The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, May 22, 1903, Image 3
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SOUTH
Cyrus To
As1h#r ! "W.ren Wfth
?K^J?X5vi?\X^V' **TK? Qolfcen
s~
V "Mary Annan!" alio cried; and the
nest moment, discerning a tall figure
behind Iter, she rnu down the stairs
/with a scream of raptnro and relief
and fell Intd Pleasants' arms.
"Oh. thank God, thank God. you are
nfe!" she cried. "Xnd my brother?"
Before Pleasants conld answer Mrs
Peyton followed her daughter.
; "General Peyton?" she cried,
j "Well, madam?"
j "His wound?"
, "A trlrte."
"God be praised!" ejaculated the woman
brokculy. "The general Is safe,
and Willis. If only"?
"And what of Boyd?" cried Many Annan
sharply. Instantly suspicious of the
pause.
t "My poor child," said Mrs. Peyton,
coming down the stairs and taking the
girl by the band.
i "Oh, what is it? Have you news of
klui?"
! "He is here, sister," cried Tempo,
bursting upon them and clasping her
sister In her arms. "He is here, In
your room upstairs."
"Hush! Ilush!" said old Dr. Bampney,
catching .the child In his arms. "Don't I
you see how you alarm your sister?"
Indeed the shock of the news was almost
too much for the woman. She
divined Instantly that Boyd Peyton
.would never be there in Mobile, In her
house, unless something terrible had
happened to him. Could it be that he
Was dead?
' "How comes he here?" asked Mary
Annan, leaning back against the wall.
"Willis brought him up yesterday
tinder a flag of truce."
I "Is ho?wounded?"
[ Mrs. Peyton bowed her bead.
"Badly?"
. I>AI. oi-? ? . ?
I VII, miiuu.v, OISUT ailirj"! 11T. > <?tinsste
says he will soon be dend, like
brother," Tempo broke out again. "Did
< you bring poor brother back with you?" 1
she asked, her little fuce filled with
pain.
. "Is it true?" whispered the girl, disregarding
her little sister in her consuming
anxiety.'
! "Yes; I fear so," said Mrs. Teytou,
taking the girl in her niins. "Oh, Mary,
dear; only God can save him."
; "Is he conscious?"
1 "No, he has not spoken since? since
r - - he-was wounded."
i "What Is it?"
1 "A fracture of the skull and'con-'
' cusslon of the brain. Dr. Vcnosste says
that even if he recovers he might be?
.he might not ?his mind ?O CSod, O
God!" wailed the older woman, and
she looked old Indeed now, "that this
should come upon me! And we sent
him nwny on the porch that day! His
father drove him froiu us, and this Is
how lie lias coiue back to us! If he
could only know that lie Is home again,
that we love him once more and that j
.we forgive him! If he could only
;know-tl>nt, no matter where he gocf
or what he docs, be is my boy, m>
boy!"
' "We were all wrong," said the gir!
brokenly. "We nil drove him nwayas
well as the rest, and 1 loved liin:
too. I love him now?now that it Is too
late! May I see hiui? Take me tr
|hlm."
| There on the bed, her own bod, lie
ay. aucy unu inuen mm 10 ner roomthat
room with tbo window looking out
toward tlie sunny soutli. wboro she bnd
.lookoil and watched, waited and lis
itened, longed and hoped. 8he stood by
'ibis side dry eyed and desperate. Tbis
(was tbe last blow tbat could have
tfallen upon hor. She thought she bad
.reached the sum of bumnu endurance
jlong since, but she knew now that fate
had done Its worst for her on tbat day
jand not Ixjfore. Father, brother, lover
r?all- gone, and now this one too!
I Tbe mocking bird sans In tbe great
PLAIN PROOF
What This Qentleman
Says is a Mere Statement
of Facts.
No one can have any reason from dissenting
from the particulars and proofs
which follow, for verification of the
same is within easy reach of every residents
this vicinity; That Doan's Kidney
Fills promptly and effectually cure
kidney complaints is substantiated not
only in this particular case, but by all
*- who have given them a fair trial. Testimony
likewise shows that you do not
Itave to take them indefinitely to be
cured. ^
Walter McLachlin, a machine hand,
employed at J. Holiday A Hons planing
mill, Wheeling, W, Va., address 3032
Jacob street, says: 4 Had I not used
Doan's Kidney Pills when I did I would
not be alive now. I was- in a terrible
condition, and although I look quarts
of medicine I got no better, but worse.
Friends spoke of my bad appearance and
thousands knew about it. 1 could hardly
get around and felt and looked iike a
dead man more than a living one.
Doan's Kidney Pills were a blessing to
me, half a box relieved me, three boxes
entirely cured me and now I feel as
though my back was as strong as that
of any horse in Wheeling. I would
rather have a box of Doan's Kidney
PUls than the services of all the doctor*
In the state."
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.
Y., sole agents for the U. 8.
Remember the name?Doan's?and
take no other.
ERNERSl
bunscnd 'Brady ipigsjf
Ikt Ship,** "hobenteilm" ^ V.,Vs,''l
Ml Touch,** Etc. '-f-. ..'"v.:
?l/rm Totcntcnd Drady
,llve onk outside the "window. He dk
not hear. Stretching out her haiuli
tn lilm nV>? ? * " ?1 ,-f? *
....... ono tiincu nun again anu again
,He did not hoar. The long pent-up feel
Jngs of her bosom rushed to her llpi
at Inst. With every endenrment thn'
'the deepest passion could dictate sh<
'.appealed to hi in. He did not hear, hi
did not heed.
The others stood about the bod. Sin
did not care, if. indeed, she were con
scions of their presence, whether tliej
heard or did not hear the vows of hei
heart. But presently she became awnn
ot' a haggard figure standing next her
It was Willis Peyton.
"Oh, Willis," she cried. "You hnv<
nothing to reproach yourself with. Yot
kissed him goodby with friendly words
when we all turned against him."
"I tired the shot," cried the young
man, "that struck him down! My
brother's blood is upon biB hands! 0
God, lie can't die; he can'tl" he
cried, in feverish anxiety and agitation.
"Hush!" said the girl. "Don't reproach
yourself for that. We are nil
brethren. We are all guilty. You could
not know. It was not your fault, but
mine, and every other man's and woman's
who cried for secession. Do you
remember how in this very house that
day at dinner I, we all, cried for war?
We were mad, inad! And well have
we been paid. Oh, the south, and the
north, and the east, and the west, what
are they to me? Secession, state rights,
the Union? I'd give them all for lilm!
Look at me Just once, Just for one mo1
I I
Stretching out her handa to him, the
called him again and again.
mont! Say that you forgive me! I am
guilty too. All are gone from me now.
Let me have one?Just this one! No,
no; he cannot, lie shall not, die! Dr.
Venosste," she said, turning suddenly
to the old man who had just entered
the room, "is there noyiopc at all?
Can't you do something? Is there notlk
ing"? " v
"My dear child," said the old man,
"he is In Cod's hands. All that my
human skill and knowledge can do lias
been done. My colleagues who have
soon him have pronounced his case
hopeless. For myself, I think there Is
a little chance; but, well, I will tell
you all. If he does recover, the probabilities
are?that?that his mind will lie
affected."
"I would rather see liiui dead than
that."
"And I," added his mother.
"Oh, If he could only, know that I
love him; or, If I could only know that
he cared before"?
"You may know, dear," said the older
woman. "1 found this left in his jacket.
It was addressed to me, and this to you
was inclosed in it."
"Give it to nie," cried the girl, fairly
snatching it from the hand of Mrs.
Peyton.
"Oh," she cried as she tore open the
envelope, a Utile flicker of light In her
sad face as she read it rapidly. "I
thank God for this mercy at least. He
loves ine, he loves inc! Oh, Dr. Ye*
uosste, we will call him back! He
shall speak again. His eyes shall open.
And his mind, like his heart, will be
true. God could not deny it to love
like ours!"
CHAPTER XLII.
BOY 1> rEYTON 8KES A VI8IOX.
SITE first thing of which Boyd
Peyton was conscious was
the song of u bird. The high,
clear notes seemed to bent in
upon him personally. They cnine to
him apparently from afar off, from a
great distance. They Htolc Into his consciousness.
through his dull and drowsy
ear, with increasing vibration and
volume. He wondered vaguely what
It could be. The melody pleased bitn.
Presently It burst upon lilm that the
Hound came from the full throat of a
mocking bird. A mocking bird! That
recalled Mary. Aunaj^ to hli^. ?1$.|^j
quiet ami still, thinking vaguely of
her. There was a strange indisposition
to wove in his wind as lie thought
of her. Fragments of Ideas, bits of
recollection, whirled about in his head.
They begun to assemble by degrees
| and take shape?her shape. lie could
see her at last ? beautiful, winning,
t kind! lie hesitated to open his eyes,
fearing lest he should dispel the vision.
After awhile the song stopped, qih!
the figure faded nwny. lie opened his
eyes and looked about liim. He saw
things dimly through a whirl of mist
and motion. He could not recognize
or localize objects, but he could perceive
enough to know that this was
1 not his berth or stnteroom on the Ilarti
ford. He missed the heaving of the
. ship. The place was strangely motlon
less. Instead of the smell of tar and
? paint a delicious fragrance filled the
t room, a fragrance that, like the moek?
Ing bird, called up the days of the past,
t hours of youth and love nnd Mary Annan.
i Where was he? Ah, It was a room.
There before hlin. framed in white
r draperies, was an opening. Presently
r he made out a green mass of foliage
, beyond, a live oak, stirred by the gentle
breeze. lie was lying upon a bed, he
discovered.' Whose room could it be?
, What had happened? lie remembered
, by and by the roar of the cannon, the
, beating throb of the mighty eugines,
the crash of timbers; the scream of
shells. He had beetfoirjWe Hartford?
yes; that was it?great ndnjii
ml. They were approaching the Tennessee.
He had the topkstrlng of the
. forward pivot iiy btiVn^Qd. lie had
pulled It. Then What Mad jM^fpened?
He thought deeply, : Jklt*tie arrived
at the concltuMt that he had
been ^ wounded. Wfa|>e^ftd he been
sessed oil bis inembi He happened
to tjp-n bis eyes Upward in his speculations,-and
the white )fne of a bandage
showed,dimly across his brow al>ove
them. What did that luoay?. A blow
on the head, perhaps*. Yes, that was
it. He had been struck on the head.
What lmd they done to him? Where
was he mow? In h house somewhere
on the shore, evidently. . But whose
house and where? It could not l>e rensacola.
It wns not the hospital there;
nor the fort. What eould it be?
Had the admiral? Ah, wns it Mobile?
Mobile and Mary Annan? What wns
that sound? A footstep on the floor,
a dark llgurc bent over liini. He heard
rAl/ino- *'-* '
.<nv??oni|>iirv, reu?, anxiety in
their tones. Tliey were saying something.
lie strove desperately to cntcli
the meaning. It had been so long
since he had heard and recognized a
voice. What were they snyli*:?
"Ills eyes are open. I believe he Is
conscious nt last. Willis, call Dr.
Venosste at once."
He knew now. It was his mother's
voice. And that other who had cried
"Thank tiod!" as he hurried from the
room was bis brother.
"Mother," be whispered.
Another llgure approached him,
hung over him, swam Into the Held of
Ills vision. Eyes that he had dreamed
of looked love Into his own, a voice that
he could never forget called his name.
"Mary Annan," he whispered Joyously,
wonderingly, fearfully, and then
fainted away Into insensibility again.
The shock of her presence had caused
him to lose consciousness once more.
Dr. Venosste speedily reassured the
women by telling them that such
things often happen in concussion of
the brain. Any sudden shock after consciousness
had been recovered was apt
to throw the patient Into unconsciousness
again, but the recovery therefrom
would lie Slicedv and sure unless the
shock were too great.
For the first time the old doctor stilted
that unless compllcntious ensued
Teyton would pet well, and, better still,
when he learned of that flash of recognition,
he said that his mind would
clear as well. Such a siege ns the women
had pone through with him can
scarcely be finapined. They had been^
sustained by that wonderful power
which enables women to bear strains
and fatigues which would kill the
strongest man out of hand. It was not
until now, when the doctor had given
them the first definite ray of hope, that
they realized what they had gone
through and how utterly worn out they
were.
Summer had faded nway into autumn
nud winter was fast approaching
when Boyd Teyton was at last pronounced
out of danger.
CHAPTER XLIII.
llAUY ANNAN BEGS FOnOIVENESS.
BEAK, feeble, almost helpless?a
ghost of himself, In fact?
Boyd Peyton was yet on the
royul road to recovery. After
*il.i first sight of her he hud seen 110thng
more of Mary Annan. When Dr.
Veuosste had assured her that lie would
;et well, liis mother had gone away,
ind he had not seen her either. Fort
Morgan had fallen after a lierolc defense
before the combined assaults of
<hlps and army, but its Hag had not
come down until it had been hammered
to ruins by the tierce bombardment,
ind not a gun had been left service*
ible. General Peyton had been sent
lorth as a prisoner of war, and Mrs.
i'eyton had accompanied him. Willis
iad been exchanged and was now with
General Maury's army defending Mobile.
The care of the Annnndale household
lind been left to Pink and little
Tempo, for when Boyd Peyton's recovery
had seemed assured Mary Annun
had given way under the strains and
anxieties aud bereavements she had
lustuincd.
Peyton had begged so hard and so
constantly to see Mary Annan that
Dr. Venosste bad at last given his
permission. The girl had been mlserIably
ill, but was now somewhat letter,
and the old doctor hoped that the
txmcut them botb.
I Weak? I
" I suffered terribly for 12 years.
The doctors said my blood was all
turning to water. At last I tried
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and was soon
feeling all right again."?Mrs. J. W.
Fiala, Hadlymc, Ct. 1
No matter how long you
have been ill, nor how
poorly you may be today.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the
best medicine you can
take for purifying and enriching
the blood. Don't
doubt it; put your whole
trust in it. ftftAiS
Ask your doctor what he thinks of this
grand old family medicine follow his
advice and we will l?e satisfied.
Recovery will never be complete 8
if the liver is inactive. Ayer's Fills 8
are liver pills. Purely vegetable, g
J.C. AVER CO* Lowell, Mass. S
Willis and Pleasants had come that
afternoon to carry hlin into her room.
Peyton had Insisted upon being
dressed in his uniform as a United
States naval oflicer, his clothing having
boon sent him under a tlag by tho
thouglitfulncss of the old admiral before
he went north 011 a well earned
leave of absence. He had a strange
fancy that if she loved him she must
take him In the uniform of the Union.
It was in that uniform that she had
rejected him. It was in it that she
must take him hack. Willis and Pleasants
fomut him ready when they came.
Willis had never ceased to he thankful
that his brother's life had been
spared. He never would forget the
sensations that had come over htm
when he had learned that ho had
tired the shot that had stricken him
(own. lioyd had never forgotten that
Willis, alone of his family, had hidden
him godspeed when lie went from
Mobile years before. And Pleasants,
whom lie had always liked and who
was betrothed to his sister, who had
been good to Mary Annan, had been
very kind to him also. lie was glad
\) see the young man, but I10 could
scarcely wait until they lifted him up
in "the wicker chair to carry him into
me room that had been lier father's,
where Mary Annan lay.
The two men set the eliair down
elose to the side of the bed. Then with
a word of cheer to the sick woman
they turned and left the room.
"Now remember, Boyd," said I>r. Venosste,
"only a few moments will I allow
you, and you must not say anything
to agitate yourselves. Come,
Miss I*lnk," he added, turning to the
faithful girl, and the two .went out,
leaving Peyton and Mary Annan alone.
Poor Mary Annan, how thin and pale
and haggard she looked, her white face
framed In the rich brown curls flowing
over the pillow; how wasted from her
long Illness, from the shocks she had
undergone, from the bereavements she
had suffered, the heartbreaks that had
come upon her! How different she was
from the gay, lightsome, cheerful
young girl of those days before the awful
war had come! And yet he loved
her more. lie could not tell her how or
why. lie neither argued nor Justified
nor explained, lie was simply cognizant
of the fact. His heart yearned
toward her. He did not say anything
at first, nor did she. She lay staring
up at him out of her great black eyeshow
they shone out of her pale face
then?with such a look of utter thankfulness
and gratitude in her face as a
sinner might show in being admitted to
heaven, lie bent forward in the chair
and with his own thin hands clasped
lini. *1.1........ ' ' -
UVI luuilll'l II1111 MH'lHH'l'er QUO.
"Mary Annan," he whlspct^d, "how
ill yon have been!"
"I ahall got well now, Roytl, since yon
are here with me. If?if?you can forgive
me?all our troubles will he over."
"Forgive you, dear!" he answered,
"I have nothing to forgive. 1 only love
you, love you, love you!"
The sound of his voice, and not even
his physical weakness could quench the
passion in it, was like nn elixir of life
to her. It even brought a faint dicker
CONTINUED ON 6TII PAGE.
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Don't Forgot tho Namo. J
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Snvcil lijr n Jokr.
Students of Edinburgh university
who could not spoil foil on evil days
when Professor Traill, editor of a former
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tnnnien was an examiner.
According to Professor Knight's
"Iteeollectlons." Professor Traill one
day objected to a candidate for graduation.
who was a native of Ceylon, on
the ground of false spelling.
"Why, ho aetually spelled exceed
tvit l? o??a 'a'' 99 O..M I -
Win v, III*.
"Well," instantly replied Professor
Henderson, who tilled the chair of
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Fitch a lucky man into the Nile, says
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Cures Blood Poison, Cancer, Ulcers
If you hr.vo offensive pimples or
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You may be permanently cured
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?1. To prove it cures, sample of
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Describe trouble and free fnodieal advice
sent in scaled letter. F. C. Duke.
Final Discharge. j
Notice is hereby given that Malay S.
llice, administratrix of thy estate of J.
Aubrey Itice, deceased, has applied to
Jason M. Greer, Judge of Prolate, in
and for the county o? Union, for a lin.il
discharge as such admiuistrati ix.
It Is Ordered, That the 2 id day oc
June A. I). 19U.T, be fixed for hearing of
Petition, and a final settlement of said
estate.
Jason M. Gkkf.u,
Probate Judge Union county, S, C.
Published 1st of May. 19.'3, in Union
TImes. ,18-30d.
Final Discharge.
Notice is hereby given that I<\ M.
Farr, administrator of the.estate of Mrs.
M. L. Gage, deceased, has applied to
Jason M. Greer, Judge of Probate, in
and for the County of Union, for a final
discharge as such administrator.
It Is Ordered, That t lie .'lid day of
June A. D. 190J, be fixed for hearing of
Petition, and a final settlement oft aid
estate.
Jason M. Greek,
Probate Judge Union County, S. C.
Published 1st of May, 1903, in Union
Uimes. ]tt-."01
To Cure a Cold In One l>ay
Take Laxative 'Vjri mo Quinine Tablets
All druggists refund ttie money if it fails
to cure. E. W. Grove's signature on
each tin*- ' *
VI 1 jr
THE SOUTHE
The Great Highway ol
THROUGH THE t-c
Excellent Scruico Quick '
Any Trip I* a J'loaiv
Travel via THE. SOU
The Finest Dininr>Cai
For detailed Information ei to Tic!
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W. A. TURB. ti. >!. MAR
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WASHINGTON. D. C. WASHING!
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C\?i1 .i. . A ii v
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I / \.::' j I , a makep^oe
W CLOTHING
t?
Summons For Relief,
(complaint not selvfd )
Stu' r of South Carolina, 1 Court of Com*
County of Union. ) mon l'ltas.
]>. C?. Smith, Plaintiff,
against
i J. M Smith, Mrs. Eddie Harms, I).
[ E. Smith, C. L. Smith, J. It. Smith,
I Mrs. Novent Cole, .1. IT. Parr ami II.
M Grimball and W. C. Wallace, Defondants.
I To the Defendants, .T. M. Smith, Mrs.
! Eddie Ilatr.es, I). E. Sruilh, C. 1<,
I Smith, .1. It Sm?th. M.s, Novem Colo,
(.1. II. I'arr and II. M. Grimball and W.
C. Wallace:
Von are hereby summoned and required
to answer the complaint in this
action, which is tiled in tbe i tli e of the
Cleik of the Court of Common Pleas,
for the saiil oonniv .....i ? -
...t, cum id aiJIYB it COpy
of your answer to the said complaint on
the sul??ciilK?r at lii.s Jaw Ulice No. 13,
Law Range, Union C. II., S. C., within
twenty days alter the service liercof, ? xclusive
of i lie day of such servic?; and if
you fail to answer tlia complaint witliia
the time aforesaid, the p'aintilf in this
action will apply to the Court for the
relief demanded iu the complaint.
lUltd Apiil 14th, A. 1). 10t3.
I. Fkaxk I'eakb,
Clerk of Court.
S. Means Beaty,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
To the Defendants, D. E. Smith and
Mrs. Eddie llaraes:
Take notice that the coniplainl in this
action, together with the summons, of
which the foregoing is a copy, was duly
liUd in the cflVie of the Clerk of Court
of Common lMeas for Union county,
.South Carolina, at Union C. II., S. C ,
ou the 13th day of April, 1003.
S. Means Bkaty,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
Union, S. C., April 13, 1003. ld-Gt
Mortgage Sale of Real Estate.
Under and hy virtue of a power contained
in a mortgage given me by James
II. Rodger, dated September 4'Ji. 1800,
and n corded in the cilice of the Clerk of
Coui t and Register of Mesne Conveyance
for Union County in Book of Mortgages
M Xo. 12, page 10, and of the
written consent of said James II. Rodger
to the amount due on said mortgage
debt, and to the sale of tlie real estate
desoribed in said mortgage, which writ
u'.n consent is recorded in the oflice of
the Clerk cl'Court and Register of Mesne
Conveyance for Union County where the
real estate is situated, on the record of
said mortgage.
I will sell before the Court House door
in the town of Union on Salesday in
June, 1003, during the legal hours of
sale, all that certain piece, parcel or lot
of land containing ninety-three hundredths
of an acre, with dwelling and all
buildings situate thereon, lying, being
and situate in the town of Union, State
and County aforesaid, bounded by lands
or lot forinei ly belonging to A. 11. Stokes,
(now Mrs. M. B. lander) lot formerly
belonging to John Rodger (now Mrs.
Ann Smith) and Main Street, wlureou
I, James II. llodger, now reside.
TERMS OK SALK?CASH,
May 7, 1003, F. M. Farr,
20-3; Mortgagee.
Eariy Risers
The famous little Dills.
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9