The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, February 19, 1904, Image 3
f IJV LOVE^l
I and WA'R j
V Sy Kate Pf. Cteary 0
O Copyright, 1003, by T. C. McCfuri Q
Doris was singing as sbe came flying
down the wide stairway and out lots
the warm brilliancy of the young da?,
for It was midsummer, ths time of
roses, of fragrance, of romance.
And Doris seemed the veritable spirit
of it all?at least so thought the young
fellow watching her from his seat under
the great elm. But It was not till
she was quite close to blm that she was
aware of his presence. The gay little
chanson she had been lilting ceased,
and the pretty, startled color deopened
In her soft cheeks.
"Bon Jour!" she cried blithely and
paused In her Atnlnnta-Uke flight.
"Mercy! What n morning to be poring
over a book! Why, Instead yon
should"?
"I know I" He had risen and was
towering before her, straight nnd stately,
a man with an air that was more
that of a soldier than a student "Ton
think I should prefer to cultivate Dame
Nature."
There was a quizzical flicker In tho
gray, black lashed,-black browed eyea
that met her accusing gaze.
"If you will put down that book you
may walk with me as far as the abode
of Mrs. Mellnda Farsons, who Is expecting
me this morning to write her
monthly letter to her son in the Philippines."
"The permission Is tempting," confessed
John Jardlne, "but tliero Is Freddie"?
"Oh, If you prefer Freddie's society
to mine!" The little chin with the dimple
went up In the ulr.
"But I'm paid to tench your brother,
Miss Ware," he hastened to explain.
I "And not to accompany me. I quite
understand." And then, with much
dignity of demeanor, "Good morning,
Mr. Jardlne."
"Good morning," he replied ruefully.
But tlie quizzical smile was dancing
again in his handsome eyes as Miss
Ware flashed open her parasol, whisked
up the skirts of her embroidered batiste
and turned loftily away, only to
pause when she had tnken a few steps
and look back over her shoulder with
eyes full of Infinite reproach.
"There's that dog at Brown's, and?
he might bite. And?and it's hard to
get over the nnstnro' ?tUo ??
And"?a pitiful quiver In her voice
clinched the sincerity of her assertions
?"I am afraid of snakes?and there
may be snakes. Freddie saw one last
summer."
There was no questioning the triumphant
truth of the final declaration.
' Nor was refusal longer possible. Conquered,
John Jardlne found himself
walking along the avenue, adjusting
his long stride to the gait of Miss Doris
Ware, who, now that she had her own
way in persuading the most stubborn
individual with whom 6he had ever
come In contact, was radiant and bubbling
over with merriment.
Since si*- months before their acquaintance
began the little flirt, belle,
beauty and heiress had vainly tried all
her graces and fascinations on the serious
and stately instructor of her boisterous
young brother. It had seemed
so natural since she was a schoolgirl In
short dresses to have admirers by the
dozen that the difficulty she experienced
of bringing Jardlne to her feet
piqued her and made her more than
ever determined to make him capitulate.
She *niiM hotro Anone^l ? ? ?
? ??? .? -M?W vj^cucu urn pau"
sy purple eyes very wide Indeed and
bare been honestly amazed bad any
one accused her of being heartless.
She would have sold that no one meant
to be serious. Anyhow, all knew?for
it was an open secret?that she was not
free. Her marriage had been arranged
?oh, ages ago?by parents and lawyers
and solicitors and that kind of people.
It was purely a marriage of convenience.
But It appeared to be very convenient
indeed, and quite satisfactory
all around.
Borne day, when she was old. very
DOUBTFUL RUMORS.
And Still Scores of Union
People Accept Them
As Facts.
The statement of some stranger, residing
in a far-away place, may be true
enough; but it is generally acceptedias
a doubtful rumor. How can it be verified?
The testimony which follows is
convincing proof because it comes from
a resident of Union.
W. Clyde Drummond, Insurance
Agent, on Main Street, residing on
Mountain St., says: "Before using
uo&ns ivianey jtiiis i naa great trouuie
with my back and kidneys. The pain
right across the small of my back, first
in one side and then in the other, completely
prostrated me at times and made
me totally unfit for buslnes of any kind
and coula hardly get around. The kidney
secretions were strong, dark and
full of sediment and caused me great
inconvenience on account of their too
frequent action especially at night. I
used any number of remedies but all to
no purpose until I read of Doan's Kidney
Fills and went to Holmes' Pharmacy
and got a box. The result of their
use was a surprise to me. My back has
.not hurt me since I used the Pills. I
can go to bed and sleep all night without
having to set; up once, and the secretions
regained their natural color and
the sediment in them disappeared."
For idle by all dealers. Price 60c per
box. Feete*-Milbnrn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.,
sole agents for the UnHed States' Remember
the nemo?1)0AW' S?and take
iim
uiu ? pertiufm twenty-four or thereabout?Lord
Lesslugton would come
sailing over the sea and wed her and
bear ber back over the -billovy to a magnificent
historic old home In Sussex,
and she would be a great lady and lead
a good and beautiful life and be happy
forever and ever. Which, as her heart
bad never been touched, and she was
only a wild and winsome little maiden,
seemed quite right and natural.
Only of late she had begun to wonder
why her eyes wonld droop when
suddenly encountering those of the
man beside whom she now walked,
rattling on In light. Inconsequent fash,
Ion. She was fnrlons when she found
her cheeks grow burning hot at the moment
of a cbanee meeting. What was
be to her that her heart had come to
beat more qulekly when In his presence?
Defiantly she summoned all her
bright audacity to conceal this Strang*
new tin rest.
Homeward bound- atj bonr later, tbey
secured tbelr mall at the village. In
the groen gloom, gold pierced, of the
forest pathway the girl sat down to
read her letters. Leantng against a
tree, grave and silent, Jardlne stood
wzucQing ner.
"Oh I" she cried out suddenly and
turned very pale. "He is coming! His
lawyer writes he Is coming. Oh, I
didn't think he'd come for years and
years!" There was downright dread
in the eyes that looked pttoously up at
her companion. "Lord Lesslngton Is
coming."
He nodded. "You've never seen
him?" he asked. "He Is old, I suppose,
and ugly and altogether detest
abler
"No. Oh, no. It was all arranged.
But they say he Is young and good.
He Is very rich, of course. I didn't
think I'd mind?and now." She rose
trembling. The tears brimmed over
and ran down the cheeks from which
the rose bloom had fnded. "He will
he here today, and I?soon I will have
to marry him."
"You poor little thing!" The compassion
In his voice thrilled her?that
and something more. "Don't you know
?you do know, my darling?thgt yon
are going to marry me."
Then he had her in his arms and
was holding her close In their strong
and sheltering embrace.
For an lnstnnt or two she did not resist.
The sweet shock of It nil, the
sense of being protected, more than all
the ecstatic knowledge of her own
heart, overwhelmed her. His kisses
were on her cheeks, her lips, and his
passionate words In her ears.
"No, no!" she cried and drew away.
"It Isn't right! I most marry Lord
Lesslngton. It was all arranged long
ago. I never objected. I didnl know"?
?ium? no. i sunn i ioucd you again
unless you come to me. You, didn't
know that you were going to fall in
love with me!"
Her color came back with a rash.
"Is this," she faltered ?"is this ?
love?"
He laughed, a low, contented, joyous
laugh.
"I will answer that only with you in
my arms. Come!"
She hesitated. Aware of a bewildering
sense of happiness, she still hesitated.
But his eyes compelled her. She
took a step forward, and again bis
arms infolded her. It was with dread
of the battle to be possessing her that
Doris Ware heard the first dinner bell
that evening. But It was a determined
young lady who held her head high and
went down the stairway to meet the
English nobleman whom It had been
decided should make her bis wife.
Would her always Indulgent father be
furious to learn she was to marry a
penniless tutor? Would her weak, ambitious
mother weep and protest? What
matter? She ^pnld have him whom
she loved?loved?loved.
"Go in!" Her parents, standing at
the foot of the stairs, kissed her. "Go
In, and God bless you both! He Is
waiting. Go to him!"
Then the slender figure, all in snowy
draperies of clinging lace, was walking
up tne room.
"I am sorry to have to tell you, Lord
Lessington"-? she began, but the words
she would have spoken were never
aid.
The tall, handsome man In evening
dress had her held tightly to his heart,
and the arms that closed around her
were those that had been her refuge
that morning in the forest
"John," she whispered. "John!"
XJedric John Jardlne Dynely, Lord
Lesslngtonl" he corrected her* "Beloved,
I've won you I I've served for
you. If not as long as Jacob served for
Rachel, aa faithfully. Ifs fair-all's
fair, sweetheart in love and wart"
Akasstalaicd Momaucm.
Professor Theodor Mommscn, the
great German historian, was very absentmtnded.
One day he waa engaged
in his study in profound researches
and failed to notlee the presence of his
servant who announced that his lunch
Was ready. The servant asked If he
might bring the eonrses to the professor
and, receiving no reply, laid the
table near the writing desk. Returning
ten minutes later with some fish, the
mental found the soup untouched.
Thinking It too good to spoil, he sat
down ssd finished soup and fish unobserved
of the professor. The remaining
eonrses suffered a similar fate.
auoui an iKnir iwier jhoinmsen iookto
Of frem his work and proceeded to the
kitchen ts ask why-luncheon'bed not
been served. "But the professor had
his luncheon an hour ago!" expostulated
the servant "Dear me," said the
historian, "how could I be so forgetfull"
and returned peaceably to his
study, where he continued working
through the afternoon.
A IfftrHlnv fiacit.
Mrs. Chic ? Isn't Miss Patterson a
rather dull girl? Mrs. An Palt?DuUT
She's got a pedigree right straight back
to a real English lord^-Detxelt Free
h i is i a
My Hair
"I had a very severe sickness
that took off all my hair. 1 purchased
a bottle or Ayer's Hair
Vigor and it brought all my hair
back again."
W. 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. All rfreffltte.
If your druggist cannot supply you,
send us ono dollar anil wo will express
you a bottlo. Jto suro ami givo tlio natuo
of your nearest oxprcssonTeo. Address,
?!. A YKK CO.. I.owoll. Mass.
A Sure Result.
'If John lind throe apples add Willie
gave lilni three tnore," asked the teacher,
"what would that make?"
"The stomach ache," promptly responded
little Paul, who was being
bronght up to the idea that he was
some day to be a doctor.
Loss a Gain.
When married life Is full of strife
And such left handed fun,
'Tls better to have loved and lost
Than to have loved and won.
The Proper Finish.
*T suppose Mnud is satisfied now
that she lias had a great wedding."
'T guess so. You know all is well
that ends swell."
Oures Blood Poison, Cancer, Uloers
If you have offensive pimples or
eruptions, ulcers on any part of the
body, aching bones or joints, falling
hair, mucous natohes, swollen glands,
skin itches and burns, sore lips or gums,
eating, festering sores, sharp, gnawing
pains, then you suffer from serious blood
poison or the beginnings of deadly cancer.
You may be permanently cured
by taking Botanic Blood Balm (B. B.
B.) made esnecially to cure trhe worst
blood and sain diseases. Heals every
sore or ulcer, even deadly cancer, stops
all aches and pains and reduces all
swellings. Botanic Blood Balm cures
all maligant blood troubles, such as
<'CEema, scabs and scales, pimples, running
sores^carbuncles, scrofula. I)rug'sts,
?1. To prove it cures, sample of I
Blood Balm sent free and prepaid by
writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.<
Describe trouble and free medical advice
sent in sealed letter. F. C. Dukp.
Mary Mairdalcne** Ornve.
Fifteen thousand pilgrims annually
visit St. Baume, In Provence, not far
from Marseilles, where Mary Magdalene
Is said to have spent the last thirty
years of her life.
The legend, according to the Nouvelle
Revue, runs that Mary Magdalene came
from- Judrnn in a small boat with Lazarus,
Martha, the two Marys and Salome,
bringing with them the body of
St. Ajine, the head of St. James the
Less and a few wee bones of the innocents
massacred by King Herod. Buf
from early ages this story has been disputed,
and the Abbe Dueliesne, one of
the most erudite writers on the early
Christian saints and martyrs, considers
that the relics of Mary Magdelcne
were probably sent from Constantinople
about the seventh century. A
Orppk lll'pvin rv hntvnvnr cnnoL-a
saint as having died at Ephesus.
One may ruin himself by frankness,
bnt one surely dishonors himself by
duplicity.? Vlelllnrd.
Escaped an A wful Fate.
Mr. H. Haggins of Melbourne, Fla.,
writes. "My doctor told me I had consumption
and nothing could be done
for me. I was given up to die. The
offer of a free trial bottle of Dr. King's
New Discovery for consumption, induced
me to try it. Results wore startling.
I am now on the road to recovery
and owe all to Dr. King's New Discovery.
It surely saved my life." This
great cure is guaranteed for all throat
and lung diseases by Dr F. G. Duke,
Druggist. Price 60c and $1. Trial Bottles
free.
A Great Old Man.
One Henry Jenkins died in England
Dec. 8, 1870, at the alleged age of 109
years. He i* ??*'d to hove been n fisherman
for l4. jc..rs. Though he could
neither read nor write, his reach of
memory was such that he would calmly
give evidence In court In matters on
Which his memory went back 120 and
140 years. As a boy he is said to have
taken a horse load of arrows to Northallerton
to be forwarded north in time
for the battle of Flodden. At the age
of 100 years he used to swim a wide
stream in Yorkshire with ease. He
lived until four years after the great
fire of Iiondon, was poor ail his life,
but subsisted cheerfully by thatching
ana Bftimon nsumg.
Better Than Gold.
f* '*1 was troubled for several years with
chronic indigestion and nervous debility,"
writes F. J. Green, of Lancaster,
N. H. "No*emedv helped me until I
began using Electric Bitters, which did
me more good than all the medicines I
ever used. They have also kept my
wife in excellent health for years. She
says Electric Bitters are Just splendid
for female troubles; that they are a
grand tonic and invigerator for weak,
run down women. No other medicine
can lake Its place in our family." Try
them'. Only 60c. Satisfaction guar an toad
by Dr. F. 0. Duke.
The Clever Dnihman,
Speaking of the grout power tlit
Brnhmnns In India possess in localizing
thought, a prominent Brahman said
recently: "We would consider a game
of chess as played in this country more
child's play. An ordinnry Brahman
clicss player could carry on three 01
four games at a time without inconvenience.
The usual game played by the
Brahmans consists in checkmuting with
one pawn designated when the play begins.
I have seen a man perform a long
problem In multiplication and division,
at the same time noting the various
sounds and discussions going on aboul
him in the room. I have seen a man
compose a triple acrostic in Sanskrit in
a given meter, at the same time having
three well versed men trying to overthrow
him in his argument on religion."
Sandy's Heitnonlnir.
A lady meeting her gardener In the
grounds said to him: "Sandy, I am surprised
that you do not marry. You
have got a free house, coals and gas,
also a weekly wage of 110 shillings, so
I think all you want to complete your
happiness Is a wife."
And to lend weight to her argument
8lio added. "Adam, who w^s the first
gardener, was given n wife."
"True for ye, ma'am," replied Sandy,
"but he hadn't her long till he lost
his job."?IiOtidon Tit-Bits.
Clvlllrcd hi4 KnllRhtened.
Tenclicr?Can you tell me the difference
between civilized and enlightened
nations? Pupil?My dad says civilized
nations manage to get along all right
If tbey arc let alone, but tlmt enlightened
nations know enough not to let the
civilized nations alone.?Boston Transcript.
Bla Other Cheek.
"When an enemy smites me," said
the pious looking hypocrite, "I always
turn the other cheek."
"Why," asked fhe mail who knew
him, "do you want your enemy to go
around with both hands disabled?"?
Chicago Rocord-IIerald.
Nearly Forfeits His Life.
- A runaway almost ending fatally,
started a horrible ulcer on the leg of J.
B. Orner, Franklin Grove, III. For
four years it defied all doctors ami all
remedies. Rut Bucklen's Arnica Salve
had no trouble to cure him. Equally
good for Burns, Bruises, Skin Eruptions
and Tiles. 26c at F. C. Duke's Drug
Store.
Nature'* Sweet Refrain.
A former assistant secretary of the
Interior who lives in Washington bears
the same name as a poet who halls
from Pennsylvania. The ex-olficial received
a letter which lie considers a remarkable
epistle. The writer confounded
him with the poet and wrote:
Dear friend and statesman: I rite you
the earliest dalt to be so cind as to do me
a fafor. , I haf trld ail clnds of paten
medislh for hart decease an no avail. ! 1
read your- little pome on Hart decea beginln
"The hart which sad tumultus beets,
with throbs of keenest pain
wll oft recover its defects
Thro' naturs sweat refrane."
I haf never trld an Injun doc but haf
took all clnds of erbs. I now ask you to
send me by return male 2 bottles of your
med8ln naturs sweat refrane. Send to ,
Postofflce, Pa.
P. S.?I will sen prise by return male.
Silent Great Men.
The list of silent great men Is n long
one. Especially Is this true of noted
warriors. Wallenstein, Wellington, Yon
Moltke, Grant, Marlborough, Chnrlomagne,
Hannibal, Ciesar, all gave their
orders in as few words as possible and
demanded like brevity from their subordinates.
It is saicW that Marlborough
never allowed more than a minute for
a verbal report, and It is told of Von
Moltke that when an ald-de-cnmp
brought a written message that France
had declared war the great general
simply ordered It filed In the "second
pigeonhole on the right, first tier." In
that pigeonhole were complete plans
for the successful campaign that followed.
Gun Barrels From Nails.
Horseshoe nails kicked about the
roads of the world by horses Innumerable
are far from the useless fragments
we might think them. Gunmakers tell
us there is no Iron so well fitted for
their pui-pose as that derived from
horseshoe nails and similar worn fragments.
The nails, made originally of
the best stuff obtainable, receive from
the constant pounding of the horse's
feet on hard surfaces a peculiar annealing
and toughening, making them
a most perfect substance for the manufacture
of the finest gun barrels.
Illualon* of the Theater.
It Is a moot point whether women
should be taken to the theater at all at
a young and impressionable age, seeing
In what a totally unreal light the modern
young man is presented by the average
drnmatlst. Behind the footlights
the hundsome, clean shaven fellow 1ms
principles as unimpeachable as Ids
dress clothes, a soul as speckless as his
dnazllng waistcoat.?London Ladles'
Field.
Somewhat ConfnalQR.
"So that heiress married a titled foreigner?"
"Yes," answered Miss Cayenne.
"How do they get on?"
"It's a little confusing as yet. Whenever
she wants to know who the distinguished
members of her family are
she has to ask ldm, and whenever be
wants to know bow much lie is worth
he has to ask her."?Washington Star.
jayairriotis uircntnstance.
One wee pale and sallow and the othcT
fresh and rosv. Whence the difference?
She who is blushing with health uses
Dr. King's New Life Pills to maintain
it. By gently arousing the lazy organs
they compel good digestion and head
off constipation. Try them. Only 25c,
at Dr. F. 0, Duke'a.
V
M i
wvc Cbnrnt.
I A yout :uan who thought she
; wa3 losi, ! v?r husband's nlTcctlon
I wont to ;i .wventh daughter of a sevi
enth daughter for a love powder. The
i mystery woman told her:
i "Clot a raw piece of beef, cut flat,
about an Inch thick. Slice un onion In
two and rub the meat on both sides
i with it. Put on pepper and salt and
i toast it on each side over a red coal
fire. Drop on It three lumps of but!
tor and two sprigs of parsley and get
i lilin to cat It."
I The yomur wifo did sr?
bund loved ber over after.
I Couldn't Get Array.
! "My denr," said the physician's wife,
"why don't you take a Rood ion#? rest?
Go away somewhere and enjoy yourself.
You're working yourself into the
grave. You haven't becu out of town
for five years."
"My dear," the celebrated practitioner
said, "I dare not leave. If I did so
most of my patients would discover
that they could get on Just as well
without me, and uiy practice would be
ruined."
Sometime* tlie Unlit I* Good.
"But you are not always bothered
with poor light, are you?" Inquired the
complaint clerk at the ga3 office.
"Oh. no, not always," replied the
quiet citizen.
"Ah, I thought so. It's only at certain
times that you notice it, eh?"
"Yes; only after dark."?Pliiladelphla
Press.
Vexlntc Dclity.
"Our new company is capitalized at
$40,000,000."
"Great! Let mo see your prospectus."
"Oh, we haven't got out a prospectus
yet. The?or?the darucd printer wants
his pay in advance."?Puck.
An Alphabetic Blenn.
Apples, bananas, coffee, dumplings,
eggs fried, grape fruit, halibut, Italian
Jam, Knickerbocker lamb, mince, nougat,
orange pic, quails roasted, stewed
tomatoes, underdone veal, waffles, extraordinary
yams from Zululand.?
Christian Intelligencer.
J. CLAUDE CAUBLE,
CONTRACTOR.
Plumbing Corner rialn
(las and ^ and EnterSteam
Fitting prise Sts.,
UNION, S. C.
Services Guaranteed. Prices Reasonable.
Final Discharge*
Not:ce is hereby given tl.at A.
HiU, Executor of tiie Estate of Robert
J. betsill, deceased,, has applied to
lasou M. Greer, Judge of Probate, in
?nd for the county of Union, for a final
i discharge as such Executor,
i It Is Ordered, That, the ftih day of
March, A. 1). 190i, lie fixed for lintr-'
ng of Petition, and a final settlement of
-aid E late. .Iasov M. Greer.
Probata Judge u. O . s C.
Published in Union Times Feb 5lli,
MWM. 0 4?.
Notice! Notice!
Executors, Adnv-nis* Ators. Trustees
tnd Guardians n?u*r. make returns to
me at "the elll tu of .Tod/i of Prolate
during January and February of this
year The 1st day of V>1 uoh wul tie the
day to issue notes to sdiow cause v. hy you
nave failed to do s ?. No commission
will l)e allowed you for your troublw* i'..
managing lite estate unl-sr you make
your leturns promptly.
.Iason M GRKKR,
5- Probate Judge.
\T- A.
JX u bice:
A meet ing of tlie stockholders of The
J. J Litthjohn Co. will bo held at this
fflce in Juuesville, S. (J., February 20,
1904, at 10 o'clock a tu., for the purpote
uf amending iheir charter to authorize
theiu to manufacture fertilizers.
J. J. Littlejoiin, Pres.
Notice to Taxpayers.
I will be at the following places as
designated for the purpose of taking tax
returns:
At Union in Auditor's office, from
January the 1st to 10th, 1904.
Buffalo, Mills, January 11th, 1904.
West Springs, January 12th, 1904.
Gibba, Binder's store, January 13th,
forenoon, 1904,
Sauford Wilburn'a store, January
13tli, afternoon, 1904.
.Cross Keys, B. G. Wilburn's store,
January 14th, 1904,
Sedalia, January 15th, 1904.
Goshen Iltll, Black liock, Jauuaiy
16th, 1904.
Lcckhart Mi'ls, January 18th, 1904.
Adarasburg, January 19th, 1904.
Kelton, January 20ili, 1904.
Jonesville, January 21si, 1904.
Union, Januatv ?2nd to 25th, 1004.
Fish Dam, January, 20th, 1904,
Saniuc, January 27th, forenoon, 1904.
Union in cfilce from January 2-Mh to
February 20th, 1904, when the time expires
for making returns for Personal
Property. After that date 50 per cent,
will be added.
Piease take notice and fail uot to make
your returns.
I John G. Fakk,
52-tf, Auditor Union County.
Dr. R. M. Dorsey,
Specialist
on diseases of the EYE and EAR
?and?
I OPTICIAN.
'Successor to II. R. Goodell.
Alexander's Music Hall, Spartan
burg, S. 0. 47-lyr.
_ . - ^ I
Dr. Alexander S. Foster,
Surgeon Dentist,
JONESVILLli, SOUTH CAROLINA.
Rooms over J. F. Aluum's Store.
CROWN TORRENCE. M. 0.
Office Hours: 5i?fS??.tS:
Special attention to diseases !
Eyo, Ear, Nose and Throat. Ifc-om
SCAIFE & HAMBLIN,
^ AT TOR" EYS AT LAW,-%
Foster Building. Union, S. C.
J. CLOUGH WALLACE.
ATORNEY AT LAW.
Room 12 up stairs Foster Building.
S.a MEANS BEATY,
ATTORN EY-AT-LAW.
No. 3, Law Range.
Money to Loan.
I have money to loan in amounts of
$300 and upwards on improved farms
.?t n ...
at, i per cent interest. No cornmission
except k reasonable attorney fee
for preparing necessary papers.
39-ly. V. E. DkPabs.
To Cure a Cold In One Day
Take Laxative Hroroo Quiniue Tablets.
All druggists refund the money if it fails
to curd. E. W. Grove's signature on
each box. 25c. 6-ly
R'l'P'A'N S Tablets doctors
find a good prescription for
mankind.
The 5-cent packet i3 enough for usual
occasions. The family bottle (t>0 eentw)
contains a supply for a year. All druggist
seli them tf
CONTRACTORS' ?*
^BUILDERS'^
,ho_MILL supplies.
OHUii, IINI litat, MomM QM?
? ! Belt*. *?4?. Wctfkt* Tajik a. Tmn,
MhI *if? tfoau* Rvs.a, liftvij
W? run JMiu.BMrrMi, OnN, Okirfa *M
ffCM ??#? .
\0muid iron mm SDPPLY ca
4*r-*?*4. JM.
<0
This signature is on every box ot the genuine 4
Laxative Bronio*Quinine Tabieta '
the rerpedv that cnrei u coltl lit one day
I to write for our confidential letter before epI
plying for pntent; it may be worth money.
I We promptly obtain U. H. and Foreign
PATENTS
?n<l TRADE MARKS or return EN* I
TIRE at to ley's Ice. Bend model, sketch I
orjii-.oio and wo send an IMMEDIATE
FREE report 011 patentability. we give
the best legul service and advice, and our
(charges are moderate. Try us.
SWIFT & CO.,
Patent Lawyers,
Opp. U.S. Patent Office,Washington, D.C.
lg**8BB
' A good looking
! homo and poor lookIng
liumeaa l.i tlio ' -i-sVlV
I klu-1 of u com- prEureka
Harness Oil
not only ttjp** ^i the harness and tbo IJA
hone /or/ (tor. lint makes the '(W
leather ag > I i liable, puts It In con- |ll%
HIH/.d/ ? ?otion t ) lost?twice in lung [I/A
llMlnWf. 119 11 ''r,li"H'iiy would. jufA
iMjLlf Ul, SuH *?trr?hera |u oui-all (kA
alia*. IIlas by I ?e
STANDARD /?\
. o,l co-, 'MA
Glve%
l?ur yS^m
Horse a TijWmMiiW
junancc/ |yjy
IW V&mhJc
m \j :w L>tAJUO.
Twos :; . ' y rrs practical expcrteuc
: i i :ct that we do
the l:i' ; t ! i ;:cs6 i u Seeds in the
Souther i enables us to
supply every requirement in
CARDS'! tm FARM SEEDS
to the very K"-t advantage, both
as rogaruo'quality aud price.
Truckers end Farmers
requiring V.r :e qur. v. titles of Seeds
arc rcqu.^ ti -l '.o v.rilo for special
prices. if f-i-i iiiao not received
a cony . f v. '\0'ii Si.KD BOOK
for lth: J. v. : for it. 1 here is not
anofhr *; vest ion anywhere
that p.ppc" i ';? *s Jt in the useful
ant! 1 i herniation that
it -n to Covt'tcrn farmers,
fit Vo., ;', vJJ! be mailed free
?iO ; ? .v. 'VrPc to-Cay:
|' i:;?,S8e4sii?n,
I C;*v:ss:5,!A*