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Unioi ft " dllnim M You are most cordia New ] You will find white the better than ever before. Then and Light E'er us. Gray will b White Goods, we have: White Mercerized Yarns, the 1 that with a high lustre. White Nainsook, plain and ch( White Pique, figured and plair White Scotch Lawn. White Silk Persian Lawn. IN Black Mercerized Cotton, a bea Black Duck, which is needed s< I n uliorlna rtf T.irrlif Pino Or# M- LI V 1 J * V iluish and fast colors. Ginghai; A new lot of 1 Albatross in light blue anc in the shades of tobac brown, b weight skirts. Please notice our new brai UL Special Advertisements Notices will be inserted in this column at t In* rate of words or less for 25c one is-ue. lour issues for 75c. Additional lines over twenty live words 6c a line. NKVTCKOFGAUDKX"SI-:I:D JN one cent papers. 1'ea.s ami lieans in bulk. While anil yello?v onion sets and ?seu.l potatoes at Scaij e's. rniiK spuing clothing has au-L rivoil at tlie Cotton Mills store. It. IO-T?A LADY'S SMALL OPEN J met-silver wateli with chatelaine [id Main street between the resiliences of 1 r, I. O. 1J (intt*r iiiiil Dr. S. .S. Binder. A ?? nable reward if left aL lliis ollioe. /~1 A LL FOR THE NEW XOUV_Vveunte Braid at the Cotton .Mills . Store. Tin: i y building j.( ?r.s?the Diwkins property has been laid of) in Daulitul building lots which are oiteicd for sbe. They front on tinea nito streets. For terms, etc., apply to ti-tf. S. Means Beaty. COME TO THE UNION UO'JToX Mills 1 tenartmcnt Store and see our line of Furniture. It. For sa ii??fi f reen taousand A N ?. 1 extra low country her.:I pine shingles. Also ten thousand second hand low country heart pine, hand made shingles, almost good as new, cheap. 7-:}t. D. A. Town sex i). H ave you gotten a mewos. tennoor Mattress from the Union Mills Department Store? It. One house and lot on South strict known as (J. II. Burketc's for sale. Apply to A. \V. Greene. fMrn. A CAR LOAD OF OI.D HICKORY /V wagons and line harness ju.it received, also a lot of Rock llil Buggies, it.'), < i? / ???. r.'....i f 1 c. VAXES' HOUSE AND LOT Vy. for sal a. Apply to .1. II. Ilartlc.s for terms. 10-Im. W ANTOD?SEVERAL PERSONS of character ami gojd reputation in each State (one in this county refill red) to represent and advertise old established wealthy business house of solid financial standing. Salary #21.00 weekly with expenses additional, all payable in cash each Wednesday direct from head office. Horse and carriage furnished wh? n necessary. References. Enclose self addresse I envelope. Colonial Co., 8dl Dearborn St., Chicago. Il-I2t RT P A N S Tablets doctors find a {rood prescription for mankind. The o-cent pac'tet is enough for usual occasions. The family bottle (<>') cents) contains a supply tor a year. All diuggist sell them. tf f GRE] OF THE Lly invited to come am Dress ( leading color of the spring and 3 is a demand for fashionable shn e worn more than was at first lustreless, aud White Linon customer. ;cked. White Albatr t. White Organ Cream Corde BLACK GOODS WE HA utiful quality. Black Albatr o much. Black Silk, ^ >en, Pink and Light E'crus see o n of select colors. ligh grade Percales sell 1 drab. Corded Madras with sn luc and dark green Bourette Noi ds and embroideries. ^?rm?r*ir" SEVERE ATTACK OF URIP Cured by One Bottle of ChamberIain's Cough Remedy. "When I had an attack of the grip last winter (the second one) I actually cured myself with one bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy," says Frank W. I'errv, Editor of the Enterprise, Shortsville, N. Y. "This is the honest truth, t at times kept from coughing myself to pieces by taking a teaspoon ful of this remedy* and when the coughing spell would come on at night I would take a dose and it seemed that-in the briefest interval the cough would pass oil' and I would go to sleep perfectly free from cough and its accompanying pains. To say that the remedy acted as a most agreeable surprise is putting it very mildly. I had no idea that, it would or could knock out the grip, simply because I bad never tried it for such a purpose, but it did, and it seemed with the second attack of coughing the remedy caused it to not only be of less duration, but the pains were far less severe, and T had not used the contents of one bottle before Mr. Grip had bid me adieu." For sale by Dr. F. C. Duke. Webster News Notes. Mr. Editor: Sunshine, wind, rain, warm, cool and cold weather come by turns while the roads remain unchanged except an occasional freeze which is no better for the traveling public. One may see team after team of tw ) mules iu harnes? to a nn? Iiorao wagon anil yet I ravel id next to impomible. I favor more tax it we get better roads, (less taxes would not make the roads much worse.) Public school. S >me compulsion may be beneficial to some extent. To go farther, the teacher's salary should be in accordance with the work actually peifjrmed with a chanee to strive for a premium. Toe monoy being apportioned, based on attendance, it seems that the disbursement should operate on a similar plan. Under the present system it is possible for a teacher to draw a salary of 825 per month from a:i average attendance ')! (U) scholars while teacher No. 2 may be overcrowded with scholar* and receiving the same ra*e of salary 82?o, or as the case may 1>3. This h not intended ai a criticism of any one, ueither of tho law a$ it now it. liui to get what is intended out of the sys torn there can be s>ma he a', thy amendments readily made. Tiik Times heejs me informed as to the changes made in Union. Bhould Rip now return it would surely be with some difficulty that tho way t> his own bouse could be found. Approaching tho premises uncovered I earnestly solicit pinion should the Texas coriespoudent yet charge ETINGS J d inspect our stock g ioods. summer seasons. Black se: ides of Light Blue, Green, Pir expected. First, in line c Lawn, at prices to suit eac oss. dies, from 10c a yard on up. d Brilliantine. .YE: OSS. vhicli is stylish at almost any tii ur liue of Chambrey with line ing now at lOc. lall stripes and dots. Our li lveante is the new goods for lig - //: // 4 ' * aie with criticism when my positioc explained. The general tendency to give the bright side of a dt picture would appi nr to have referei directly to the versatile correspoode But I had in mind the nature of rc resentatiou generally, the bright e is more readily given which the scr 1 iu quostion was an exception, am ' conclusion could bo drawn. No cr icisn was iutended. There have beeu several mj bought among the farmers. 'J i prices paid in buying or excbaDgi seems to be somewhat above norm ! Yet the buyer makes his selecii fools the bill and returns home c lighted. Messrs. Nance ?fc Eison have as mill in operation near here. Lutul this far from the city may be in profitable and readily handled ih wood. S>me of the farmers are sowing o which n ay come just in time of ue Farm work has begun, but retard uow on account of rain. B. F. F., Ju RECORD OF THE PAS No Stronger Evidence Can he Pi daced. Look well to their record. W1 they have done many timos in yes gone by is the best guarantee of futu results. Any one with a b.ul back, a reader suffering froin urinary troubli from any kidney ills, will find in t following evidence nroof that relief a c ire is near at hand: .Mr. G. M. Myers, the woll-kno\ shoemaker at Winchester avenue ai 14th street, Ashland, Ky., says: "Doai Kidney fills are like true friends, t longer you ktow them the better th are appreciated. I can add nothing the statement I first in iHa in iKon aft I procured the remedy at the Ventu Drug (Jr^, and took a course of the tre; ment winch cured nie. I was absolute free from all backache for nearly thr< years, then I noticed a slight ache, i the result of a cold in my back. A b( of Doan's Kidney Pills disposed of it. have recommended this remedy many, and have never heard of or who did not endorse the claims mar for it." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cent Foster-Milburn Co., Builalo, N. Y., so agents for the TJ. S. Remember the name?Doan's?an take no substitute, O I Ha! O I X-a! ?AT? per Gallon ?AT? W. Newell Smith's Store. Phone 12tt. I CLAIRYVOINT COLUMN. * THE MYSTIC VEIL PULLED ASIDE. By Mrs. R. P. Ward, J. W. H. A8K8 QUESTIONS. There was a country store burned ^ on the night of June JiOth, 1899, in r this neighborhood. Can you tell who burned it, whether white or black, or both, and how many implicated? If larceny was the intention was much or little taken out of the store ' *? 11 _ UUIUTtt lb nao uuiuvui Does the one or if more than one implicated in the burning, live near the store? J. W. H. THE ANSWER. The fire came at or near midnight; if the store was not a large building, but a moderately small one, with a mixed stock of goods therein. It was as I see it robbed of some of the contents, ere It was set on fire; the fire seems so rapid that it appears to me to be from oil, or some condition that would burn very rapidly. There is a negro that holds some knowledge M of the burning, he is a rather old ne, gr0? an(* fear has kept him silent all IK this while, yet he may at some time )f unfold what he knows of this. There are two men in the burning, a white ( or a mulatto man and one rather tall, i lanky, ugly, poorly dressed black man that took a hand in it. Some of the goods were buried for sometime after the fire; there has been many suspicions regarding this and some of them seem to be right to me. There was a good deal taken from the store. This store appears to me to be in a distant place or there has been some change made since then, Ann r\9 noff Sno 1 i vnrl nnor 5 r? o V I1U VI VilV put VIVO * ? vv* ??VM? , <u w thick, woody, damp looking place, seems like it is near water or in a low place. The old negro man that I see ?I1# with some knowledge of thejrobbery 1 lives in the same neighborhood, seems to be a little bit lame or crippled in some way; he will with a little persuasion and a promise of good treatment quite likely tell what he knows. There must have been shoes in the ;ht store as I see shoes and some folds of cloth as well as other things; these things were buried in a thick, dark place, and some of thera seem to never have been taken up yet. There must have been some one or more tires near there Since that one; I seem to see more fires; there comes to me the name John and then a great, angry flash. The man that owned the store must have been named John or had something to do with it. Pardon me, I have possibly taken up too muctv spaoe for the pleasure of our genial editor. Mrs. R. P. Ward WAWTS IP PC AfARMEfl'S WIFE. ? A Farmer's Girl Replies to the , Article in The Times of Feb. i . Entitled "Happy Fife of a Farm" er's Wife." She Takes the irk Ground That the Article Was a ce Written by one of our City Girls. >ut. * p_ Mr. Editor;?I notice in The i,le Times an article entitled "Happy ibe Life of a Farmer's Wife." The i _ '-i x. .1 . i n buwu gin wuo wrote teat was misit taken in the class of men she was writing about, when she depicted the 'es life of tho farmer's tfife, after saying .'he it was a fond dream of her's to be a ing farmer's wife. The class of men she l*h describes is not up to the average ,n? man to be found on tbe farm. Our 1 formers, as a rule, measure fully up 1 to your town men, and arc far supe- 1 aw rior to your town loafers. I say to be a farmer's wife would 1 >rc seem to me one of the greatest pleae- 1 ures upon top of God's green earth. ' ^ When you ride along the public 1 road and see the home ot tbe pro- 1 e] gressivc farmer, a well cared for 1 p'antation, with a nice, comfortable 1 dwelling house, surrounded by nice 1 shade trees and beautiful Ibwers, I 1 dare say that beneath that roof you r. would find the happiest of wives. 1 Give us what we deserve and we < will give you the same. 1 Some one said in a recent issue of int Tiie Times that he heard a dove calling. lie was not the first to ? ny hear the dove. I hoard the dove, fis, and it was a Taint, far away, mourn- j ful sound that caine to my eer, as < the call of a lover whose heart had < vn grown weary with waiting, and was j n,'1 growing cold. The dove may call ( lie its mate as the first heralding note I ey of spring. But when spring does J to come and the birds are singing in j pj[ the branches of the trees, and the j it- buds are bursting into beautiful flow- a y era on every side, then indeed it is a iiH happy life to be living on a farm, t >x The spring time is the time I most * 1 enjoy, I can gather flowers and weave t them into pretty boqueta. Everylo thing seems to have put on new life, there is a freshness everywhere that jo gives a joyous inspiration of happi* a ness to one and all. And we are ?: id glad that we live to enjoy these gifts v of nature, aad breath the pure, fresh ? air laden with the sweet perfumes of a< ! nature's garden. When we look at 01 all this we Can but feel that the beautiful spring is one of God's richest n blessings to mankind. n It is tho time of seed planting. Among others we plant the seed d which later brings forth the fruit that like the music, hath power to Gone I T? Buy Will ke< lookout . gains. When 1 I'll nab t When you ean t Tell your poekei mouth shut till y . . . WATCH 1 McLure Mi -A STOCK OP THE VEQETABLEaiu Sufficient to convert the wl man TRUCK FARM OR A few White Multiplying The mildest flavored and best for winter use at DUK1 charm, if not the wild beast, at leas the town dude. I reier to the lus ci)us watermelon smiling on th< vine. Your town gentlemen deligh to call on the country lasses and hel| them sample the most choice of thii most popular fruit, and bye and by* the ladies call and spend the da] with their friends on the farm, when the melons, the peaches and the ap pies grow, and for the time beinj there is no visible line between th< country and the town folks. Who would not enjoy being a hap py country lass, and eventually be come a happy country bride down ot i farm. A Farmer's Girl. ADVERTISED LETTERS. Remaining in the Post Office at Union 3. C.. f>r the week ending M iroh 13, L903. [Juckhsm.*1i.<w Sallie Orr, Mrs Mannie barter, Eugene Palmer, Mrs Emms Dlavton, ltich Parker, Li I lie look. Sunt (' M P.?rrv .r p Downey, J Roberts, T M Jill. J am Rodelsperger, ? L laston. M N[ Smith, Nan Inter, Morrison Kkelton, Susner leter, Giiiie Sphty, Gentile >foy, Janice Bchell, D?niel ifcHammer, Geo Wallace Thorn is 4cMann-\ Emma Waters, Press Persons calling for the above Inters will please say if advertised, and rill be required to pay one cent lor heir delivery. J. O. Huntbb. P. M ? ? ' Afore Riots* Disturbances of strikers are not nearly s grave as an individual disorder of the yrstem. Overwork, lose of sleep, nerous tension will be followed by utter ollapse. unless a reliable remedy is immediately employed. There's nothing > efficient to cure disorders of the Liver r Kidneys as Electric Bitters. It's a 'onderful tonic, and effective nervine nd the greatest all around medicine for in down systems. It dispels Nervous088, Rheumatism and Neuralgia and xpels malarial germs. Only 50c. and itisfactlon guaranteed by F. C. Duke, ruggist. ? ' Fewer gallons; wears longer. filtoe. Vorth * 1 | Goods' | l | 3p a sharp for bar- I ^_JL [see them 4 ? i I return ' i lave them. 1 11 r ou hear from me. j t 1 PHIS SPACE ... | \ ircantils CoJ : HIGHEST GRADE ^ 1 FLOWER SEEDS lole of Union countj into one j nmoth . t FLOWER GARDEN. ; or Nest On:on Sets on hand, for pickles, also the best keeper E'SDRUQ STORR ' Coal Bin MrainreBeiti. * A solid cubic foot of anthracite coal s weighs ninety-three pounds. When t broken for use, it weighs about fifty* 5 four pounds. Bituminous coal, whan I broken up for use, weighs about fifty, pounds. The coneeqnent rale for the 9 approximate measurement of coal Us J a bin ov box Is to multiply the length i In feet bv the helffht In .M ,,,l. * by tbe breadth in feet tod thia result by flfty-fonr for anthracite coal or by ? fifty for bitnmlnons coal. The remit , 5 will equal the number of pounds, and to find the number of tons divide by - 2,000.?Popular Mechanics. i Stockholders' Meeting* A meeting of the stockholders of the ' Union Building and Loan Association will be held st the office of Farr & k Thomson at SUM) o'clock p. m. on April 7th, 1903, for the purpose of amending the charter so aa to increase the capital stock to 2,500 shares and to change the by-laws. W. W. Hircmu, 1 10-4t See. and Treast, CUT PRICE8. I will sell at these prices one week only. 25c Chocolate Candy at 15c. 25c Cocoanut B >n Bon at 15o. 00j New Orleans Molasses 40c, Good Floor aid Moal. I guarantee everything, that 1 sell to give satisfao M tion in qaalitj and price. Good Goods, Cheap Pricea at W. Newell Smith's Store, ^, | East Main 8b, Union, 8. Phone 126.