is that of throwing out the manure heller
skelter and leaving the pile too kio.-e. The
atnumnia in the manure is one o( its most
valuable components, and b.-ing a volatile
substance a large amount of it goes off in
the form of gas and is lost to the farmer.
Sonic, recognizing this, rush t? tho other
extreme, and pack it so tight that in a very
short time the pile is lire-faugcd. lu this
respect a happy medium should be obForved.
The pilo should bo packed middling
tight tight enough to avoid tho
cscapo of auiuiouia and loose enough to
avoid fire-fauging. Tho farmer should
watch his pile, and if he finds the ammo,
eia escaping, which lie easily could detect
hy tho smell, he should pack it lighter. If,
on the other hand, lie fiuds, oil inspecting
the pilo, that it is getting .all baked, he
should stir it up.
Any ouc who observes the care which is
ordinarily bestowed 011 the trimming and
neatness of a straw-stack, cannot but be
struck by the contrast with the careless
manner in which the manure is throwu
together, while the littor is inuicusely
more essential to the farmer's prosperity
than the former.* The niauure pi I ? should,
if possible, be kept under cover, but if this
id not convenient, n neat cylindrical pile,
packed properly, will go a groat way to
avoid the loss of the valuable properties of
the manure by rain. A very good plan to
counteract this difficulty is to hollow out
arouud the pile several good sized holes,
into which the water, after Gltcriug through
the pile, will settle. A dipper with a loug
handle should bo made by the farmer, and
in every four or five days in rainy weather
be should scoop up the liquid from these
holes and place it back on the piles. It
should be remembered that the liquid manure
of animals is nearly niiic times as
valuable as the solid, as it contains an cnormous
proportion of nitrogen. Farmers
have a vague idea that the liquid is valuable,
but a large proportion of tlicui, nevertheless,
allow it, to a great extent, to go to
waste. One of the most effective ways to
pieservc the liquid manure, is to provide
an inclined trcuch behind the animals, at
the lower end ol which there should be
placed a trough to catch the liquid. A
more couvcnient way is to soak it up by the
bedding, but the farmers of this country
will Gild a few dollars properly laid out in
the construction of the stable floor to be
moticy well spent.?Practical Farmer.
J)lVKttSlFlEI) FaumiKU.?It is a wellestablished
fact in commercial circles that
it is possible to over produce in anything,
and consequently diminish tho immediate
demand for it, and for a time its practical
value to the producer as well as dealer. It
is natural that farming should be no exception
to other kinds of business in this
regard, and oftentimes the cause of meagre
prices for certaiu farm products may be
found in the fact that farmers have been
too eager to produce tlieui, because some
body has ''struck a bonanza" iu cir cultivation.
Ono man's success in any business
is energizing to a host of men who
hear about it, and who then strive to ape
his characteristics with the hope that they,
too, may acquiro his success. As a result
a largo number get "stuck." The lesson
t?* be drawn from such proceedings is ono
of economy of force, namely, that it were
belter to expend our force on more than
otic thing, so that if the ono thing fail we
have yet left a few sources of income with
which to keep above water. Or, if we wish
t> make a specialty, let us try something
that peop'e have not lost their heads on
and see if we can not be the lucky man
who st irts the rush instead of nn individual
who follows iu his wake. Iu other
words, strive to lie the progressive individ
j;ii. in ?\ew Kuglind :? surt of mixed
liusba'dry seems safest and best, although
if a man has his eyes open he may uow
ind then s:c something that lie can pay
iearly his whols at tent ion to. and get large
'jturns fur a trivial outlay.?Xno Enj.
Fanner.
: ?
Tub Value or Sawdust.?A correspondent
says he can buy sawdust, made mainly from q,
oak timber, for twenty-five cents a two-horse |
load, and asks us if it will pay him to haul it ^
houio to his farm, one mile, for manure- We
answer?yes, especial ly if he h?s n miry barnyard
from which the valuable properties of 'o
the deposits arc liablo to go to waste by excess to
of rain or snow water. Sawdust of itself
thrown over the Innd would act as a fertiliser ^
to I lie extent of the potash it contained, which
would be of just the same amount as if the
dust hod been reduced to ashes by fire?and a
mechanical benefit might be derived from it in ?
heavy -oils, hut these two advantages would
uot be worth to tho farmer twcnty-fiv?~%pnts a
load and the trouble of haulinir. npDlvilx. etc. sy
The value of rawdutt as a manurial agent, at
chiefly lies iu its property of absorption. It *t
will tifke up, hold fast and secure the richness cc
of other su^lnnces and give it out at j)ie demands
of vegetable growth. If a two-horse *
load of barn-yard manure is worth two dollars,
nud if half its value can be saved from leach- a,
ing off to tho rivulets and creeks by one load b<
of dry sawdust, ouc can readily perceive ct
wherein lies its vnluc. We say to our corres* ^
pendent, then?buy all the sawdust you can at ^
tho price named and put on all your teams to ii
haul it, just so long as the liquids of your barn- si
yard deposits are in dauger of wasting. Bed ?
down cows and horses whh it, and Ihrpw lots
of it into pig-pens. Too many farmers neglect ct
this importaut matter of.providing the necessary
absorbent*, When so good a thing as saw-dust
cannot lie readily obtained, why not gather j
leaves from the forest or sea giass from the sea p,
and river shores, or turf from the fields?any- g,
thing, in fact, that will save a needless waste ?
of w hat has cost time and money to make??
American Farmer. X
? ? ?
Tiik Stino Removed.?Rostoo Tran- 1
script: lie put on his hat, started slowly
Tor tho door, hesitated, came back, sighed
deeply, and took the lily white hand in hiti
own and pressed it to his lips.
"Katie," he murmured, "I have waited 8,
long?O, how long !?for this opportunity. P
Will *you, Kate, will you, darling, be
ntiue 1"
"Henry," sho replied, with a look of
half sorrow and half of determination, "it
can never be." I
"Neve r bo ! O, why have you permitted a
mc to hope? Why have you encouraged 0
me, only to stamp upon my bleeding heart A
at lust J" . p
"I am sorry, Henry ; but -I can never
be yours. I have other objects in view."
' Other objects!"
"Yes, Hcury ; I cannot consent to belong
to any man. I intend that you shall
bo uiiuc." 1
I have for many years fed bran and re- j
commended it to others, and do not know o
any other food so valuable in winter to keep
tho system in a right condition, when Btodk are
on dry rations. Bran is for. winter
feeding what grass is in summer |-it regulates
stomach and bowels, and Aonblos
the animal to better digest and ?BHnilntc
the other food eaten. I would not ittempt .
to winter yearling oolts and calves vithout
bran each day unless I had a supplj of car- rots
for them. I also God it valnible in
fattening hogs, and considering there is
much less risk of cholera or other diseases
when the diet is part bran than if all corn. ^
? Waldo F. Brotcn. .J
For sick bendnche, female troubles, neuralgic
pains in the head tako l)r. J. II. MoLean'a
Little Liver nud Kidney Fillets. 25 cents a
vial.
Wohsk Than Native Neuboes.?
Washington, November 27.?Mr. Chas.
II. J. Taplor, minister of the United States
to Liberia, has tendered his resignation, to j
take efTuct in January next, lie Is now
in this city on a leave of absence. One
reason for his resignation, he said, was tbo
dangerously unhealthy climate. He had
also been disappointed in the character of
the civilized negroes sent over there, lie
said: ^'Instead of a majority of the civilized
negroes being honest, sober, iodustri- '
ous and self-reliant, I found a condition of j
things that diplomatic reserve will not al- 8
low inu to describe. The native Africans
arc superior in every way to the civilized
negroes sent there, and are susceptible of
the very highest civilization." "Thecoun- 1
try," he further said, "is a rich one, abound- I
ing in grains, timber and minerals, but the j
condition of things is such that no wide
awake man would care to live there longer
thac two weeks."
Look Out for tiie Uouue!?Washingion.
ViromW '? _Tk. J -
, .<#.? mi; uupunmcDi 01 "
agriculture is iuformcd that a person is 1
traveling through tho South representing J
himself as an advance agent of tho depart- s|
mcnt, and making contracts for board, iodg- J'
ing, fires, washing, &c, in the name of what
he styles the "Washington Agriculture *'
Society" for a party of men who are collecting
agricultures) statistics. This person is
described as a man of German decent,
about five feet eleven inches high about
twenty-five years of age, weighing about p
150 pounds, wears spectacles and is very
intimate on short acquaintance. lie is a
man of fair complexion, sandy hair, gjpy
eyes and has a light mustache. IIo gives
his name as 0. Iloffer.
11km A II K A in V *
iiuoviiin ur J\ UV ERT1S- I
ISO.?The first issue of the Broudaxc it) JO
Blakely, contained an advertisement, "A
boy wanted in this office." The next issue
of the Enrlry County iVcics, published alto Cl
in Blakely, contained tho following: "Born
to Mr. and Mrs. \V. A. Jordan, n bouncing
I baby boy." \V. A. Jordan is editor of the
Bro<tiUi.cc. Some people pictend to believe
I that advertising doesn't pay, but it docj.-tGulhbcrt,
Ga.y Liberal. I
I
The wise old Cointessc do used to rcark
tbnt there were three Co lies of men I
hich always amazed her. The Grst was
itnbiog trees to shake fruit down, when if
ey waited long enough t'le fruit would
II of itself. The second tjas going to war
kill one another, when if they only
sited they would all die naturally. The
irct was that they should run after woen,
when if they refrained from doing so
e women would be sure to run after them. ^
-Voltaire. \
- ?#i ? L
If von find indicnt innn of mil.it i l in vntir ^
stem take at once Dr. J. II. McLean's Chills '
>(1 Fever Cure, it will agreeably and effectually
adicato tho poison from your system. 60
ints per bottle, warranted.
Fob Dkuii.itt in Summkh?Westmoreland's 1,
klisayn Tonic. The bust Malarial Antidote, A
combination of the best known Tonic, alterive
and anti-periodic remedies. Calisaya bark
sing the base. Highly recommended for the
ire of Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Torpid Liver,
idury Diseases, Wane of Appetite, Loss of
trength, Lack of Knergy, aud General Dcility.
It enriches the blood, and acts on all
npaired functions of the Digestive Organs,
irengthens the muscles nnd quiets the nerves,
elieves habitual constipation. Will a positive
reventativc in nil malarial contaminations,
specially.adapted to weak aud delicate female .
institutions.
Nature usually makes a gallant fight against
iseusc, and when helped by Dr. J. II. Mcean's
Strengthening Cordial nod Blood I'uri
er will crndicutC it from the system.
*ew Stock of Millinery, j
I/f RS. MA11Y VINCENT lias just received a L
VI bcsulifful assortment of
WINTER IIATS.
These Goods have lieen bought with cure nnd
he offers them 00 per cent, chet.per than Inst f
eason. She respectfully asks the public and
atrons to examine her stock and to buy from
er.
Sept 10 30 tf
C
Houses to Rent. c
The Dogllll House nnd Lot ; also the 8
louse nnd Lot known os the .lames Goss place,
nd the House and Lot now occupied by T.J.
rcer. to rent for the year 1888.
Dwelling houses now occupied by Rev. IV.
Caldwell, S. J. Ray. nnd the Car- .
enter house. :
JXO. r. GAGE. 1
Ileal Estate Agent.
Sept 10 30 31 J
LUMBER AND SHINGLES. '
t
<
I WILL furnish alimitcd amount of Lumbe, j
and Shingles during this year, for CASH t
I reasonable prices. M. CI1A1HN
renk, S C. J
Jan 14 a tf
(
THIS PAPER
-ANDI
i
- Santhera Mtmtor'
{?ASD?
[) I X I E PAUMKU
The Great Farm, Industrial and ,
Stock Journal of the South.
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Dec- 10 49 Ijr.
REMOVED.
?THEJNION
MAR1ILE and (JRAKITE WORKS,
IAS moved front Mr. W. A. Kicbolson's'old
land up in front of W. T. Graham's store.
LARGE STOCK ON HAND !
t
vhich will be sold nt prices to suit tho times. I
If you have not pot time to call nt my office,
et me know, nod I will at once send my agent,
On. J. Leon Hitler, to see you, with a large j
ot of designs.
GEORGE GEDDES. '
Don't forget, the marblo yard bus moved up I
LOWD. (
April 1. 1;> if ]
1 g* _?Sea Wonders ex id In thousands of forms, j
I (J (J flbiit are surptased by the marvels of iiivenll||||ltion.
Those whor.rc in nerd of profitable t
JUU Uwork that ran lie done while living at lioiuo (
ion Id at onre send their address to Hallett A Co.*
orHand, Maine, nnd receive free, full information how 4
Ithcr ocx, of nil nges, can earn from ?.*. to |ier day
ad upwards wherever they live. You are started free,
apital not required. .Some have made over $51) in a
ogle day at this work. All succeed.
Insure your property/
rVT BARE AGENTS FOR TI1K FOLLOWING
VV strong and reliable Insurance Contsntes:
INSURANCE COMPANY of North America
HARTFORD iLsuruncc Company.
GEORGIA HOME Insurance ('nmannv
r--v
sriUN(iKIKI.I) Firo [anil Marine Insurance
impany.
WESTERN Insurance Company of Toronto,
mad a.
SUN MUTUAL Insurance Company.
If yoa want sound insurance give as a call.
GOSS & STOKES,
Agents.
l?Ili:i?X01NT AlR-IilNB I
LICHMOND & DANVIILE R. R
GREENVILLE & COLUMBIA DIVISION.
CONDENSED SCHEDULE
la circcl .June l'Jtli IHS7.
(Trains run on 75th Meridian lime.
NORTH BOUND No. id. No. 51.
eavo Columbia -fit tiOn. in. *10 10 p. in
rrive Alston II 50 a.m. II OO p. m
cave Alston 1 OO p. in. II 00 p. in
i!-;.... .? i-. .. ? i > -n ..
* ? " "
rrive Spartanburg.... 0 -15 j?. m. 1! 12 n. ni
" Tryon 4 07 a. m.
" Pallida I 57 a. in
" Flat Hock 5 27 a. ni
" llcndersonvitle... 5 02 a. m
" Aslievillc.. 7 00 a. m
llot Springs il 00 a. m
care Alston II O'.l n. ni.
rrivo Prosperity 12 -II p. in.
" Newberry 1 01 p. m.
" Laurens.. f.i 4'i p. ni.
Ninety-Sis 2 12 p. in.
" Greenwood.., 2 02 p. m.
' Greenville..., 0 40 p. in.
Abbeville 4 20 p. m.
" Anderson 4 00 p. in.
" Sencca <i 02 p.m. (
" Walhalla 0 20 p. in.
Atlanta 10 40 p. in.
SOUTH HOUND, No 02 No. 00
cave Wallialbi f8 00 a. in.
" Seneca it 17 a. ui.
*' Anderson 10 40 a. in.
" Abbeville lo 10 a. in.
Greenville It 40 a. in.
' Greenwood 12 00 p. in.
" Ninety Six 1 2K p. in.
" l.aurens S 40 n. in.
' Newberry 2 00 p. in.
' 1'rospcriiy 2 22 p. in.
rrivo Alston I 00 p. tn.
.cave Mot Springs *7 <10 p ni
.cave Abbeville 9 4'.) p. m
" llendcrsonvillc... 11 07 p. tn
" Flat ltock 11 23 p. m
" Saluda 11 03 p. tn
'* Tryon 12 39 a. tn
" Spaitanburg +0 00 a. tn 2 12 a. tn
" Union 3 40 a. m
irrive Alston 11 40 p. tn 5 37 a. tn
" Columbia 3 10 p. tn. :'G 30 a. m
" Columbia 5 07 p. in. 0 30 a. in
" Augusta 10 p.m. 10 30 a. m
" Charleston via S.
!. H. 11 9 40 p. in. 11 00 a. in
" Charleston via A.
'. L. It. It 9 40 p.m. 18 30a. m
" Savannah via C. &
I. It. 11 ti 03 p. in
Daily.
fDaily except Sunday
BMX,. Through Ctr Service.
On trains No's 00 and 01, Pulliiirn Sleepers
iclwccn Charleston an?l Hot Sprngs, via A. C.
j., and Columbia and Spartanburg.
Through passenger Coach between Charleston
ind Morrisiown, via S. C. ltailway, Columbia
uid Spartanburg*
TickcCs on sale at principal stations to all
loints.
On train Nos. ">0 and "?1 l'ullmnn sleeper licween
Charleston and Louisville, Kv.. via A.
2. L.. Columbia and Spnrlanburg. Through
msscngor coach beiween Charleston and Morrisown.
via S C. liy.. Columbia nnd Spartanburg.
Ins, L. Taylor 11. Cnrtlwcll Sol. Hans.
. !**'< Gen I
Jen. I'tux. Agent. j J'n.es. Agent. Traflic MannI
Columbia, ?S. C. gtr.
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Inthe SCIKMTVFIC AMKIMCAW,which has
the largest circulation and ia ths inoal influential
newspaper of its kinJ published in ths world.
The advantages of soon a notice every pe ten tee
understands.
This large and splendidly Illustrated newspaper
la published \VRI?I?I?Y at ?1.00 a year, and is
admitted to be the l>eal paper devoted to science,
roechanice, inventions, engineering works, end
other department? of Induatrial progress, published
in an/ country. It contains the nsmca of
all patent??* and title of ?very invention patented
each week. Try it four months for one dollar.
Bold by all newsdealers.
If you hav? an invention to patent write to
Mono A Co., publishers of Scientific Ajgorloaa,
[Harness Shop.
Having secured the services of a firs
class workman, it. J. Kimukkll, lit have
added to my already well established
Wagon ami Buggy business, a
FIRST-CLASS HARNtSS SHOP
where I am always prepared to make
harness, both buggy and wagon, and
saddles in the very best manner. I do
all kinds of
A -W -w ? ?
t>- n u tL~ X IX M. rX ,
; ami warrant every stieh of tlic work
done in my shop. Call and examine
onr work and get prices to suit the hard
times, before purchasing.
1 am still selling the
Jenxessee Wagons
AMI) L jJSWl
and liavc reduced prices to rock bottom
All in need of u good vehicle or a firs
class set of harness, cheap, will do wel
to call 011
JOHN RODGER.
Dec. l'.? r?o ly.
GO TO THE
UNION TIMES
* J *
JOB
* ^
PRINTIHGOFFICE,
?FOR YOUR?
NOTE HEADS,
1 LFTTKR HEADS,
BUSINESS CARDS,
LAWYERS' BRIEFS
And nil oilier kinds of'Job Printing (at
SPARTANBURG or COLUMBIA PRICES.
Good Work and Good !Mn
terial alwayH XJHetl.
ALL WORK PROMPTLY* EXECUTED.
iwu TERMS, INVARIABLE,
C. O. D.
( R. M. STOKES, Proprietor,
' TnttAnlion'11* revolutionized the wornI
H uQllTl flTl,,,,rl,|K la,t half centurly
I II II11 I 11111 N "t least among the wonders of
All I Ull llUllinventive progress is a method
r and system of work I hut can he performed ali over
tlio country without s?|iarating the workers frorn their
homes. Pay liberal; any one ran clo the work ; either
> sex, young or old; no special ability reijuired. t'apiiut
not needed ; yon are started free. Cut this out and
[ return to us aud we will send you free, something of
LTMI vul.... I ?
I? ....r.?ouvv .u ;ui., lum win svuri you
in business, which will bring jrou in money right away,
taster than anything cha in tho world. Grand outfit
l tree. Address True ?fc Co., Augusta, Main#.
R. W. T IN S L E Y,!
WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER
i
MAIN STREET, UNION, 8. C.
SPECTACLES AND EYEGLASSES A;SPECIALTY.
SPECIAL ORDERS SOLICITED AT ANY TIME
FOR FIXE GOLD, WATCHES, DIAMOND
ItIXOS, PINS, BAR-DROPS, ETC.
BEST GOODS, LOWI33T PRICES.
April 10 11 '.Ira.
nltewanlcd arc tliosa who ro:?.i Timw
11! II I II will find honorable employment (hut
II Mill I V w'l' l,o( bike llirm from tuvlr hom??
lLlUill V and families. Tlie profits are la ore an?l
sure for every IndictHons person. Many have made
and are now making several hntidrad dollars a month.
It Is easy for any one to make V? ami upwards |n?r dsv,
who !* willing to work. Kither m-x, you tic or old:
capital not needed; we start you. Kvcrylhing new.
No special aldlity required ; yon, render, ran do it aa
well as any one. Write to uant once for full particular*.
which we mall free. Add re** Sliijsou A Co., ?'ortlaiid.
Maine.
DAVID JOHNSON, Jr.,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR
No. a LiiwltmiKr, Union, N. (J.
Will prectico in State ami bVIeral Court*