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OH! HOV That is the ex lady that enters < a look at our WHITE GOODS, JjA Now we don't claim to many goods, as some pe liof ...l.it UKil TT 1 Kl L nc IKIVC IS CHEAPER THA We do our own \ floor, no army c THEREFORE WECAN Al A visit to our sto Special for next w< 2^c a yard. L. N. M< The Quoter ( ytAiAiAiAiiiAi<AiA.*A*AniaA>i<ul Ifi??n?nnnn??i ||^7feMa I Glei ' ? By DAVID MACLUI ^Copyright, 1902, by ^,TT^'f?,'T'Tyi'yrTTy>7^yf^y? ""In God's 11amo," 1 cried, "wba thing lins happened?" lie put his mouth close to my en and said hoarsely, "The laird's gnu daft." "What moan ye, man?" said I, push ing him from mo, and my heart falrl; stopped in its heating. "Has aught c til befallen him?" "And If to gang daft is no' an il thing," lie returned, with a show of re entment at my words, "then 'deed tin maister's just in his or'ner and doin One." "Hoots, ye silly body, and what c my laird?" "Hearken," he said, coming ncnre and glancing about in the dark as i he feared an uncanny visitor, "I'd lit say but auld Tibbie is at the bottom t It." "At the bottom o' what?" 1 domain ed, beginning to lose patience. "Spea eot, man." c "At the bottom o' the laird's awfi daftness," ho said, with his face clos to mine and his long nose poiuting ti me. I said no more to him than "Curse y for a gomeril!" and hurried up the coui and into the house, where 1 asked fc the laird. He was not In the house, and non of the people knew where lie was. made diligent search within and the went out to inquire further. The lair had not been home for his dinner, bu that was not an unusual thing; and n one within or without could toil of lii whereabouts, though I made active in qulry, nor yet was there any unusua news of him among them. J started out to llnd (Jeordie again flunking I might get at the menniitj of ids words and learn something tlia was doubtless hidden in them, but t servant lass told me that CJeordie am another had gone to Dulquharrnn tt see an acquaintance who was lying a ... - ... me point or death, so I was fain t< content myself with waiting in tin fef ^ ' hope that the laird would be home be fore bedtime. /" I went to my ofHce In the west towei and sat down by the open window fae Jng the Killoelian bay, looking ou across the court and the Abbey foil highroad to the far vault of blue when the sky and water merged and meltc* "* In the darkness. It was a still night still as death, and the sky was eleai with stars sharply glittering in th lift and only a faint breath of wiw coming gently in from the sen, cnrrj lag an odor of brine with It. By th light of the stars, for the moon hn< gone down nil hour earlier, I could so the waves in long lines moving ovc the surface of the hay and breakitr in littlo crests of white as they tolle silently shoreward. As I sat I heard the clock down th stairway announce the hour of nil* nk'lit ntwl Hum I l?oo?ul ?1 - wtu (ijvii a. llUdlU Dirjlft IUIIIIII along tho court pavement. It was nc so dark but that I could make out tw figures approaching as I leaned 01 eagerly, and one of these was (Jcordi (^lllespie back from Dalquharrai Down stairs I went and found him i yio ball, but It was plain that he ha seen more than a sick neighbor at Hi Clachan and that the ('Indian hrei had fortitled him against any cv spirits that might have haunted th long, lonely road home. When I entered tho hall, he was tr.i lng to sing in a weak, maudlin key a old song I had heard In our parts man a time, one verse running: "Na saddle tae me the white," he snk "Xa saddle tae me the brown. But saddle tae me the swiftest steed In a' my stables roun', For I will neither ent nor drink Till I bring my lady hame." .When be MW me, be wade a trrer >* v Cheap. pression of every ourstore and takes lCES, EDGINGS, ETC. have more goods, or even as ople BUT WE 1)0 KNOW N IVLOST PEOPLES. vork, sweep our own >f salesmen to pay, FFORDTO SELLCHEAPER re will convince you. eek, "Printed Lawns" dNEACE, Low'Prices. ;-.* ? ^<$.SxS><* J j ster of 11 nhaughd fS ! the Mcrshon Company xx T| -?- Sxi^'i><$xS>$> . > <& , i?t j>v5 ?-T-JN* r>? ivsXj-NixitG 1 oueisancc, being quite gone In drink, aiul said: r "Hy George, Maister Gillieuddy, it'll 0 be line for tbe laird, tlie niclit, and he'll be like to inak' a giiid niclit o' 11 l" in the glen amang the warlocks there, y but 'deed I saw nane o' them the niclit ' mysol', for tin: Dalquharran ylll is a grand drink to gar them bud back." ' "What ken ye o' my laird?" I asked. "Did he no' tell ye, Maister Glllieml* dy? Then belike lie's no gotten back 1 free tho glen." "What mean ye, man, o' my master's 1 being in the glen? The laird wad be mad to wander i' the glen at sic a time r o' nicht." 1 "Mad, say ye," he replied, and wlial ' with drink and his uncanny fancies >' there was a wild, horrible earnestness in his ione, and ids watery eyes stared I* at me, and his long nose seemed to k wrinkle and sharpen?"mad, say yel And wasna that What I said to ve lana sync when I mot ye nt the gate?" "IIow ken ye my master is at the glen?" said I. "1 kcnna that he be at the glen the nlcht, hut at the glen he has been, Maister Gillicuddy, a' wheen nichts ere this, for those een o' mine line seen him," he replied, with a hiccough al the last word. "And was he there last nlcht?" I asked. "Aye, was he. and Hie niclit before that, and yet the nieht before that and inair forcliy, by George, and it's a fact!" lie came close to me with unsteady gait and. drawing bis hand across his slavering n aitli. balanced himself before me and raised his unsteady forefinger to be impressive, lie had drink enough soughing in his head to make his speech thick and husky, but yet his brains were keener now tbnn when he was sober, and his speech was ipiite us terse and intelligible. "And let 1110 say to ye, Maister Gillicuddy," he said, ' I "that the laird and auld Tibbie line some fearsome business on hand, mid the auld witch has east her spell o' r i evil owcr him." " i l(w wo---? ? - ? - ?... 'uiii.i'u, iiiiu ne cast * j upon me a look of maudlin wisdom, as * ! though lie had laid before mo the reB j suits of some deep cogitation and de' served well of me for his service. 1 * stood in silence watching him as he ' turned away, with a hiccough, and left a me, beginning again to tune up to the ' words: "When my guld laird ram' hame at e'en Inquiring for hts lady, d Some did cry and some made reply, t, "She's iiwa' wl' the gypsy laddie.' " i' At the close of every line ho gave a g drunken hieeongh, and ids quavering d voice was far out of tune. Hut as lie left me standing alone there was the ie echo of that old rhyme he sang still ]. running in my mind, and I found myg self unconsciously repeating (lie words it nud remembering other lines that L 0 scarcely knew 1 had knowledge of. it I passed out into the great hall and c looked up the lonely, dark stair. How i. often had i seen my laird and his huly ii coming dow n that same stair in Impd pier days! The words came to me no u the soug had them: ,v "She cam' tripping doon the stair, j| ller fair maids all nroiin' her; As soon as they saw her wcel faured faeo 1 They cast their glamoury ower her." Ilad some glamour been oast o'er my lady, indeed, and were my lainl and '' all of us bewitched with some cruel ^ Spell? Old Tibbie's fearsome presence seemed to come before me at the ' thought, and the clock, heavily measuring off 1 lie minutes in the dead still1 noss around me, I could almost fancy I to be the sound of her step upon the stair and that her bent and twisted >(l flsuro might emerge out of the shad* Iwns the tirat clew to my iruititer's hidden life, a momentary hut certain j alauce loto the deutha within and a ?^;>?v. u* ??? < ows (lint were around tne. I went out into the court niul stood thinking. As I stood in the hush of the night with the stars above tne and the dark old house behind me, silent and historic with the memories of generations of lairds and ladles cllngipg about it, I heard the clock on the great stair again strike out It was the first hour of the morning, and ns the sound started solemnly out of the stillness to die again in silence the very air seemed to die out of the night and an all engulfing hush, like nn eternal death, v.uovu uivuuu I1IV-, UIJI/IVSOIVC JUIU uypnlling, when, like nn echo from far away, en me a sound stealing upon the breathless air, and the voice of one singing broke weirdly upon the stillness and caihe down from the black shadow of the house. I could hear agnln the words of that some old rhyming song I had but now dismissed from my mind as Geordle wandered with drunken steps up the winding tower stairs singing in qunvering tones, broken and maudlin, with frequent hiccoughs: "For I will neither eat nor drink Till I bring my lady hame." There was a weird suggestion In ths I words again that recalled my long lost lady, and they sounded like words from far away as they came down to me In the stillness of the night from the tower hanging black overhead. I could not think of going back Into the bouse and to sleep, so I wandered down Into the road and looked up and down. Lonely enough looked the Ab I could make out the form of a man, bey font road stretching nwny Into darkness, but clear for 200 yards under the lights of the stars. 1 stood leaning against one of the tall gateposts looking up the road In the direction of Pinlawn and Dalquharrnn, and It may have been but a space before the hour of 2 in the morning when 1 thought 1 heard a footfall in the stillness. 1 waited and listened. Again I heard it It was a stop approaching from the Pinlawn way, and now I could hear its regular tramp along the highway. When a few moro moments had passed, I could make out the form of a man outlined against the starlit road behind him. lie was walking along at a fair j/utv, jiuu uih Humury lorm upon me rond at that time of night and the startling tramp of his steps in the stillness gave him a character the mystery of which made me cower as one In a fright, nor was my feeling the leas that 1 could well prophecy who It was that was coming to me, and still I found myself trembling with strange emotion, when my master, the laird, turning in at the gateway, strode up the Approach to tlie house. "And it'll be just a fine nicht for a dauner nhoot the country, my laird?" quoth I. "Is that ye, GIlHcuddy," said he In his common way. "Aye, it's n lionny hlelit, but we'll just gang in thegether, I for I hae a wheen questions to ask o' | ye." CHAPTER IX. I FOLLOWED* the laird up the court, or rntlicr It were more truth to say I walked side by side with him, for he had taken a grip of my arm In his warm, kindly way, and we two wont, linking it together, to my master's room. Not a word did he say for a good five minutes, but sat before me at the open window, with the mystic, faint light of the stars dimly showing me his fea turos. At last ho spoke. "Oilliouddy, is it no' a bonny niolit?" "That it is," said I, and I wondered I at Ids words. "Look oot, Oilliouddy, at the lift and toll mo is it no' a grand thing to Bee those count loss bright Mtnrs glinting in tills blue dome and shining doon through sir a vast o' spaoe upon us?" "Aye, my laird," I said, "and I think nne man oan look up at sic a grand spectacle wi' reverence and nwe In his soul that is no 'a child of Ood, for when a man's nature Is touched wt' sic things it Is but the touch of divinity, and the great Architect o' it a' is speaking unto him." tie paused for a little, leaning against the window, and then saJd: "Aye, 1 lino sometimes sat and lookl ed up at them till I moist thought 1 t was getting nearer them. Aye, but i there's a whccii o* them, and I line ! thought that they may be Just each o* } them a pure soul that has gone before ; and aye waiting there for some soul that hasna yet left ils earthly prison." I was surprised at this saying of his, for it was far and away out of the manner of his expressed thoughts, which never in the months of his hopeless resignation to fate's decree had suggested sympathy with any condition of nature or el roll instil ne<Hi IToro I whisper out of his soul that had sat with sealed lips through so many long ' days. j At last I knew that he thought my lady dead and gone and had still a gentle strain of old memories singing like tho echoes of a sweet song in his heart, and I thanked God for it devoutly. " 'Deed, my laird," I said, thinking to bring him back to more practical converse, for I ofttlmes feared that some hallucination might possess him, "ye hoe a thought that does ye credit; but, man, there's a bonny earth that lies beneath the stars, and there's mony n pure soul clad In the garment of flesh. God has given man the power to get glimpses of the sublime for the purpose It maun be, I'm thinking, that he may just mak' use of Its influence In this everyday world o' oors. For what use can the spiritual l>e If Its holy and sublime whisperings be no* to mak' us happier and mulr perfect here nmang men? Ah, my laird, the stars may e'en shine ns they line shone for ages, but men nro just o' anlther sphere and may e'en bide their time beneath them, and there's an end o' it" "And ye think," said he, listening to my words, "that the spiritual nnd the earthly ore no' in communication, do ye? Weel, a' men hae different minds, and a' knowledge Is no' given nllkc to men. Noo let me ask ye what think ye o' the deid? Ca? the deld come to life, think ye?" I was startled by his question, nud I began to have a vague dread of my master's drift, feeling that his question was not one that should come from the Hps of a man whose reason was either natural or wholesome. "Can the dcld come to life?" I said. "And that's a strange thing for a man <f yer sense and wisdom to ask. It eanna he. There is nae resurrection o' the body in this mortal life, and there is little profit in asking such questions or in meddling wl' such mysteries." Ho listened to me with a graclousness which was in keeping with his kindly nature, and yet I could see that he listened as one indulgent to another In error of opinion, and I thought 1 saw in his face an expression of something like triumphant superiority, as though he had some thought and belief that gave him confidence in his p<pver to differ with me and refute me. "Ah, Gillicuddy," he said, "do ye no* ken that unbo some It is given to know the mysteries o* God mair than others? Man, ye hae never been touched wl' the hand o' God; ye hae never known the grandest and the dlvinest love that man can know enter into yer heart and soul and mnk' ye just blessed wl' the Joy o* it?a love far too deep to breathe its last wl' the breath o' life, a love stronger than death, a love that trembled wl' the exquisite sweetness and satisfaction o' its aln being. My God, Gillicuddy, ye ken na ething o' it, o' the grace and purity and sincerity o' a great love for the lovell est and tenderest woman that was e't r nwde for man to worship and absorb into his whole nature, a woman tin,* was life and love and hope to ye, tbavt gave ye rest and peace and content ;tml made the sun and stars to shine fur jre and the nobis to grow green for ,yc*: Oh, Gillicuddy. what ken ye o' It? ^Vl' sic a love that curntw to man a man maun be changed, and, being changed and let into the mystery and rapture o' It, he may wool feel and hear what other meu never ken. What recks It that the grave lias chuiped Its cauld arm's aroond the body? It canna hold th? spirit Ilut, oh. \?-<*dd It no'Tx<fluekto' get comfort frn?e lt?< words?" 1 luui never hoard my mast?.r^-ponk of his heart's possessions In-fore, fqr I know that they were sacred toisufcli. a* inon, hut now ln^t ho depth of his feeling ho spoke and with an earnestness which was pathetic and impressive beyoud expression, aiul I bowed In spirit before the dignity of hlH theme and felt indeed that I could not (lare to approach this altar of ids worship, sanctified ns it was by the sacrifice of hope and happiness. What a weirdly beautiful, nye, sublime, thought was in his soul! Ah, rwhat yearning aspirations were his to rise to a spiritual companionship! Hero was my master walking among us and by his side a ghost, a deathless spirit ever his companion, to whom he spoke as to a living reality, straining his soul's ear to hear and interpret a .voice thnt was audihle to him ulone. A watcher he was, ns it were, in his lohely night tower looking out for a star, a soul lifted up and hending its gaze to search the illimitable spaces of mystery to find the substance of a sweet and sacred memory. [to be continued.] /?Harness\L flnH Tea mo make /oar hor n?M M aofl M * gtoT* 19B VT W ?od ? tftofh win by /^k\ ?1 ualns ivrika bin w ks tmUk\mI ?? ? Oil. Von can V / IW1 lengthen 1U IUb-makelt Bul lM? IWlM M lone M It BSR ordinarily would. 1 EUREKA r 9 Harness Oil I makoo a poor looking bar- Bi mm Ilka now. Mado of H iBf puro. heavy bodlod oil, 00pact ally prepared to wilte{Mi wand (he weather. W j^KI Sold everywhere |H HI/ tn pane- all elaee. BI Mi* If STANDARD OIL CO. H, (O Thla signature ia on every box of the get\ah it Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tnbiote nifeMenMMvsMMSiotsv 509 / Oi'best lancl in sale. I offer m M E N G On ex KKAS0NABL1 The place has an excellent tenant houses and all the co FOUR P, One of 140 acres with a place is four miles east of town between the Little and Big Brc For tern THE TIMES OFFICE Bargains in 7 acres in town belongii Tosche's Branch. One 2 room cottage near I on our price. The Lumpley residence or One wide lot between R. Farms in different sections We have what you want < People's Real 1 i Charleston & Western Carolin; Railway Company. AUGU8TA AND ASHRVILLE Short Lin Schedule In effect Dec. 20tb, 1001. Leave Augusta .0 05 am 2 55 p Arrive Greenwood 12 39 pm Anderson 7 10 p Laurens 140 pm 6 36 a Greenville 325pm 1130 a Spartanburg 3 30 pm 0 00 a Union 7 30 pm Saluda 6 33 pm Hendersonvillc.. 8 II pm Ashevllla 7 16 pm Leave Asheville 7 05 am Union 8 45 am Spartanburg 1215 pm 4 00 p Greenville 12 22 pm 1 46 p Laurens 12 45 pm 6 55 p Anderson 7 25 a Greenwood 3 07 pm OOOp Arrive Augusta 5 40 pm 11 35 a Leave Columbia 1120 a Newberry 12 42 p Olinton 1 25 p Arrivo Greenville 325 p 8partanburg 3 30 p Leavo Spartanburg 12 16 p Greenville 12 22 p Arrive Clinton 2 22 j Newberry 3 06r Columbia 4 30 p Fastest and Best Lino between Newbor and Greenville, Spartanburg and Glei Springs. Connection from Newberry via Columt Newberry and laurens Hallway. For any information write W. J. CKAIQ, Gen. Pass. AgL, Augusta, Ga T. M. KMMRKHON. Traffic Manager. UNION AND GLENN SPRING V. RAILROAD COMPANY Schedule Effective Nov. la, igo Tram No. 15 loaves Union Milll Station 6:15 a. i A.Tiveti Buffalo 6:27 a. i Tra.^ 17 ieav<*a Union Mill Station 4:30 p. i Arrives Buffalo 4:42 p. i Train N *> 1? ,Wive8 Buffalo 12:15 p. i Arrives Uu Will Station 12:27 p.i Train No. lb ieavos Buff. to . 0:10 p. i Arrives Union i BJJ Station 6:22 p. i All Trains I) Kxcept Sunday. The Union and Glenn Springs Hs road Co., is now pi spared to handle passenger and freigh * business betwe Union and Buffalo. Jl freight for Bi falo will be handled wUmt from I Southern Railway del* 't or from I Union Cotton Mill Stath w. Ticketo Buffalo will he sold at the Union Cott Mill S'at ion. We now lia\ e a pt| passenger coach in operatioi r. C. Duncan, Geo. Al. Wright President '-en'i Manag MONEY TO LO AJ On Farming Lands. Long Time. Easy Paymei v No Commission. Borrower pa actual cost of perfecting Loa E. K. PALMER, Columbia, 8. C. T W..r tl . V? AMiAUA, Union, 8. C. P. O. Box 288. 17?6i to write for our confidential letter before ap plying for patent: it may be worth money We promptly obtain U. 8. and Foreign PATENTS SffiT r^ffl?FW.ASi! the beiil legal service and advice, and oni obargca are moderate. Try oa. SWIFT & CO., Pmtoni lawyers, Opp. U.8. Pitwt , P.C VCRES" l the cotmty for ^ PLACE tremely S TERMS. nine room dwelling with eight nveniences of a country home. ^STURES. bull and pig tight tence. The on the road to Lockhart Shoal# >wn's creek, is apply to or to "i", iv. rAi^iviJtiit, Real Estate. ng to estate of Judge Wallace ?u Cnitting Mil paying big interest i Church street. m N. Sprouse and C. W. Whitiook. * 3 of the county. >r will get it for you. Estate Agency. '. 1 ' 1 i, . SESA.UOA'KD ) Air Line Railway. Double Daily Service. & Between New York, Tampa, Atlanta, Ne Orleans and Points South and West. LO . IN EFFECT MARCH 2nd, 1902. ~ SOUTHWARD, m Daily Daily m No. 31 No. 27 ? Lt. New York. P II 11.... 1*2 55 p m 12 10 a m ~~ Lv. I'hiladrlpliin, 1* K It.. X 29 p hi 7 20am 111 Ly. Baltimore, " 5 45 p ra 0 34 am Lv, Waghinpton. W.S.lty 7 00 p m 10 4o am Lv. Richmond, 8. A. L. Ky 10 37 p at 2 20 p m i.y. Peterabnrg. " n 20 p m ? 00 p m ? Lv. Worllna, I 42 a in 6 25 p m Lv. Henderson ' 200am 55tpiii m Lv. Knleitch " 3 24 am 7 27 p 111 m Lv, Sou. Pines " 5 27 a m 9 27 p m m Lv' Hamlet, S A !,.. 6 40 u in 10 3% p m ^ Lv. Columbia t " 8 40am 105am Ar. Savannah " 12 05 pm 4 40am ? Ar. Jacksonville " 3 50 p m 9 05am Ar.St, Augustine " 5 10 p in 1 55 |> 111 m A~Tampa " 5 00 a m 5 40 p m No. 33 No. 41 iID ? Lv. New York, N Y I'&N t 7 55 a 111 8 55 piu m Philadelphia " 10 16 a in II 26 p m >m Lv, New York, O 1) S5C'o'.f 3 00 p 111 Lv. Baltimore, B 8 PCo f 6 80 p lii ? Lv. Wash'ton, N & \V S B .. ..7."..' 6 30 p ni ni, I.v- P.,rl.1, u ? ? - Lt! Weldou" , i 35 L* J" ?Sam ?la Lt. Norllna ? ,}%!lm Lv. Henderson " 1 25 a in 9 in ^ W Dr. Raleigh ? ,'55" ?c?,,ni . ???-:__**? iS{S Lt. Wilmington 7 : : 5 3 ) 5 P 111 Ar. charlotte r o 23 :A ^?? ? iViVY ... . * 1,1 10 32 p m Lt. Chester ? 9 aa i",;: ...K... !S : |?S;s r Lr. Athens ? 2 2lV.? t*3*m ALA.!?.. t ? ffisg ??;? Ar. Augusta, c A W c5 40 p m ~ ? O. Ar- Macon, c of 720p(n ii: aasrrw *w r isis Ar^New Orleans, LAN 7 25 a 111 H Ar< Memphla 4 15 ? "j-g-J? ^ __ _ NORTHWARD ~ ifl QQ. < ' Dally Daily r a. , No. 32 No. fW Lv. Mcmphls, N C A St L 12 4.5 noon 8 40 p ni 00 Jg.HMhT.iy facTim m Yl' ?T.f,rlean"' L^N 8 00 p in .. lt. Mobile ? 12 30 a m Li^MoDtgorarJ^AA W P_ ?? m V 30 p ? ra- hr. Macon, c of <;. TooTiT ^. n, L?. Augusta, c Si Wc10 06 a m it ass?' ? ? ;?? man Ar. Greenwood " 5 14 ? ni .%% P m Htl Ar. Chester ? 7 ,7 \\ "! '? ? ei) A.r- Carlisle r, 5.1,, * ?* * 1,1 nf- * *> ** m he W; Wilmington, " jfltt'p'm -I lie 1,T' " II 00 p in 7 40a m ^ 1st"'riStS .fli11 ?n i.t. Henderson ? 12 411 # rn 12 as ij " bMr {'* w?i 1 HMam 1 ? p Lv. Weldon " 6 00 n i nn J: A.r:. P.0.r,8",ou\h " ~ I "> a m 5 8ft p m ' A N Ac WSl! . ."." ."."71 ~""s'u 'ii'iu H ' Ar."Bs7tIiftofe7 H S 1'"(>>""'.-.7-7-'7~~y 5 ^ - ,,, . A7:.No?.Vork,OD8 8c? F5oo7T7S Ar. I'htla'idiia, N V I'AN fft 40 p'iii s'l'n?" [yj ***.?? !!\V ?J2SS , m No.";u No.'m" Lt. Tan pa S A_L Ry 9 00 p m ft 00 a? AiiKUSl lnc 8 66 a mi lilS) p m Lt. Jacksonville " 10 10 s ni x i?i .. V? I.t, Savannah " I ft.1 p m .. , . ' tfl. !'t-("0,u?VU 1 " 7 05 phi .".(Warn Lv. Hamlet 10 40 pm 8 "ft a m vfl Lt. Southern pines " 11 33 p m 9 oo ? " y P* .W' :: 'Wain ,?Sa? n Lt. Henderson " 3 07 a ni 12 km ? .? ?* .. " Lr. Petersburg ? * 5'ttanV Tm ? m Ar. Richmond " 6 3(1 a 111 . ? ' SSSKS"-?iS' "SiS ,?SfS ??E^L- i?i= Ill UJ * j&iitriil Time, (^sti^'n'riiiiel R. E. L. BUNCH, ?ieneral 1'aHAencrer Aunnt ^ m k Savannah, ({a. 1 W. K. (CHRISTIAN, J1 ' A. <i. P. A., Atlanta, <Ji?. " ToCart n Cold in One Day Tiflw* 'laxative Jiromo Quinine Tablets. Alia dr?cgi?t.s refund the money if it , ! falls to are. F. W. C.rore'h ?)<tnat.me L [ ;W ?i'a'? Ifr 'v r Dr. Mason's Depilatory removes j su perfluous halra permanently from j an.r pert of the body. $4.00 a box. Joh o H. Mason &0o.. Hanoook Marv | lane ' 27-ly