The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, October 05, 1900, Image 3
Announcement.
We, W. T. Beaty and F. G. Austell, take pleasure
in announcing that we have formed a co-partnership under
the firm name of
u/ nr rpatv j?. rc\
i ui^riL 1 i ^ w\y?
For the transactioon of a cash business in Dry Goods,
Notions, Clothing, Shoes, Hats, etc.
In making this announcement the manager, Mr. F. G.
Austell, wishes to state that lie is thoroughly trained and
familiar with everv detail and requirement of the store in the
line of goods which we propose to handle; that the business
of the firm will be conducted on strictly business principles;
that all customers shall be treated with due consideration
and courtesy, and that nothing shall be promised except what
can and will be fulfilled in good faith and with rigid exactness.
The world moves and Drotrressive neoole must move
with it or lose their place in the race of life. There has been
a steady evolution in prices, terms and manner of doing business
in all lines of trade, and the most careless observer
must have noted that
Long credits are being eliminated and
the cash principle is gradually asserting
itself.
Many of the largest houses in America have adopted it
and their success is inducing others to follow. The system
has passed the theoretical stage and become a
Real Condition.
* ... .
We will invite your attention from time to time to the many
points of advantage of the cash system, and ask you to
think over them carefully, as a matter of business importance
in which you are interested. We are in the field for business
on square, open and above-board business principles.
We don't expect you to give us your business on sentimental
grounds but understand fully that to get it we must show
you in
Cold Figures
Which way your interest lies. This is what we have set out
to do, and we adopted for our motto "SUCCESS." May
the future have in store for us both the realization of this
hope.
YOURS FOR BETTER BUSINESS,
W. T. BEATY & CO.
rooHooHooHoonoo^ooO^ , ? . ,,, ,
Z. Delano s. which was also ntiito close
o a r;ipt g atl od
V J I I \ | "To-be sure, yos, certainly, I know,
o |?i f?% ? rp o Well, well. If you will not be persuadQ
| | L ( ? |] o eil. Hut (lie carriage Is entirely at
$ ,1 VJ 1\ 1 X % your disposition. Is that not so, SuO
O setter
:: BY MAJOR ARTHUR GRIFFITHS. It occurred to me that the duchess
was not altogether pleased at this offo
Copyright, looo, by It. F. Fcnnad: Co. o hand disposal of her carriage. So I re
fused the kind offer and left them with
ooHoo#4oo4fooi^oo4iooH ? ,
the pleasurable sensation of having
made a couple of charming new aeas
sue spoke a deadly pallor over- b'-'b.t.!i.cts.
spread her face, which was high color- K':1' uas "llotbi,r nc.p:alntnnee. l!
ed. as is often seen in very fair haired \ n,i-l,.tos?t:ul ^ whether friend or
women, even when still quite young. ,,n s" ? <!1'
Iler husband had returned silently. I snnveshaiding, si psbod creature whom
, , , ., . 1 had seen so otten that evening In
might have said stealthily, and alio , , , . . ,
? . . , . , , . , , , . rectly I went cut 1 saw dsn emerge
~4F first had caught sight of him standing , ' , , ...
. .. ? .... . from the portico o! an unfurnished
there behind me. Why was she thus . ' , . ,
... .. , ? . , ? house and follow me to the very duo
terrified? Because the duke had heard , ? , , .
. . , _ . , In Prince s (Jaidens.
liCr lust words? .. .... , , ...
... . lie was still on the watch when In >
Whether or uot the Duke of Ticrra ... . . . ,
0 ., . , .. .Mrs. Collinghnm"Smith s. having outid
Sngrnda had even heard his wife ... . . . .
. .. .. , . nothing to detain me there?no sum oi
when so earnestly counseling me to be . . , , , .
, , i.*4i Frida I-alrhohne, whom I had hoped
upon my guard, I was unable to judge; . , , . , . 1
' . /, . . , ..| to run down, i would now have eon
at least, he made no sigii. Ills manner . . . . . .
was perfectly qu.ct and natural, and , ,
he spoke la nn unconcerned tone when footst(.|ls, ir ?? sa,,s.
he pressed me to keep mysent In the taotlon ?vcr
front of the boa , w0?!,l ha ,v taken tlnte and I felt
At the oextlnterval he said very
courteously: lie you propose to stay ? lva, nll.eutly , ,?|dulght.
for the -Cavallerla Itustlcanu? Would , m| L, , d , ?,ls ?ot
you care to accompany us? Our cat- ,0 , M i,.a|rholme. her
r age s here. Susettc will he very moU cou|d lv0 n0 ue ,
A pleased to present yon. c, ..y [,rlda ls , B0UK,.
W , ?i',?r'",V01y SO?d' ?/' 1 where. That Is all 1 know." she anshould
like to go very much If I may swcrcd ln a w raro(r
run away early. I have a couple of son,noleu, volco> a3 no doub,. 'ahc ?ad
a s on g . answered a dozen similar queries. "But
It was a curious and not unimportant , , sccn her for an hour or
circumstance, when v owed by the nl01.c i do wish. Mr. Wood, you would
Ight of later events, hat the three , aa? ? , her ? ah
houses I was to visit that night were plalntlvc?..
wUhln a stone's throw of each other A, , ?.?adcrcd about dejectedly, all
The flrst. that of the Dos ltlos tn a- oncc , ?c.m| ,.Ca taln Wo0d. Miss
later,.to which I was Introduced by ,..a|ri,0,m0 wants to speak to you." and
the Duke and Duchess of T erra Sn- , gaw a liatcd H , ,,h ? f , d,
gratia, was in Rutland Onto. The next. ncs3 |n |da f pointing to where
Mrs. CoUinghntn Smiths was u ,.-r,d? Bn, behind a great mass of How
Prince's Gardens, and the last. Lady orj azaiea!j
R?1 0'* ,U. srldnce,.8_?atc- _.My Sl.e was as gracious a sight n<Tever.
''V, , "u " u", one of the fairest and brightest of a
carriage, especially when they learned crcat?d for ?,c de? * ,
I had not far to go. This near neigh- mcll( 0( m?nkln(1_ Hcr dr*ss , b ,
ho,hood was remarked on by the duke , d >
when, observing that the reception did ,va, ? |o 1 w|tll ,
not grcaNy amuse me he asked f I ,hal ? , '
was not dying to get to my danelng. tmm t|,u foutl ? ? ,
and whore, exactly. I was going. t,er sunny hair to the tip of a tiny shoe
ken must let us sen,I yon on to Ued ? u?|e , k ?
Prince s Gardens In the carriage, he ? *
said, very civilly. -We have brought UOst absolutely charming woman I had
you out of your way to a not aery cvcr gecn 6
bright cutertnlnmcnt ami now we ... , *
ought to speed your departure. We < on in shall speak to you,'
must stay on here for on hour or so began Miss Frlda. with a sniff. "What
more, hut there Is no reason why yon have yon to say for yourself? Are you
should." awaro that I kept you throe dances"?
I protested that Prince's Gardens was 1 took a seat by her side without
? i ai . answerintr. and then, crivlncr wnv tn ?n
only a rew yarns on, rouuu cue corner, i . - ~ ?
In fact, and I really preferred to walk J1*.011 d,d ?ot extlct,y 'eel. la splto
Besides, I only meant to look In for a ? 0 ^r.ea^ cb?nBe In my fortunes, I
moment My real destination was Ladv ln her face.
r)
k
r~
"llenlly, Captain V.'c I am at a j
loss to understand t!.!; mo.-g !.!!??*,:? ]
proceeding," the wiat c.\ vith ;
statellm ss; "something mi: t l?av
happened."
"It littK? something: most r'muge :n !
surprising. I have be. a looking l'< r
you the whole day. la the pork, at the
opera, at Mrs. Collingliam Smith's, to
tell you that?that---that? !>o you remember
once say lag that you felt perfectly
safe with rue?"
"I withdraw it altogether. I now relieve
llrmly that you are a dangorom
lunatic, ami 1 will ask you, please, : ?
take ino back to mother." She half
rose from her re at.
"Stay?you used to snv tliat there
could be uo nonsense between us; that
I was only a pauper, a harmless, in|
pjjjj
She was the mor.t absolutely charming
woman I had ever scot.
significant nonentity, and impossible?
whereas if 1 were a duke, or an American
millionaire, you might?perhaps"?
"Do you mean to say that you have
been deceiving mo all this time? I altogether
refuse to be hound by any
unguarded words I may have uttered,
and if you persist shall al.->o decline the
uuuui ui %>uur actjua nuance.'
"Hear me out, at any rate," I pleaded,
as I seized her hand and gently
drew lier back, for she had now got
up and was leaving me like a frightened
bird.
Then I blurted out the whole story,
in that clumsy, blundering way a man
lias when his heart is full and all his
happiness depends on what he is saying.
Still never a word from her, until
at last 1 cried despairingly.
"Frida, darling, my lirst thought
when 1 heard of this fortune was of
you?say you win share it with me."
"I think you have been most abominably
deceitful and underhand," she
faltered. "You should not have kept
it from me, I had a right to know, 1
should have been told?I?I"?
"I only heard the news myself this
very morning."
"But just think what people would
say. I should be called a mercenary
wretch, accused of selling myself for
your millions."
"They shall be yours. 1 will make
them all over to you at once. I do not
care for them one bit, except that they
give me the right to ask you for this."
I took her gloved hand and kissed it,
but she herself, turning her blushing
face up to mine, offered me her lips.
When I left Prince's Chute I seemed
to tread an air. We had been among
the last. Frida and I had lingered on
anions the azaleas till Mrs. Fairholme's
patience was fairly exhausted
and she came herself to end the tetea-tete.
I think she saw enough in our
conscious faces to comfort her with
the hope that the pains of her cliaperonage
were approaching their term,
nnd she heartily Indorsed Frida's invitation
to come to lunch, and come
early.
Then 1 saw them into their carriage,
refusing their proffered seat, for I
wished to be alone with my new found
happiness.
The night was fine, the air soft,
under the pale sky, for dawn was near
at hand, and I stepped out gayly, with
all the buoyancy of oue with whom
the world went well..
1 was brought up shortly and sharply
to the realities of life by running up
plump against my "shadow." The
man who had stuck to my heels so
pertinaciously all the evening was still
011 the watch.
llut he was not lurking in the ie"nceno
nC n <> f -- ??* ' ?
W.MWV9 vi. ?v iiuuoc 1 lilt'w 111111
face to face upon 1lie pavement, and he
could not escape me.
"Look hero, my line fellow," I cried,
tackling him at once, "tills has gone a
little too far. Take yourself off, now,
or I shall give you In el#arge. Come?
walk."
Then I caught sight of his face under
the gas lamp and instantly recognized
It.
"What, you. Mr. Snuyaer?" I laughed
aloud. "Upon my word, I am infinitely
obliged to you. But really you
might have saved yourself the trouble.
And?pardon my saying so?I don't
think you do It very well."
I lie would not own lin fit oil "rnira
guv'nor, onsy," he answered, with a
well assumed snuffling voice. "Wot
aro you a-drivlng at? I've as good a
right to bo 'ere as you ev. Wott*
amiss?"
"I tell you plainly, Mr. Snuyzer, It
won't do," I continued. "I don't want
you, and I won't have you dogging inj
footsteps wherever I go. It's not the
way to get round me, and you'll lmve
to drop it. Begin at once. (Jo your
own road?that way?and I'll take
this."
I pointed him down the Exhibition
road, and I myself turned into Knightvbridge,
and walking eastward, half disposed
to do the whole distance on foot*
But a hansom came up out of eormewhero,
a mews, or a side street,, op.
overtook mo on the road, and th** j
driver, after the,custom of his clliss, ]
* ?
Cob, sir! ( j. up to i ly pu< i
tlit-l sill*-!:!:: '!>!-: .1 \ ; .uxly.
At lost. *r. t . i' r ?'.! < !, m:-l t.?.
end Ms hi:.) rUinliy. ! jui... 1 !i:l: the
ea'? stntl pave my a lu.w ; ::: (!lar^es
BtU-Ct. ?
I had barely 1'"!.' .1 a oh-ar aiul
Uait. '.l back to prv' . over i r many
s;:i anil ma'.dv i ,Ie
events, of Hie day. wren I iv. !i:: t.i;
tlie ea!> was taking Ike y.t is: dime-,
tion. For :Mine :; .ii and i:u-; ::ipivUcnslblo
rcasou, tko driver ha I turned I
round ami was head;::;; westv ..
"iteiv, 1:1, IllI" 1 shout;:!, lifliiy* t::?
11::p. "Where sire you .'.oil::;?''
"Wol's up".'" an: wered the eabi.y in- i
tsuh ini; , >io iic- ijuiivu i:?? "j
I don't know my way uhout? Stow
it, or"?
The alternative! novor hoard, for at
that moment two men jumped up oa
the front tread of the c::'> a: 1 ? m nlug
the doors threw themselwu v;v a
me. Their weight a! no would it : .
suliiced to overpower . t > .simme
me, and crush out a 1 resistance. i
could do no more than i\e voh e to
one frantic yell for help, for now the
strong. pungent email < f th'.u-ufu-n
under my nostril.; and the vain :
glo I made with fast, in cava t r
told plainly that they i.e.I call'- ! i:i
another dread ally# r r.d that I war. ahsolulely
helpless in their hands.
CnAITEIt V.
ritOM caul j. sxuyzei: o:- :t::. sr.a. kava.
band & rons, new yob:; city am)
chicago.
In my earnest desire to farther the
wishes and interests of your lirm I
visited the gentleman named in yamlast
plea: uro and put before hint,
briefly and with much cirair.nspeotion,
the reasons why he should secure the
services of Messrs. Saraband & Sons.
Captain Wood did not respond very
cordially to my proposal, which he
guessed was not serious. It is my ret
tkmi conviction now that ho would give
tho earth to reconsider that liasty and
mistaken reply.
I shadowed him tho evening of the
flrst day, now just 43 hour.-; ::g \ following
him to tho llydo park, to his
club, to id: house! lu llydo pari: only
one person spoke to Mr. Wosd. I
knew him by sight and name, a half
American, Jimmy I.awford, having
crossed with him once in iho same
Cuuarder and taken a hand in tho
same game of poker in the smoking
saloon. lie passed tlua as an ocean*
drummer, although some said lie was
engaged in the secret service of the
federal government. Now, I take it,
lie just loafs around?just the sort of
chap to be1 in tliis crowd against Wood.
I did not hear what lie said to Wood,
but when leaving by the park gates L
noticed Jimmy in close talk with a
hansom cab man who had got off his
perch and was very particular to hear
what I.awford said.
J only caught the last word or two:
"Any time touight or tomorrow night.
You'll get the olilee; mind you're on
the tiUCQ vee."
1 shadowed the captain all that
blessed night, to tho opera, out west,
to several parties, and spoke to him,
or rather he spoke me, roughly, too,
at the door of a house In Prince's Gate,
when he was seeing two ladies to their
carriage. That was not quite the last
of him, for somewhere near Knightsbridge
he was picked up by a cab, and
next thing it comes back, ten miles an
hour, cabby standing up and Hogging
ids horse like mad. It was so neUr
daylight that I got a view inside the
UUUWI1I <19 ll imSSl'll. lilt; I till nil. 1
caught sight iu that short moment of
a mass of people inside the cab, two
or more men struggling and lighting
with some one underneath them.
Of course Captain Wood was being
kidnaped and carried off. I reckoned
that up on the spot, and gathered myself
together then and there to git'e
chase to the cab. I followed it steadily
He was acclny tico ladies to lltcir ca rriuac.
down the Kensington road, losing my
distance, of course, very fast. By the
time I reached High street I had lost
the cab.
But a man at an early coffee stall
had seen it pass, holding straight on
the main road toward Holland House.
I heard of it again at St. Mary Abbott's
terrace, and was told that it had
turned up Addison road. I traced it
by Holland road to Shepherd's Bush
Green, and there a herring was drawi}
across the scent.
I was on the track now of two cabs,
one going by the Shepherd's IJush or
Uxbridge road, tlie other by tlie Stareli
Green road. I followed the tirst, and
drew blank. It was a nlghthawk working
home to bis stables, and where, by
and by. I caught 1 lie chap settling into
liis crib. He swore he hadn't had a
tare for the last two hours, and I
dould see lie was speaking *ruth, for
lis horse had not turned a hair.
i went back then to the Starch
Green road, asking all and several for
my galloping hansom cab. There were
very few people about at this early ,
hour, only the policemen, and they I
looked very shy at my tramp's clothes,
| itiVliur qp answer. At last a couulc of
TRy a"r
Women sufferinj;
from female
,;:' i>"?nful "*en fe*#-.'
V'i^' not
??^" ^ \ : *3 to lose hope if
tT-. '< V_wV' , ^doctors cannot
v'-. i ?^holp them. Pliv, '
,'k ft sicians are so
#.:^V " ^4l busy with other
V disease* that
W/f / :~: W& \hcy,doinotr 5iil"
y /' f V V ^ dersiand fully
// k Rr.l tin* iMW'llliiif nil
' ^ meats and the
delicate organism of woman. What
the sufferer on ght to do is to give
a fair trial to
fr'&ZMZil/Q ffi&GjSfaator
which is the true cure provided
by Nature for all female troubles. It
is the formula of a physician of the
highest standing, who devoted his
whole life to the study of the distinct
ailments peculiar to our mothers,
wives and daughters. It is made
of soothing, healing, strengthening
herbs and vegetables, which have
been provided by a kindly Nature to
cure irregularity in the menses, Leucorrheea,
Falling of the Womb, Nervousness,
Headache and Backache.
In fairness to herself and to Brad"
'Jeld's Female Regulator, every
suffering woman ought to give it a
trial. A large $i bottle will do a
wonderful amount of good. Sold by
druggists.
? S-M I Or i nicely il!ustra* 1 ir--c ! k oil tlie suSjeet.
The Bradfleld Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga.
decent f.trm folk bringing in i nil: told
ino thoy had passed a hansom wi.h a
Kvorn horse on the far side of Hammersmith
bridge, in the district of
Barnes.
By the t!;:ie I reach-. 1 the Strathallan
road it was broil 1 daylight, i found
a long road cf detached villa hot:- v\
each in its own garden, many with
stnhlns !nt inintn.? I
I walked up and down this read twice,
that one of those cottar a was ju>l
suited for lite purpose of sequestra tin;:
Captain V/onl, if he could he got
to it. lie could he .driver, straight into
the stable yard; the cab would be no
more seen when the < < ach hous door
closed behind hint, and no one, neither
the neighbors nor the i lice, wouhl be
a bit the wiser as to what mischief
was being worked inside.
It took mo just two hours to examine
the entrance gates of every villa house
with stables in that road. In three
of them there were the new tracks of
wheels marked plainly in the thick
lying summer dust. I could not discover
which were the most recent, but
I carefully noted the numbers of these
houses-, meaning to put a watch upon
them all.
I called tin the boy Joseph Via its, a
very smart young squire, t o. from
t lie eliiee in Nor foil; street, as soon as
I could get a telegram through, ily
the time lie arrived I had narrowed my
investigations to a single point for
further observation.
The day lqtd so far ndvane. <1 that
the business of life was well It-gun. I
saw the blinds drawn up in two of the
houses, the front doors opened, the
women helps busy shaking the mat
and washing down the stoops. Presently
some of the young folks ran out
into tho gardens, and 1 could see the
family gatherings round the breakfast
table -, from which on the early morning
air canto the smell of hot coffee and
l-Jugllsli break fast bacon, with the
temptation of Tantalus fur a starving
man \\ln> had been out all night. All
this while the third house remained
closed, hermetically sealed. It -was
closed up, tight shuttered, not a sign
of life in It. When I reached my lodgings
in Not folk street 1 was pretty
well washed our. Hut* I turned in f
an hour and at 10 a. m. woke mi. !>
refreshed. As 1 dressed with care 1
ponder? 1 deeply over this business
and the coarse that I show! 1 adopt.
My tir.-t and most urgent duty was t.>
secure the rekaseof Mr. Wood, always
supposing that my gentlmmwi was the
person actually carried off in the cab
At present I hud no certainty of this,
only a l it more than strong suspicion.
Vet If 1 could ascertain that he had
not returned 1 onie I should be justilied
in taking surmise for fact.
First 1 went : > ('large:? street. The
man th re r 1 ered me. but looked
strangely i impaired for Captain
Wood.
"V a have mat In.ad news, then?"
lie said.
"What" hi tiit.mar !. there to hear
re thar. i have t > t !i ; uV I a 'trd.
nettled at t!sin!*!:? . s . ne was. be
: iI or : i\ ;;;o!'llUtg and
f ! II ; I I: IN . '
,'l: > ; ! ! y. u : .y ? Do yon
!?; !!.".< it'."
"I i f! -v l!:v in's own handwr'.t'.n/:."
"W! ;.t did lso ray < : :: I won
quite 11;: fdnnh. v. - y
j:- . i\ Inst c'dd l: t v.sust t-> si)o v?" it 1 :
inucll.
"lloro, i? ' :t ; y it's : t
oil liis < < f o v.\ r id u will understand
v. hy. IV.'. ;I.Is' nr.; so
t lll> lli'lt 1 .1 . ' !'< Si t : '
It war. written on ?;vny nr-te | iper
i:i a fair i liaiai. 5 it s;r
Rav: ry. MM n ;:l ' driflll : % 5!> rM
slipped upon t t.e i.:i'.'. ...I I v. > ill!' .Ml I .1 . .
the S >ni 1.1 ".I | . ;!.* pi'- I mc tip 1
re tiihin; t: I . :;ro if t I'il I sli .'I I.
able to move lund or ( . I I ; ..c ':? > P :i i
ine by bcarir portmanteau c.f t! ; . i!.
i?tf gown, ilittoci, chetkbeu!:, I tti i =, p an I
the rest. Yours, \V. A. Uoou.
17A Laburiiuin Street, Harrow It .id.
1*0 BE CONTINUED^ i
nafwWMJi.' ? t. > M'Hf r?i ?m II ? OT?
:.;. ; <v i\ hy> .\o riiS.
.\ : i ; i i icrca^':ti 10 per cent,
i .. o w.igcd \va< uiMile by tbe
f k aid It?'a?!irg Coal and
! ?:? ( . : .amy. It in eai?l this move
t on i'nestiay by aimir
'M . v t-v.rry c dihry ii tbe anCroats
. i
l!,r.\'s This?
W'r t ;'i One Hmidied Dollars lie*
! \ ' i.l i'nlutlll tll.lt Cillli
i n . ! I v li.iii's t'.itanb Cure,
i. t :ii \ : v a ' ? " -
TI.ImUO.
V. . ;i. i.V: !. IlllYC tllOWl) F.
. >. > . hr:: e;. J 1*? \ear.?, and be:
v ' in i< ;iy honorable in all buai4
a--' ?!!.? and liuano'ttlly able to
i ai; i;; n;y obh^.uions made by their
linn.
i i' vv T> ; \x. Whnlerala Dmcr-;i
: . : il l. ?> Wai.dimj, KlNNAN
?.V M m.yin, W!i>-i:e Druggists, To..
-i .v \
ii : i's <".>!;?! iii <T:i.* is taken internal'\.
: n*? ii tl. i.p'ii the blood and
in:' ni ii-. Mini..:' Mil .ili" system. Price
i by all Druggists.
Testimonials free.
iia.i's l bj i ills arc the bes*.
A n r.'le of two tbickli
i.i e'.-' f .c-e'o\b is preferable to
o - <; c:: fch f r washing glaaa and
c i; o,
Ii Il.'jificiictl inn Drug Store.
"i);;e<!ay Isst wiuler a lady came
?!< n y dr.;;.: store and atksd for a
1 i 1 cc.:;;!'. n.edicine that 1 did
n : ' nve ia rt cU," savs Mr. C. R.
liie : i nlar druggistof OnA.
V. "?Siis was disappointed
i v.- ? : il !< knew what cough prep
j <ouu recommend. I said
' ' - ' ! c. u'd tret'y recommend
h'm'- ' 1t;gh Kemedy and
: < n ko a I of the
) :;!.er yiving it a uir trial
: * find it. wi?i th th?? money
bottle hack and I would
cc paid. Iti ;h? course
' ' ; . > i:c lady came hack in
i:!' a tricnd in med of a
: i'-- ! i- i: ?> atvl advised her to
hti} : <.: Chamberlain's Cough
y. I .oi!ci?Ser that a v? ry good
yc -, , ,1 ..j, Jbr ilie remedy. It is
to; (\ Duke, D/ug^i-t.
For sprains, av.cllings and lameness
th ro in nothing so good as Chamber?
lahi's Pain Bairn. Try it. For sale
by J ". C. Duke. Druggist,
I /AMY Saivi:,? Cream, one hslf
< uylt.l I' butter aud one cupful of
: r.nd ; utuiegaml the yolk of one
then add one cupful of boiling
water, aud serve.
Wleti you cannot sleep for coughing,
it is hardly necessary that any
:);c .- liotild tell you that you need a
| ft *.v d. l a t i Chamberlain's Cough
Homed y to allay the irritation of the
j :t* and make sleep possible. It is
. ...d For sale by F. C. Duke, DrugI
g 181.
Train s:rvice to and from Calves1
' . n l.n.i la en resumed. Labor, both
>:<; hd rud unskilled, i3 needed badly
a.;.; the contractors ami other empo-yG1*?
are offering excellent wages.
i r mrce uays ana nignts i suii.r.
i agony untold i'roiu an attack of
cholera morbus brought on by eating
! cucumber?," says M. K. Lowther,
; clerk of the district court, Centreville,
lov.a. "I thought I should surely die
J and tried a dozen different medicines
| but rdl to no purpose. I sent for a
b .tt'c of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera
a ul Diarrhoea Remedy and three
; d scs relieved me entirely." This
r-. jv.c. iy ie for sale by F. C. Duke,
! Druggist.
i . 0 people, of Atlanta, are on Frid
iy to nominate a mayor, who is to
s rvo thciu f.r tho next two years, and,
nr tlu- same time, they are to choose
two uldcrmer. arid several councilmen
' 1 r the fs;v.c period.
Robert Flouruoy, Brickyard, Ala.,
i iotr: 1 consider no remedy equal
i i) Dr. MoilVt'a teeth in \ (Teething
Powder ) for the irritation of teething
! and the howel troubles of our Souths
; e?n country. 40-2t
GOOD
PHEALTH
by the Quart.
Every bottle you take of Jobnstou'i
sarsaparuia means better health.
B and every bottle oontainfl a lull
quart. It makes better blood?purer
blood. For thirty years this famous
\ remedy has been creating and malajy
taininK good health.
.JfL Johnston's
0! Alfi a. 211 ^
a^cirbapanna
builds up the system, tones the
nerws, and strengthens the muscles
more promptly and effectually than
any other remedy known. The pallor of the
i cheek disappears, energy takes the plaoe ot
languor, and tho rich color of health flows to
the cheeks. Unoixuallcd for all disorders of tho
stomach and liver, and for all weakening complaints
of men, women and children.
Hold rtrrjwhtr*. Prlw, $1.00 p*r fall |Ur1 Mli
M1CIIIUAN DRUO CO., - Detroit, rilefc.
,f bOK SALE BY DB F. 0.
I1 DUKE, UNION, S. C.