The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, September 11, 1903, Image 3
* r- V
. W*. :in. M'TFFTT Mr I
lay ?jtp*r!rno with yourexcelltnt mwdicln*, TEETIIIMA.
trouMilewthing. Krrr; rrmrdr was exhausted In tha nhajw
ront!nuvd to rasa off pure blood a.id burning terer eon!:iu?
liar mother determined to try THLTniNA, and In a day or
tb? bowels wen regular, and thanka to TEETHIN A, the litl
Youru, ate., P. W. Mcl
For tree planting on the fnrtn we ,
would like to cbnmieiul the nut hearing f
trees?walnut, butternut, chestnut and .
hickory. The wood of nil of these
trees Is very valuable and they liave '
the advantage over other kinds of trees ,
that their annual crop of nuts enables i
tliem to pny their way while growing.
It will not do lo refer to Kansas ns n
dry state hereafter, for oie county lit
that state during Mny Inst had enough
water fall to make a lake thirty feet
deep, covering one entire township, or
fl tlinHoP r%f dt 817 rt/Ml niiKlo foo# ft#
m"'~ v"""- "* " " |
ter. It was tills sort of tiling which
caused the destructive wArk In the
rivers of tlint region nt tlint time.
Winter wheat has proved n grand
crop for nil that lnrge territory In the
southwest where the rainfall mostly
conies during the winter and the summers
are excessively hot and dry. Besides
producing a profitable crop, the
wheat Holds afford the finest of pasture
during the winter for stock, such pasturing
being to the decided benefit of
the crop.
A Purgative Plea sit re.
If ^*ou ever took I>cWitt's Little Karly.
Kisers for biliousness or constipation
you know what a purgative pleasure is
*These famous little pills cleanse the
liver and rid the system of all hile
without producing unpleasant effects.
'They do not gripe, sicken or weaken,
but give tone and strength to the tissues
and organs involvod. W. II. Howell,
nf I Innutnn Ti.v " Va 1 w?4lor wv?ll
can bo used than Little Early Risers for
constipation, sick headache, etc." Sold
by F. C. Duke. j
Somebody tell us why auctioneers '
nre always called colonel. f
The cotton crop of Texas brings In
$40 each year for every one of Its
population. Then the seed Is worth
half as much more. 2
Abilene. Kan., sells more strychnine
and bisulphide of carbon than Any
other town in Anuyica. These poisons 5
nre used to destroy the prairie dogs. v
t
The east this year has a very short '
liny crop nnd the west an unusually 2
Inrgo one. There will he a good mar- ,
ket for nil the hay which can be so- t
cured. j
?
The last of July we put In what we j
call our fall garden?strlug lienns, rad- Ishes.
lettuce, turnips?things which will
come 011 late I11 the fall nnd afford late
plcklncr.
Distress After b.ntinyJ Cured.
Judge W. T. Holland of (ireenshnrg,
La., who is well and favorably known,
says: "Two years ago I suffered greatly
from indigestion. After entinc. crest
distress would invariably result, lasting
for an hour or so, and my nights
were restless. I concluded to try Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure; and it cured me entirely.
Now my sleep is refreshing and digestion
perfect. Bold by F. C. Puke.
'Die lv I iJ ?j,? I". Tlru I.n V..ii i'.
Ti e ear that iiiusUMt.** l:i [
"Descent of .Man" ?m being .allied to
the pointed type belonging to our simian
relatives n; not as tinc-unnicn as
many may Imagine, it is iny observntion
that this peculiarity of (lie fold
In question is ofteuer lo be observed i
in women, and In many of these cases j
the persistence of the wisdom teeth ,
is also a characteristic. I liuve In
mind two eases of this sort, one of a
man, the other of a woman, both residents
of one of our lending cities and
among their socTnl and intellectual
forces.
The latter is n remarkable reversion
to an earlier type in ear, in teeth, in
length of urm, in painless childbirth,
In flexibility of hand joints and in
other marked characteristics. ' It appears
to mo that the ear, like the vermiform
appendix, the suspension of
the viscera, the position of the oVillee
of the bladder and the unprotected I ,
condition of certain main arteries, is ' j
jet in a transitional state and not fully <
adapted to tlio newer human conditions \
imposed by the erect position and the
artificialities of civilization.?Science. J
__ ^ 1
TEMPER TESTER.
1
c
1
No Wonder Some Union 5
X
People Are Annoyed. J
? ,
i
Very little rent night after night, t
Very little comfort day after day. The i
constant itching of riles or Eczema, \
Any itchiness of the tdiin is a temper ,
^tester. Uoan's Ointment is a never
* failing core. Is endorsd by Union citizcns
for nil itching skin disease*.
E. N. Uailey, printer on the Timks, '
residing on Church Street, says: "I
have found Doan's Ointment to be an ,
A No. 1 remedy for itching hemorrhoids 1
from which I have been a great sufferer."
A man \rith this utliiction gets no
sympathy and people wonder why he I
Ais cross and ugly at times. Only those a
who have suffered in a similar manner 1
can understand the agony and torment i
he is sometimes in. For sale by ull deal- I
ers. Price "?0c nor box. Foeter-Milburn y
Co., Buffalo, N! Y., sole agents for the ?
Unite*I Stat**, Kemeinbpr the name? r
UOAN'S?and take uo othey. I
? #
ITT'BJfmim* Cliolara-Infantum, !
WWiB Diarrhoea,Dysentery, and
I ti Bi the Bowel Troubles of
IV Children ofAnyAfjfi.
"""" WflBjjAlds Digestion, Jl guL'-j
IWDKKSVUNI the Bowel?, Strcr^'hcn.*
at I)rucr<rkt? thc Chl,d nnd Mak'?
?l OTUggblS, TEETHING LASY.
. MOFFKTT, M. D.. ST. LCUiG. MO.
)*-\r Sir: Ju.tlco to you demand* diet I should j Ive yon
Our littla girt, Jusl thirteen month* old, h.in 1 ndmii-h
> of prescription* from family ph-tlcl.'ir. II r bowls
d for day* at n time, fl r life wn.slmortd ?cni-ednf.
1 two there w.ssAKreat rhauue?ne-.r life had returned?
le babe I* row <?? ; ir well.
VEK. Editor n"d I'roprletor Tn?fc*<ec(Ala.) New*.
HANGMAN'S PAY.
rhp Wny nn Orle ntnl F.teciillonor
Help* fir Kill 111* Puree.
In the oast a hangman's tratle Is very
profitable. As sixin as a person Is
rondciuncd to 1>?> hanged notice is sent
to the executioner, who has the privilege
of erecting the sea (fold wherever
tie pleases, ami at sunrise the next
morning lie begins his work. Accompanied
by his assistants, who guard
the condemned man and carry material
Tor the scaffold, ho goes to soino prominent
place in front of n lArge dwelling
iml there proceeds to erect thc scaffold.
A few minutes later the owner of the
large dwelling rushes out and implores
liim to go somewhere else.
"I don't.want to have a man longed
In front of my house," lie expla His.
?? \ II .d.rl.t ? <1.? I.....
i*n?, hh; ^ uir 1141mi.i u. I .111
ivllliiig to go elsewhere provided .von
lay mo for my trouble in coming horo
liul for tlio time wliioli I hive spoilt
it tlie job."
Though tho sum which ho mimes Is
irotty largo, tho owner of tho largo
lwoliing pays it willemf a word,
tvhorctipon Mho hangman goes to an><hor
largo dwelling, where a similar
icono is onactod.
In this way several hours are spoilt
jy the executioner in extorting money
Irom ail tlio magnates In the noiirhliorlood.
When Ills purse is at last well
Hied lie erects tlio seafTohl in some
lark wood, and soon tho unfortunate
nan. who has been tramping after lilin
ill day. Is at rest.?New York Ilerald.
Some of the mutual insurance oommnlos
among the farmers are making
1 lower rate of insurance on stock
iVhere t lie policy* holder properly
frounds (lie wires of ids fences.
We have noticed that bee men?men
vlio are successful In caring for bees?
ire almost always mighty good mtn.
't Is said that tho bee knows a mean
an Just as soon as lie Bees him.
Mr. Joseph Poniinville, of Stillwater,
Jinn., alter having spent over $2,000
vith the best doctors for stomach
rouble without relief, was advised by
lis druggist, Mr. Alex. Richard, to try
l box of Chamberlains tStomach and
jtver Tablets, He did so, and is a well
nan today. If troubled with indigesion.
bad taste in the mouth, lack of np>e1ite
or constipation, give these tablets
i iriai, ana vou ceriaui to oe more man
ileased with the result. For snie at
!5c ;>er box by F. C. Duke,
A LI. IXTKtlKSTnn l>" A?niCILTURK.
There has doveioiied in the large cor espoiulence
growing out of the pubicntiou
of these notes the very pleasng
faet that a large percentage of
lien engaged in professional, uierchnile
and manufacturing lines have a
strong liking for things pertaining to
:he farm. This is not to bo wondered
it when one considers how many of
hem wore born and raised upon tDo
farm, and then through much of tlie
ouiitry, especially in the great wc'st,
ill kinds of business outside of the
farm are so very closely connected
ivltli the farm?agricultural prosperity
iml good crops insuring commercial
ind ^irofcssional success?that tilings
lertainlng to agriculture are of interest
lo nearly ail. Then the man in town,
jo ho doctor, lawyer, merchant or parion,
Is Just as nnicli Interested in ids
10111c surroundings, and often more
than is the farmer, for he will have
Ills garden, ids lawn, his flowers, his
shade and fruit trees, often his chickmis
and a cow, and for many the
lreain of their lives is to have a small
farm where living shall be free from
the fret, strife and competition of our
modern commercialism. And so it
nines that if anything can bo written
which shall appeal to the almost universal
love of nature and natural
thing* of home, and how to make It
x more delightful place of life and
liow to get the most and best out of
It, the parson in ids study, the uierhant
in his counting room, the'teacher
n his schoolroom, the lawyer in his
>01ce are as much interested as lie who
toils on the farm.
Six of the states have no state debt?
Iowa, Nebraska. New Jersey, Illinois,
Jhlo and West Virginia.
A costly way to raise calves and pigs
s to set the milk of the dairy cows In
ana in cold water and sell tho cream,
'ceding the skim milk to the young
itock. T'nder the normal conditions
vhich prevail on the average farm
heije Is fed to the calves and pigs not
ess than three-quarters of a pound of
Mitter fat for every 100 i>ounds of
ikhn milk. Tho farm separator would
irevent tills loss. We know of one
locality where there are fl.lO patrons
'urnlslilng cream produced in the mnnler
stated 1o the local creamery, and
:ho daily loss of butter fat amounts to
3\-er $70. These patrons raise good
|iigs and calves, however, and don't
kick because they do uot kuow what
Lhey lose.
Has Sold a Pile of Chamberlain's
Con fib Rt medy. 1
1 have Sold Chnmlierlain's Cough
{emedy for more than twenty years
incl it has given entire satisfaction. I
lave sold u pile of it, and can recomt
highly.?Josonh MeKlhiney, Linton,
own, You will find this remedy a
[ood friend, when troubled with a
eugli or,cold, if always afY< rJs quick
elief aad is pleasant to take. For sale
>y F. 0. Duke.
bk i i ????
On n ranch in Nueces county, Tex.,
there is a collection of (Umkh) rattles
taken from thai number of rattlesnakes
killed on the ranch during a peri oil of
years. A bounty of 21 -j cents is paid
for each snake kilh'd.
A representative of the 2,01 >0,000 propie
of tiie island of <"?\vh>n. who arc always
on tin' verge of starvation, is now
In llils country studying American systems
of agriculture with a view to improving
the condition of liis people.
If u hoy does not seem to be good
for anything it is far better to try to
make a lawyer out of him than a farmer
these days. It used to be the other
way. The blockhead lias no place on
the farm under existing conditions,
while Judicial courtesy will still permit
ldm to address tlie court.
i
The I*lcn>itre of I\niitig.
Persons en Iter ing from indigestion, !
dyspepsia or other stomach trouble will
lind that Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests
what you eat and makes ttie stomach
sweet. This remedy is a never failing
cure for Indigestion and Dv-pepsia and
all complaints allYctiig the glands
or membranes ot the stomach or digestive
tract. Win n you take Kodol Dyspepsia
Care ov? rything you eat tastes
good, and evety bit of nutriment that
your food eoist tins i-< ."s.-ainilatcd and
appropriated by the M? od ami tissues.
Sol.l by l*\ C. Duke.
Experiment; onr-'.-isivi !y prove tlint
for some unknown reason snnuuer or
full apples. such as I 'i-* Duchess,
Wealthy anil I'iiiu mis", when placed in
colli storage conic out in (in* spring and
early summer in very much le tter condition
than do winter varieties, such
as the Willow Twig. Winesap, I.aldwln.
< livening anil others. This fact
is of no small Importance to a largo
section of the northwest, where the
summer and fall apples named ran be
produced in perfection ami where the
winter apple Is so far wanting.
A Hoy's Wild Hide for Life.
With fajnily around expecting him to
die, and a son riding f?>r life, IS miles
to get Dr. King's New Discovery for
Consumption, Conges and Colds, W. II.
Brown of Lees-vile, 1ml., endured
death's agonies from asthma; hut the
wonderful medicine gave instant relief
and soon etned him lie write-: '!
now sleep s undly every night." l.iki
marvelous cures i f Consumption, 1'i.eu
tnonin, Bronchitis, Coughs, (.'olds and
tirip prove its matchless merit
for all Timet and Lung Troubles '
(iu a ran teed bottles .";0e and $!.<"?
Trial bottles free at F. C. Duke's drug
store.
Toe North Dakota system oi err.,
rotation?wheat, tlien a summer f.d
low?is the method cf ancient agrli u!
ture in 1 lie days of the l'omen empire
Tin' modern method of roiation which
follows wheat with some sort of e
legume erop'is infinitely better. ^
We are trying a one horse mowing
machine of It'-, foot cut this year for
trimming up the orchard and roadsides
and arc much pleased with it. It will
work in and among trees whore a
standard machine cannot, auil docs
much better work than can l>e done
with a scythe. 1
T/ti* !?!/? t'C r1 f\11 9*4/* fft*t 4
The genuine is always better than a
counterfeit, but the truth of this .statement
is never more forcibly realized <u
more thoroughly appreciated than win n
you compare tlie genuine De Witt's
Witch Hazel Halve with Hie many
counterfeits and worthless substitute.that
are on the market. W. S l.edhet
ter, of Hhrevoport, 1st., says: "Aftci
using numerous other remedies without
benefit, one box of HeWitt's \\ itch
Hazel Salve cured me." For blind,
bleeding, itching and protruding
piles no remedy is equal to DeWitt's
Witch Hazel Salve. Hold by K.
Duke.
...
Wo have n friend who is an enthusiast
on gardening. lie li t-' only ju t n
small city lot to work with a piat of
ground about six square rods hut lie
manages to grow something of nearly
everything i:t it. Tie has all -kinds of
vegetables, a strawberry bed, raspberries,
currants, gooseberries, blackbev
ties and dewberries true, on'y a bush
or two of each, hut h" takes such good
rare of his garden tSiat his table is well
supplied with tie* nice tilings ii produces
ail summer long. On much of the ground
he raises two crops a year. Hi-- next
door neighbor buys every such thing
his family uses. It Is simply the difference
between knowing and not knowing
how to do the business. Thousands of
lnvn coulil woll afford to loarn something
along this lino.
Ho Itrnd It.
Poet?Has the editor road the poom I
loft lioro yesterday?
Offloo Boy - I think so. sir. no's away
111 today.
Easy Pill
% Easy to take and easy to act Is 41
that famous little pill DeWitt's
Little Early Risers. This Is due to
the fact that they tonic the liver Instead
of purging It. They never gripe
nor sicken, not even the most delicate
lady, and yet they are so certain In
results that no one who Oses them Is
disappointed. They cure torpid liver,
constipation, biliousness, jaundice,
headache, malaria and ward off pneu
*- ?i ....... '
iiiviim ?uu lovcij. p
1 PR 8PARBD BY fj?
f X. C. DtWITT A CO., CHICAGO I
L Don'! Forget the Name. J
EARLY RISERS
For sale by F. C. Duke.
EMother
\y mother was troubled with
umption for many years. At
;hc was given up to die. Then
tried Aycr's Cherry Pectoral,
was speedily cured."
g D. P. Jolly,^Avoca, N. Y.
2 No matter how hard I
| your cough or how long I
S you have had it, Ayer's 8
5 Ghcrry Pectoral is the
| best thing you can take,
jj But it's risky to wait
n until you have consumption.
Get a bottle of
Cherry Pectoral at once.
Three ?lies: 25c.. 50c., $1 W.
Consult your doctor. If he nays take It,
[5 then do us ho says. If he tells von not to
| take it, then don't take It. He known.
Aid recovery by keeping the bowels
in good condition with Ayer's Pills,
ill vegetable, gently laxative.
J. C. AYKR CO., Lowell, Mann.
Bttr'jiiiiiif?M??i . ? ?
- .
, ? % %
Forty-live years ago wc used to hunt
pigeon* anil squirrels in a Wisconsin
forest, a stately, unbroken growth of
splendid beeches, maples anil oaks, every
acre of which woulil cut over 100
con Is of four- foot wood. The seeming
necessities of the early settlers
compelled the slaughter of this mugnilieent
forest growth, anil hardly a
trace of It is to be fouml today. It
was the same way in Michigan and Indiana.
Perhaps the easiest and quickest way
in which to convert the soil of the
prairie states into merchantable timber
is to plant eot ton woods. This tree
makes a fair quality of lumber for
rough purposes, and on good soil an
acre forty years old will saw up from
tn.cKM to 4!i.int<> feet of lumber, board
measure, besides furnishing a large
amount of firewood. The other soft
woods- soft maple. 1> >x elder, willoware
worthless for this purpose.
What Is Life?
In the last analysis nohody knows
but we do know that it is under strict
aw. Abuse that law even slightly,
pain result a- Irregular living means
lernngement of the organs resulting it
Constipation, Headache or Liver
trouble. Dr. King's New Life Pills
piickly re-adjusts this. It's gentle, yet
thorough. Only 25c at F. 0. Dukc.s
I >rug Store.
Tlio I'nrmpr.
The farmer ought to be the cleanest
man in bis neighborhood, both ns to his
person and in his character; the gentlest,
of. *11 gentlemen, the most prompt
to meet every obligation, financial and
.otherwise; the most ready to see and
help the neighbor who Is in trouble, on
time in all his farm operations, ready
to take a band in straightening out any
crookedness In the public affairs of his
community and of the larger field in
which he happens to live, kind in his
family relations, positive in all his convictions.
yet not self assertive enough
to drive men from the truth. Why
should the farmer be nil this? Because
In* has boon blessed in having a home
so near the heart of nature that he
ought to catch something of nature's
sweetness, strength nnil uprightness.?
Farm .Tounv.l.
linvklcn's Arnica iralve.
1 las world-wide fame for marvellous
cures. It- surpasses any other salve, lotion
ointment or balm for Cuts, Corns,
iViirns, l'oils, Fores, Felons, I leers, Toller,
Salt Klieum, Fever Sores, Chapped
il.uuls, Skin Krruption; infallible" for
Piles. Cure guaranteed. Only 25c at
F. C. Duke. Druggist.
Not nnnlnrm.
A innu with an armful of hills went
Into Mr. Sehoppenheim's restaurant
an?l asked permission to tack a hundred
or so to the wall.
"Vot wos dose?" asked Sclioppenheiin.
"t'irculars advertising a cheap railway
excursion."
"You goes avay off for a week or den
days, and you goes sheapor as to stliy
at home?" asked Sehopponheiin.
"Thai's it."
"1'nt you vonts to hang dose cirgulars
niein restaurant in?"
"You've got it."
"(Jot vot?"
"The idea."
"Den niein gustomers would rend
dose ( irgulars?"
"That's the Idea."
"I'nt go avay den dnya or two
veeks ?"
"Yes."
"I"nt don't eat dinners here vile dey
vos avay?"
"Well, they could hardly do that, you
know," said the handbill man hesitatingly.
"Dot's vot I dinks melnself. Nein: I
guess l von't have any of dose pills
liiinc nioin nwinni'.m* In
moiii friomll." London Telegraph.
BRICK! BRICK!' BRICKI!!
Kor ?ale in any
<\i ib ritity.
The Rodger Brick Works.
KOR SA.LECHEAP
One 15 II r. Boiler and Engine (deI
ached) one Brick Maching, 20,(XK
daily capacity.
The Rodger Brick Works.
I 26-tt
^rRL M
? Ofc^-^DENl
Crown and Bridge
Work a Specialty.
Now (hat irrigation as a policy for |
the reclamation of worthless lands is |
attracting so much favorable attention, j
it Is of interest to note what tin? sys- I
torn has accomplished for other conn- (
tries. The government in India has
$110,000,000 invested in irrigation !
works and its net revenue therefrom i
last year was 7..".0 per at. The value !
of the crops produced last year on this !
irrigated area was $iy."i,unO,iMMi, or considerably
more* than the cost of the
works.
It Is on old story, one which may he
duplicated in nearly every community:
Tin* father, a farmer, earing more to j
make money than he did for the wel- !
fare of his family, ltoys worked like
little slaves and denied nearly all reasonable
boyish pleasures. Hoys grow
to young manhood and. finding themselves
strong enough to break the
tether which has so long held them,
break loose and raise Cain. Old man
worries over his bad lurk with his
hoys and wonders why his neighbors
do not pity him. Jtuising boys Is a different
business from raising hogs and
siccrs, yet tunny men can't see it.
It Is wortii noting thai tin* cement
bridges Withstood the floods of May in
Kansas wlmii nil other typos of bridges
wont out with tlioin.
Fair fit I Odds Against Hint.
Bedridden. alone and destitute.
Such, in bri- f was tlid condition of an
old poldier l?y name of J. .T. Havens.
Versailles, O. For years he \vatrouhlcd
with Kidney disease and
neither doctors nor medicine'gave him
relief. At length he tiied Flectric U tters.
It put him on his feet in shoit
order and now he testifies: "I'm on the
road to complete recovery." Best on
earth for Liver and Kidney trouble and
all forms of Stomach and Bowel cotnIdaints.
Only "?0e, (Saaranlced by
?\ C. Duke, Druggist.
Till-: Tt It>" Of-' TIIH TIDK.
The country is gradually experiencing
the economic and financial change
which has been anticipated, a tapering
off of the tliisli and speculative conditions
of the past three years. The
work of the promoter is ended?nothing
doing in tiiat line, and that is a
good thing. Interest rates are advancing
and money brings (J and 7 per
cent as readily as it did four or live
years ago. Water enough to run a lot
of big mills lias been sipiee/.ed out of
corporation securities, ami there is
more- to be wrung ont of them yet.
Hardpa 11 Is in "sight. The land boom
was the last of the speculative lire- .
works?always is. The next strikes J
will be to prevent a cut in wages and i
not to compel an increase, and the time
Is not far off when the man will he
hunting the job instead of the job
hunting the man. It has been a pretty
good time, however, and all have had
a share in it. The wise man lias paid
up his debts and in a large measure
made himself independent of more adverse
conditions. The foolish man lias
run his credit to the limit and may
well dread pay day. Tlio American
people are never content with nioder- j
ate profits and healthful prosperity In
n small way. They a re always cither [
"liekerin' " up or sobering off, raising
the devil or being converted, ready to j
sacrillcc n reasonable competence for a
run for a fortune or the poorhouse, and j
in doing thus they manage to get !
a-plenty of variety and excitement.
If it is at all a possible thing the
system of crop rotation on the western
prairie farm should include clover at
least once in every live years. Where
this Is done there will he no trouble
about the land wearing out.
J.ife and Accident Insurance.
The Aetna Life Insurance writes
policies not only for Life Indemnity,
but also policies that protect you in
case of accident or sickness. The
only Old Line Company in the United
States to do this. Rates are very
reasonable. This company is well
known and comment is unncessary.
I am representing Iho above Com- j
pany and will be pleased to call on i
4liv one wishinir insiirnneo. Write
inc at Carlisle, S. C.
4(>-tf W. F. Batks, Agent.
V--?? '' jZrf
A "32
[n^UHMER V=^
I ? THE L
I UR AtCf the L
Hrtl bJ THE L
ON THE SUMN
SOUTHERN r "
Com
TCJO Mai!
JUILWAY W.A.T,.,?.
^ Pass. Traffic Mpr
WASHINGTON. D.C
^
?Ml?Mil II
. i 1 air,^+hOffice
Bank Building
Union, S. C
FREE TO OUR READERS.
Botanic Mostl Itulm for the Blood.
If you suffer from u'.c is. rczrin*.
scrofula, blood poison, cancer, eating
sores, itching skin, pimples, boi's, bone
jxiiin>?. swellings, il.cum itism, catanli,
or any blood or skin disea-e, we advise
you to lake Botanic Blood Halm (B B.
11.) Especially recomuiended for old,
obstii'ate, deep seated eases, cures where
all else fails, hea's every sore, makes
the blood pure and lich, gives i be skin
the rich glow of health. Druggists, $1
per large bottle. Sample sent. fieeby
writing Blood Halm (Jo, Atlanta. Da ,
Describe trouble and Iree medicol advice
sent in seal letter. Mediciie sent
at once, prepaid. F. L\ Duke.
WHAT Clt UriRV) IIIM V
lie was fifty years old and lived on
a farm. lie had boon all bis life what
is known as a pretty hard ease; would
get drunk and bum around every so
often, was uselessly and wlrkodly profane,
paid no regard to the Sabbath,
was hard in Ids dealings with his
neighbors, brutish In bis home and not
infrequently struek and abused his
good wife, lie was rieli and was simply
endured and despised by all the
decent people of bis community. By
some strange elianee lie was brought
under the Inllueuco of a good minister
who was conduetlng some revival
meetings in bis neighborhood and, ns
we term it, was converted. Now note
the change. lie quit drinking and
HWnni'lncr mill nl.llalm. III. _.!#? -
. ... ..-r, MiMimn*, inn n uc mm
children, observed the Sabbath ns n
day of rest nn?l went to eluircli with
his family, I wen me kind to the dumb
animals on his farm and dca\^ honestly
and squarely with his neighbors.
What changed this man? Call It an
old woman's fable, superstition or
bigotry, or what you please. It made
a new man of him and was a good
thing, anyhow. This happened ten
years ago, and be Is n good man and
neighbor today.
A rich soil should mean a prosperous
agricultural condition for any country
and where agriculture nourishes tlierc ,
will the people prosper. A poor soil
means a poor people.
To Cure a Cold In One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.
All druggists refuud the money if it fails
to cure. K. W. (Jrove's signature on
each l>ox. 25c. f.ly
Dr. R. M. Dorsey,
Specialist
on diseases of the EYE and EAR
?and?
OPTICIAN.
Successor to II. It. Goodell.
Alexander's Music Ilall, Spartan
burg, S. C. 47-lyr.
What a Woman Likes to see
in laundry work can be seen any
time by looking Ht. the shirts, collars
and cuffs laundered here.
The dirt is separated from the
fabric by the use of pure water and
good soap. At the
U-NEED-A LAUNDRY
the washing, drying, starching, ironing
and finishing is done in the most
approved manner by those who have
mucn experience in this line of work.
11 is all perfect.
JNE FOR BUSINESS,
.INE FOR PLEASURE,
.INE FOR ALL THE BEST
fER RESORT3I
plete Summer Resort Foldef
ed Free to Any Address.
S. H. Hardv.tck, W. H. Taylo*.
Gen'l Pass. At;ont, Asst. Gen'l Pass. Att.
v.ashinotoh, d.c. atlanta. oa. ?
=- ' ' ? ?