The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, August 14, 1903, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

Casts Only 25 ceo! jjm* ">U 2ft ceiti to O. .. _ __ -Omen or D. II. H I few found Dr. Hftffatt'a TKETBINA. * splendid n **? ??*?teathln# child, crer r lu 'cwllnf d*r \rarn?< TI.M3INA, ?->4 b?c?n at onco vli\inlatena? It to him, ?" ?hT on ha recuperate!. I hare couitanllr kept II yl'tW to eonadlng lu pcaUea to all mottocra oC juun HiiiMa MW. A PUBLIC SCOLDING. * TkhWhr > iMtrh Minister Itchnkcd Hie Wife lu t'harrh. j "I cherish n story I omv heard In Scotland," snld n well known author, **a Story tlint Is, 1 think, typical of n certain portion of lite people. "This -story concerns n minister who caught a member of Ills congregation sleeping antl rebuked him from the pulpit. 'Awnkr, Saunders.' Oe snld. 'Man, It'8 n disgrace to sleep In tlio kirk.' "Saunders was much Imrt. He spoke up and said: " 'Look to yor aln pew, an' ipayhnp , ye'll And Ithers sleopin* here besides mysclV "The minister looked, and there was ki? ? !#? t ?? ? - ??? nnuillR I lll^ rMUIIIUIY. tlC awakened her, ntul lie tokl Sounder* 1 tlint If slie fell asleep again lie might ' call attention to her by holding up hi* hand. Then he proceeded with hi* aenuon. "Seme week* went by, and one Sunday Saunders, sure enough, put hi* hand up. The wife was asleep again. The minister thundered out her name, bade her rise to her feet and said to ! her before the whole congregation: " 'Mrs. MncGregor, anybody ken* | that when I got ye for a wife I got no beauty; yer friends ken I got no siller; I now. If I dlnnn get (Jod's jjniee I shall hare a pulr bargain IndeetP"?Kansas City Journal. Potent Pill Pleasure. The, pills that are potent in tlier action and pleasant in their effect are DeWitt's Little Early Risers. IV. 8. Philpot, of Albany, (Ja., "During a bilious attae'e I took one. Small as it was. it did me more good than Calomel, blue mas* or any other Pills I ever took and at the name time it nffocted me pleasantly. Little Early Risers are certainly an ideal pill. Sold by F. C. Duke. Hatttag* and Tllden. Hngh Hasting*, when editor of the Prtr York Commercial Advertiser, was j lore?ant In bitter attack* upon Samuel i J. TIMen. One day he received a let- j ter from Henry F. Spauldlng, then . president of the Central Trust company. to the effect that his attack* unon Mr. Tlhlen nnnenred nnwnrrant. ' ed, and unless be could give some sat- , lifactory explanation Mr. Spnuldlng would discontinue taking Ibe Commercial Advertiser. Mr. Hastings replied, "When I was . a clerk In Albany Sam TUden was known as the boy who sold grated tur- j nips for liorse radish, and he has been doing It ever since." Mr. Spauldlng did not stop the Commercial Advertiser.?New York Times. A Lot of Slefc Onr?. A delogntlon of clergymen once called on President Lincoln to recommend one of their number as consul at the Hawaiian Islands and in addition to qualifications for fitness appealed to the president's sympathy on the ground that the candidate was in poor health and a residence In that climate would j be of great benefit to him. Lincoln i questioned the mr.n closely as to his J symptoms, then remarked: "I am sorry to disappoint you. hut there are eight other men after this place, and every one of them Is sicker than you are."?"The True Abraham Lincoln." Your ThnnRlits. In the Arm control of our thoughts lies the secret of the most wonderful possession of which we can boastcharacter. It is quite as much a matter of habit as of will, this being honorable, truthful, just; having formed our principles of right living, conscience .invariably points to n whole licnrted loy alty to them. And when baser motives J plead, why, hero la Just where your will power may profit by exercise. The son of the aclf mode man generally begins at the top and works downward.?Chicago Record-Herald. ??????? HOME NEWS. Of Interest To Everyone In Union. In every newspaper in the country yon will read statements made by people living in out-of-the-way places who are supposed to have been cured or derived great benefit from some wonderful remedy or "cure all." But here in Onion we only publish statements made hy Union people?the testimony of your friends, neighbors and fellow townsmen, J. M. Mardis, retired farmer, a veteran of the Civil War. residing at 22 Librand Street, says: I have used Doan's Ointment with very satisfactory results. For a long time I suffered from itching Ciles. I lost my leg in the war, hut I ave suffered more from the intolerable itching than I ever did with the leg, and there seemed to he no relief night or day. It was a constant torture and tllA more I scratch <ul t.hn mnr? if I I havo dono everything to try and reflleve it. but to no purpose until I read about Doan'a Kidnoy Pills and Doan's Ointment and procured a box of the latter at Holmes Pharmacy. The salve stopped the Itching on the first application and I can now say entirely cured it. You are welcome to use my name as an endorser of the claims made for this remedy." For sale by all dealers. ^ Price fiOc nor box. Poetor-Milburn Co., Mfc-. Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. Remember the name? UOAN'S?an<l take no other. FITT^JV Curl3 Ck0l8r<aInfantum, m Diarrhoea,Dyieotery, and the Bowel Troubles of Children of An" Age. rTT.vTl'^f Hi a Aids Digestion. Kcguliif-j POWDERS) IflMI the Bowel;, Strengthens ,t liriifrA'Icfo the Chi?d rx'j Mckcs & at Druggists, teething easy. J. MOFFETT, M. D., GT. LOUIS. MO. *RDY, Secretary of 8:?'.n, Av*?:s. T?x., Not. 21, r.*e. metlT and aid tor my loolhinjr children. When my oli'eet 1 u* that wo would Inevitably Insa Iilm. I ha|>:-?*ni~d ripen and hi* Improvement w.n.i ma I: -.1 in 21 ho :i.<. : id lr-:.i land need Italoce with my children, in I h.-'rotaji :i| . :.i g children. I fuurul it inval'i.iM rr. n n't r shelect'iinr UK3. i>. 11. il Mf.V. KUSSIAN PILGRIMS. I HOW AGED PEASANTS ATTAIN CASTE IN THEIR VILLAGES. They Travel Fnr Away to Pray n* Dl?tant Shrines nml Slonaaterle*. The Holy I'laeea They Vlalt and at Which They Arc Fed and liodged, Wlien the snows of winter melt in Russia nml the woods arc fragrant with violets and the lee in great masses floats down the rivers to the sea the peasant who is on the threshold of old nge, tired of long inaction, comes forth from his Izba and looks abroad. Strange thoughts have been stirring in hint for several months, recollections of a vow that he once made that, if heaven willed, he would one day worship In a Certain inonnstnrv mill flmrn vnimrnin the relies of Its saints. For many p. Jons year it seemed as If this vow would never be fulfilled, for there was work to do In the village of which he could in no way rid himself, and still more pressing was the harden of a numerous family that could not be left. ' But now the children have grown up and can fend for themselves, and the father and mother are 110 longer of the same value to the community as laborers. Indeed were they to quit the village they would not he much missed. One way, however, remains for them to redeem their lost position and to entitle themselves for the rest of their lives to the respect of nil their neighbors. It is to go on a far distant pilgrimage. Innumerable nre the sacred places in Russia and out of Russia which the pilgrims visit. On the sterile tundras that end in the lonely strand where the Waves of the White sea fling their foam upon the walls of the Solovetsky monastery; on the quays of Odessa, awaiting the steamer that will carry them to Jaffa, or 011 the monotonous straight roads that for verst upon verst lead by forests of white stemmed birch or somber pine to the resting place of St. Serge, near Moscow, or of the saints ' who sleep in the catacombs of Petchersk at Kiev, there may be seen bands of pilgrims, staff In hand, jour- , neylng on foot, through poverty or in 1 accordance with a vow, to their far- | off goal. The men often wear clumsy ] but comfortable shoos of plaited bark, stockings fastened round the leg with fltrlnir hrnpnlfOO rno*' ? ......ov v>vvvmvo m ?|1 11111^ lU 1 lie KUt'1'9 nnd wide, baggy, (lowing coats attached to the waist with a colored be^t. The women have a colored underskirt, a short .dress and bodiec all in one and a bright lined handkerchief wrapped round the head, a knapsack on the hack and a gourd or kettle fastened to a girdle. i*ut tne costumes are very various, and it would bo Impossible to describe them all. These pilgrims beg for money comparatively rarely. They have the self respect and independence which befit people presumably so pious. Terhaps they have saved for this pllgrimage>for many years; they arc hardy up to the last degree. At night they sleep where they can, in a monastery or perhaps in sheds that have been erected for them by the road, nnd when they wish to drink they stop and ask for water at a peasant's hut, where they are respectfully received. If they are short of bread the poor nioujik will give them some, If he lias any, for the charitable instinct of tlio people in Russia is Inextinguishable. And perhaps, too, they will render some service to the homes that they visit. Tolstoi has described a pilgrim to the Holy Land who found a whole family dying of starvation and set them up ngnln. And when Saturday arrives, nnd all good people are bound by "their religion to take a bath, then men and women will plunge into the river regardless of the want of bathing machines and careless of all bathing regulations. . Glad, after this interminable march of many weeks, is the Russian pilgrim when he sees far off, flashing against the azure sky, the domes of the church *. ? 01 me iioiy piaccs wnere ne is to worship, and especially Is he glad If It be a town, like Kiev, that stands on a range of wooded hills, breaking the monotony of the endless plain. Singing a more Joyous hymn, he approaches eagerly, for ho knows that there are food nnd lodging assured him at his destination. At Jerusalem there is an Immense convent built, supported by tbo Russian government, which is well oware of what the pilgrims do to increase Russian influence and her reputation in the Holy Land. At Solovetsky there is a hotel with sloping counters that serve as a resting place. At tho lavra of Petcliersk, the oldest of the Russian monasteries, there has been n house for tho poor since the eleventh century. Some of the pilgrims are accommodated in rooms that resemble well kept haylofts, nnd each one has a locker, where he may sit during the day and sleep at night. There is a hospital there, too, with eighty beds, and a special wing for those whose all merits are not of a serious description. I And for three days pilgrims arc lodged and boarded free, and many are allowed to como and go just as tbey will. He# Method. | Stella?So she married him to reform him? How did she begin? Bella?By spending a lot of money. You know how hard It Is for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven.? Harper's Ba?ar. # "* m ir iiui?m 1 - ? e ?\ ZERO AN ANCIENT TERM. | . . i It Wn? In ITwc In Ifnliylon Tlilrt y-!?tx '? CvnlurleK Aro. The term zero, which is used to designate n cipher ami in meteorology the 3 entire absence of heat in the atmos- 1 phore, was, according to a mathematical historian, Mori17, Cantor, used by the Bnbylouians about the year 1700 B. C. This, however, is merely a supposition. It has not been definitely established that 7,ero was in use any earlier than ? 400 A. D. About tills time it was used in India, and several centuries later the Arabs began to employ it. Through the Arabs its use became known to Europeans during the twelfth century. It was not generally adopted in Europe until several centuries later, notwithstanding its great advantages. Kor a considerable time there were two parties among the European educators. ! One party, known as the nlgorlsts, favored the adoption of the Hindoo sys- ? tern of notation (falsely called Arabic), with its position values, while the other, known as the abacists, favored the I'o man notation, without zero or position " value. The general adoption of the Hindoo ' system was greatly facilitated by the facts that It was explained in most of the calendars for more than a century, ? beginning with l.'UHt, and that the mediaeval universities frequently offered ^ courses devoted to the use of this notation.?Chicago Tribune. ~ Mc I.iati (it in rr Prnnli*. (or "The most ycautiful display of light- tj1( nlng or atmosi?lierie electric currents . ? which it was my good fortune to witness," says a resident of Quebec, "was n out on the Beauport llats, near Quebec. when two electrically laden clouds, as though two trees, their heads toward each other and tlieir feniror lirnnnlins ? - ?" - mo interwoven, kept on for more than ton (ju minutes. interchanging horizontal flash- ^.(>| es of beautifully colored tiro, not one of which ever reached the earth, while j r occasionally a flash would shoot up- M ward as if toward some cloud in that ' direction." (,<v . ? , . hel An Ktiirrlmrnt, "You see," said ('orntossel, "a phre- u nologlst once told us that our hoy Josh | '>0' had a remarkable head." "80 you sent him to college?" "Yes. Now we're waiting to see J'n' whether his head Is goin' to turn out to !U1 he a congenial residence fur brains or '(>' Jes* a garden fur football hair.? ' Washington Star. liiit .* 11 Yott Want. Persons tronhled with Indigestioi or Dyspepsia can cat all they want i! \ they take Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. Thi> :in" remedy prepares the stomach for tin aft reception, retention, digestion, and as hal dmilatiop of all the wholesome food to that may be eaten and enables the di- <ro pestivo organs to transform the sanu into the kind of blood that gives health :?nu fcirengui. ttokl by t, U. Duke. Kins? Snake Water MoceanIn. list "Tv.*o years ago," says n writer iu list the Seientltle American, "it was my u&u gootl fortune to witness a combat be- lA tween a king snake and a water ntoe- j' , casln. I was attracted to the scene by a negro laborer. When I reached the spot I found the snakes coiled to- ,| get iter In a pool of water, the king >03 snake gripping his enemy with the tip | oce of his tail Just back of the head. It dm was clearly ids intention to drown tlie 'cs moccasin. For the purpose of taking ,'? a photograph I llfhnl the two struggling, writhing serpenfs to a nick. Just |j_' before I took my photograph the king snake pulled the moccasin's head in the exact position lie wished and quickly stretched ids Jaws over it. Thought- , lessly enough, I put the snakes hack ^ Into the water, thinking that the king snake would also drown. Very soon, however, he left the pool, stretched his th;) victim straight out before him and for leisurely began to swallow him. In my efforts to take another photograph he was frightened away. Both snakes were nearly the same size, being about rui three and a half feet in length." 1 The Art of I.tNteniiiR. a There Is a grace of kind listening as ity well as a grace of kind speaking. Seine tar men listen with an abstracted air eei which shows that tlioir thoughts an* I elsewhere, or they seem to listen, but fira by wide answers and Irrelevant que* (tons show that they have been oeeu bo pied with their own thoughts as briny Q*'f more Interesting, at least in tlieir own estimation, than what you have been gac saying. Some interrupt and will not ha\ hear you to the end. Some hear you to the etui, and forthwith begin to talk to you about a similar experience which has befallen themselves, making your f case only an illustration of their own. Some, meaning to be kind, listen with of such a determined, lively, violent at- w tention that you are at once made un ton comfortable, and the charm of con- bre versa!ion is at an end. Many persons foil whose manners will stand the test of hat speaking break down under the trial yot of listening. car Ixx Easy Pill I f) Easy to take and oasy to act is 0k l>r< that famous little pill DeWltt's 1 Little Early Risers. This Is due to I q j the fact that they tonic the liver in- I atead of purging it. They never gripe E nor sicken, not even the most delicate I lady, and yet they are so certain In | IIC3UU3 inai no ono wilO uses them Is I disappointed. They cure torpid liver, I I ; j constipation, biliousness, jaundice, headache, malaria and ward off pneu- I monia and fevers. 1 . . PRSrARBD ST 9 I ' a. C. DeWITT A CO., CHICACIO I Don't Forgot tho Name. J >*c EARLY RISERS r p ? " . My H "I had a very severe sickness that took off ail my hair. 1 purchased a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor and it brought all my hair back again." \X'. D. Quinn, Marseilles, III. One thing is certain,? Ayer's Hair Vigor makes the hair grow. This is because it is a hair food. It feeds the hair and the hair grows, that's all there is to it. It stops falling of the hair, too, and always restores color to gray hair. $1.00 a bottle. Alt druggists. If your drn^irist cannot supply you, scud'tis otic dollar anil wo will express yuiintiottlo. lie sure anil give tlio natno of your nearest expressolllce. Address, .1. ('. A YI'.ll <'?>.. I.owell, Mass. ??MWCT? l? An Anirrlmn Waterloo. Velllngton nt Waterloo ami Monde Gettysburg each held the highland* iInst his antagonist. Wellington on >nt Saint .Tean and Meade on Cemoy Ithlg'o had the blrdseyo view of > forces of attack. The English hatles on the plateau and the Union tterles on Cemetery Heights coninded alike the intervening undulnns across which the charging colms must advance. Iteliind Mont hit .Tean. to conceal Wellington's vements from Napoleon's eyes, were > woodlands of Soignes. behind metery It 1(1 go, to conceal Meade's vements from the Held glasses of \ was a sharp declivity, a protecting I helpful depression. As the French iter Napoleon at Waterloo, so the nfederates under J.eo nt Gettysburg d the weaker position. In both eases assailants sought to expel their or lents from the stronger lines. I glit add another resemblance In tho ults whleli followed. Waterloo deed the destiny of France, of Engid. of Europe. (Jettysburg, not so dltly or immediately, hut practically, hied the fate of the Confederacy.? neral John It. Cordon in Scribner's.. * - l man may go along fur fifty year* not be worried inueli al>out de bercor, but de uiinit do barber finds a d spot on his bead lie's got a harden carry fur do st of bis days.?DeIt Free Press. Sa ye ihe Cliildren. < 'inety nine of every one hundred ,'ases that children have are due to ardors of the stomach, and these aro sed by indigestion. Kodol DyspepCure is just as good for children as is for adults. Children thrive on it. toeps their little stomachs sweet and :ouragc8 their growth and develoj nt. .Mrs. Henry Carter, 705 Central Nashville, Tenn., says: "My little r is now three years old and he has n sulTcring from indigestion ever co lie was horn. 1 have had the t doctors in Nashville, hut failed to him any good. After using one tie of Kodol he is a well baby. I Limmcnd it to all sufferers." Kodol ests what you eat and makes the nach sweet. Sold by K. C. Duke. Some Formnl Correspondence, l matter of fact sacristan of tho Cnslral of Berlin once wrote tho king Prussia this brief noto; ire?I acquaint your majesty, first, l there are wanting books of psalms the royal family. J acquaint your jesty, second, that there wants wood warm the royal seats. I acquaint your jesty, third, that the balustrade next i river, behind the church, is become nous. SCHMIDT, Sacrist of the Cathedral, 'lie reply of the king was not that of 'gracious majesty." Its stiff formalin imitating the style of the sacrisi probably was not taken by the rever as complimentary to him: Acquaint you, Herr Sacvlst Schmidt, it, that those who want to sing may i uvun?. occonu, i acquaint Merr :rlst Schmidt that those who want to warm must buy wood. Third, I acilnt IIerr Sacrist Schmidt that I shall trust any longer to the balustrade :t the river. And I acquaint Herr rlst Schmidt, fourth, that I will not re any more correspondence with him. FREDERICK. I'.kk* mid Fall-leu. t writer in tlie Chicago Tribune s: "My people came from the north Ireland. My great grandfather a\ys stuck his knife through the bofi of his eggshells after he hnd oaten akfast. My grandfather and father lowed liis example through force of dt^ind now I have contracted it. If i don't break the shells the fairies i use them for boats and can cross lies of water thus. In the north of land there are good fairies apd hud rios. The hnd fairies will ph?y ks on you if they onn roach you. n can hamper their mr omenta by nkiug their boats." RICK!~BRtCKr~BRICKI!l For ?ale in any quantity. te Rodger Brick Works. OR SALECHEAP )ne 15 II I*. Boiler end Engine (defied) one Brick Mrchiug, 20,000 ly capacity le Rodger Brick Works. U ^h^DR. I. M -^^^DENT Crown and Bridge Work a Specialty. PISCATORY STUPIDITY. I%< I Tlic Kinli'M Cnpnrlly For l.rnrnliin In j 1'nlnfiilly Contrnrtpd. j c Most fishes seek tholr fond by sight. , I snys Professor Kdniund Clark San ford ' in the International Quarterly. mnl ' 8 0 those do not usually notiee it by any i other sense, ltut those that niv aeeus- | J, tonied to fliul It by snioll seldom pay ! c any attention to it when they merely l, see It. 1 Catfish depend prinelpally on the li sense of taste, and they seein to taste j fi nil over, not only in the mouth, but by i n the outer skin as far back as the tail i 8 fin. " It is uncertain whether fishes can feel ! ,, pain or not. There is a good (leal of ; ^ evidence to show that they cannot. j ! A fish that has lost its siglit may i w learn to avoid an obstacle after swim- j I tiling against it a single time, but fishes j v that can see will jump against the plate J kk<ss wan or an aquarium Any lifter day, sometimes for a year, in the effort to catch things outside. The elements of consciousness in the ^ mind of a fish foot up a total "equivalent. perhaps, to the lowest idiocy when r measured by human standards." It Is li possible that the dish's capacity for s learning is "about on a level with that n of a man in deep sleep or preoecupa- j f tion." j (1 DeWitt Is the kamc. ! i; When you go to buy DeWitt Witch 1 Hazel Salve look for the name DeWlTT s an every box. The pure, unadulterated . j Witch Hazel is used in making I?c- J ( Witt's Witch Hazel Salve, which is the j best Salve in the world for cuts, burns, a bruises, boils, eczema and piles. The pot ularity of DeWitt's Witch Hazel d Salve, due to its many cures, has caused o numerous worthless counterfeiters to n be placed on the market. The genuine c bears the name of K. C'. DeWitt A: Co. ,, Sold by F. C. Duke. ? ^ a Tlic Hnlp Sultoil IIItn. |The new boarder bad been three p weeks in the house. "It is usual," raid the landlady, with great delicacy, "for my boarders to pay as they go." i "Oh, that's all right," lie replied af I fnbly. "I'm not going for a long time." 1 Sounilril I.Ike II. "What Is (hat piece you are playing? Is it by Wagner?" "No; the piano Is out of tune."? \ Brooklyn Times. , Life and Accident Insurance. The Aetna Life Insurance writes J policies not only for Life Indemnity, but also policies that protect yc.vi In case of accident or sickness. The only Old Line Company in the United 0 States to do this. Rates are very reasonable. This company is well known and comment is unnecs*ury. 1 am representing the above Company and will be pleased to call on sny one wishing insurance. Write ine ut Carlisle, S. C. .-1 4t5-tf W. F. Batks,Agent. b wmmmm mm, n s Pleased to flake t T3 Of laundry pi f.j'q work. 'tfr * M Who would /& ' > ' i?l \ not be? Only 'ho?c who do jft; . not se^k to anpreciale fe PERFFCT10N! ^,l|I|Il!lj THE U=NEED-A SI Surpassing It has won the approval of gooi who like well laundcre< MILLING don? at th 18-41 JACOB Z____ RUMMER ^ J&K ?- THS UN THE UN ON THE i$UMMi Southern =? .,!?!>>>. ? Complr Mailed fMlLW/fif V,AT?? W Pa.-i. Traffic M??r. II WASHINGTON. P.C. k Office Bank Building Union. S. O Cures Blood Boison, Cancer, Ulcers If you have offensive pimples or ruptions, ulcere on any part of the tody, aching bones or joints, falling lair, mucous natchcs, swollen glands, kin itches and burns, sore lipsorgums, 'Sting, festering sores, sharp, gnawing tains, then * ou suffer from serious blood toison or the beginnings of deadly caner. You may be permanently cured >y taking Botanic lllood Balm (B. B. i.) made especially to euro the worst ilood and sain di-eascs. Heals every ore or ulcer, even deadly cancer, stops 11 aches and pains ami reduces all wellings. Botanic Blood Balm cures II maligant blood troubles, such as c/.emn, scabs and scales, pimples, runing sores, carbuncles, scrofula. DrugMs, $1. To prove it cures, sample of lino 1 Balm sent free and prepaid by riting Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, (la. escribe trouble and free medical adice sent in scaled letter. F. C. Duke. X Tempest In n Teapot. What war was caused by a clay tenIAt*> l-'or an answer to this question wo mist go, nR might be supposed, to the ami of pigtails ntul porcelain. The tor.v poos that a Chinese etnperor in lden (lays pave as a mark of special avor a inagnificent clay teapot of raro leslpti to Lo Hung Chang, liis favorite namlarin. This was laid up as a priceless posession among the treasures of T<o lung or borne at his side l?y two ntendants at all liigli public festivals ml functions. A rival mandarin saw these signs of istlnctioii with the green eyes of Jealusy and 111 red a man to break the ohoxioiis pot. Tlie clumsy fellow was aupiit in tiie act and betrayed his mstcr. War followed between the two umdarins and tlicir respective followrs. which resulted in tlie overthrow nd death of I.o Hung Chang and tli? eceptiou of bis rival into royal favor ;i ills place.?London Answers. The only way to get a degree from lie colleges without earning It Is to M'coitie a great man without their iclp.?Haltiinore American. To Cure a Cold In One Day Vm- Laxative Rr< mo (Juinine Tablets. 11! druggists refund the money if it fails ) cure.. R W. Glove's signature on iihlcx "25c. ft ly )r. R. M. Dorsey, Specialist n diseases of the EYE and EAIl ?and? OPTICIAN. Successor to II. It. Good el I. kle.xaiulcr'8 Music Hall, Spartan ur-, S. 0. 47-lyr. he Acquaintance Not liow cheaply or how u quickly we can ^ie w?r^ *+ our study, but HOW WELL. And by uncensSf^f II V'vJ e^*or^ R,,<1 !| / /its vyi improved ineui/J ] J ods we have II made the work ^ done at rEAM LAUNDRY ly Good. i housekeepers and all thoFe 1 shirts and collars. 0 same oM stand* RICE. ? 3gSS^\ E FOR BUSINESS, E FOR PLEASURE, 2 FOR ALL THE BEST ?R RESORTS te Summer Resort Folder i Free t> Any Address. ?. H. Marcwick, W. H.Taylob, 11 Cun'l Pass. ARont, Asst. Gsn'l Ptsa. Aft. II waviiiiotou. d.c. atlanta, ca. ii ?????? , *