The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, March 18, 1904, Image 3
| OUT of THE I
jj DEPTHS J
By MARTHA ?
* | M'CULLOCH-WILLIAMS
i Copyright, 1900, by T. C. McClure X
Cause and effect are your true endless
chain.. Thus because young Alanson
brought good letters, the very best, to
the rector and Squire Clark Mrs. Brown
gave the garden party where so much
else happened. Mrs. Brown had threo
girls to establish, and, as beaus were
nono too plenty, naturally It was a ruling
principle with her to let no eligible
young man get away from Eastbridge
Without a proper experience of their
fasptuations.
TB6 rasoinntions were nil very well
unfil Amy Peters en me. Amy was never
accounted n beauty, but somehow
she put nil the set beauties out of court
and countenance. Dehold her nt the
party tripping airily about the" Inwn,
with young Alnnson nt ojie side, Jock
Hllmnn nt the other and Rllly Corliss
tagging nfter like the faithful watchdog
he was. Thjs while the other
young women had less than n beau
apiece. You will admit It was aggrsj
.. rating. Kate Martin, Amy's best
friend, spelled upon her fingers "P-I-G"
as the train went past her. But Kate
w$s hot in the least nngry or jealous.
She had Bobby Shepherd all to herself,
although Essie Brown had done
her best to lure the gentleman away.
"Let me tell you about Miss Amy,"
Jock said to the stranger when presently
Amy was safely enthroned in a
garden chair, with her court still nbout
her. "She's nearly the only girl in
Enstbrhlge you don't have to court,
Whether or no you want to"?
"But you know you always want to,
Jocky, dcart" Amy said saucily. Billy
Corliss laughed-witlr the k*st, but
somehow the laugh did not get Into his
eyes. Young Alnnson kept up the
game bravely. "Can you imagine a
live man not wanting to?" ho asked of
the world In general and Billy in particular.
Billy ;f>ut on his most reflective
look.' 'There might be extenuating
circumstances," he said diplomat
lcally. Amy gave him a reproachful
glance and said loftily: "I suppose,
BlllJS your extenuating circumstances
wear frocks. Pray, does It happen by
4py chance that the most extenuating
Of them Is named Clarissa Brown?"
"No," Bitty said sturdily, shaking bis
head, "But that reminds me that neither
Mr. Alanson nor I have more than snld
'hoWdy' to Miss Clarissa. Jock, you
?tay hero and keep this quicksilver
young person out of mischief while we
RCr^irfble through the decent thing."
"Y#U may find us engaged unless you
hurry back," Amy flung after them.
Joofc laughed aloud. "Let's hide," he
aid*' "I know the va- place. Won't
it gi!Te Billy a jolt to come back and
ll.il .< * C"
UMU ua uiiooiu^ i
needs one, Rood and hard," Amy
mid. toSsIng her head the least bit. "I
havt) not told anybody else, Jock, but
I> going to marry Billy if I can over
make blm show himself properly and
' humanly foolish. lie's so abnormally
Steady going and sensible and settled I
. should not dare try to live up to him?
Unless I knew he had a nice silly streak
somewhere."
*'1 supposo you wouldn't any way
consider me. I'm pretty near all silly
streaks," Jock said dolefully. Amy
laughed and patted his arm, saying:
"But you have good sense streaks, too,
Jock, else why should you like me so.
well? We'll always be the best of
friends, I know."
"Bet your bottom dollar on It!" Jock
Said, hurrying her along. He was making
for a tumbledown summer house,
thickly overgrown with vines, that
neatled in the very farthest comer of
the lawn. It had a plank floor, rotten
eqd crumbly, and a dilapidated rustic
bench along one side?a cool, deeply
shaded nook, sweet with roses and honeysuckle.
Amy sprang joyously Inside
It, with Jock at her heels. As they
made to sit down low, hollow reverberations
came up from below their feet.
There was a dull crushing, a giving
away, then before they could cry out a
sliding down, down to dark, dank, unknown
perilous depths.
; IT'S A STAYER.
Comes . Quickly, But It
ComesToStay. How
A Union Citizen
Got Rid Of It.
Comes early, stays late. No stranger
an be more unwelcome. Makes life a
misery all day long. Keeps you awake
nights. Irritates you; spoils your temper,
Do you know this unwelcome
guest? Ever hare it come and stay
With you? Know what it is? Eczema.
If you erer had any itchiness of the
kin you know hard it is to shake it oiT.
Tt>u would like to know how to do it?
Let * Union man tell you. Read his
statement that follows:
. X B. Neal, mill operator of 15 Mill
Street, says. "I had a very bad sore
my left lag which bothered me for
th4 oast ten or twelve years. I consulted
different physicians about it, and
they each crave me some salve for it,
hut it would not heal up. It itched all
the time and was very annoying, and I
scratched it antil it would bleed and
then it would discharge a yellowish
matter for days and weeks at a time
and be very sore. I learned of Doan's
Ointment, and procured a box at the
Helmee Pharmacy. I found it to be a
moat valuable salve. It has cured tip
the gore entirely ahd only left the sear/'
Far aale by all dealers. Price 50c per
bo?. Foeter-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.,
sele agent*. for the%Unhed Htates. Remember
the name?DOAN'S?and take
jtootber.
U;;-. '
r rr ii
' Flvo minutes Inter Billy wns asking !
anxiously of those about the garden 1
chair, "Where Is Amy?" Nobody !
could tell him. Presently he spied far
out In the grass one of her little lace j
j mitts. Running away from it wero
faint footmarks 011 the warm turf.
| Billy followed the marks,. his face
| whitening fast. "Jock could not he so
j cruel as to take her near that old well
! house," he said to himself?then
| groaned aloud; he had come In sight
I of the well house, where the crumbled
floor told him the tale.
"Jock! Amy! Answer me! Oh,
I God!" I10 cried aloud, peering over the
crumbling rim into the blackness. No
articulate answer came to him, but
wns it fancy that dowu in the deeps
of earth he heurd low, gasping moans?
He sprang up with a shout that brought
the whole crowd huddling about him.
Mrs. Brown wns at the head, weeping
and wringing her hands. "They are
lost, lost!" she moaned. "Nobody ever
came out of that well alive. It's always
half full of choke damp! That
is why my father had it built over!
Why didn't I think to tell everybody?"
Billy seemed not to hear. With giant
strength he wrecked the rotten Inttice,
clearing the well mouth, then flung off
I wui anu snocs, ana prepared to clamber
down. lie had already sent for
ropes. "No, I eau't wait, with Amy
dyii\g," lie said to those who tried to
slop him. "I've got to save her or
die with her. Stand by?listen close?
and let mo have ropes the minute you
can."
The last words wore shouted up thp
well mouth, whence already there
came a faint earthy smell, half sweetish,
half repulsive. Some of the curious
were for crowding the edges to
watch him, but wiser ones held them
back. "Give him nil the light and air
possible, poor fellow; he needs both,"
Squire Clark said. Young Alanson,
stripped and barefooted, sprang to the
edge of the curb. "Who'll follow me?"
he asked. "I'm going down, right liebind
Billy; we may make a live chain
before it's too late."
"I'll follow! And I! And I!" came
from nil about. In a little, the human
line was over the edge, creeping down,
down to the dangerous deeps, noisome
and cold, Billy heard it coming, and
shouted up:
"In time, thank God! I hear moans!"
Then he gave a great inarticulate cry.
There, clinging to ttyo rough rock wall,
was Amy, live feet above the glimmering
water, which lapped something
dark and limp.
"Ilere, you! Take her up!" he cried
hoarsely, husbanding his breath all he
might. lie had come to the thick, deadly
damp. Unless ho was quick and
bold it would make an eiul of him, as
It had possibly already made an end
of poor, light hearted Jock. CLluging
fast with one hand, his feet well braced
across the well breadth, he swung Amy
up with the other into young Alanson's
hold- The others knew enough to
pass her on up apd out. Drawing a
long, long breath, Billy leaped down
beside the insensible figure at the bottom,
caught It up and began a desperate
ascent.
"Hold hard, Billy! I'm coming to
help!" young Alanson cried, sotting his
feet firmly and bonding until his head
was almost level with them. Thus he
gripped Jock's collar and somewhat
eased the strain on Billy. Both were,
howover, so near to smothering their
tense muscles gave down. Lights
swam before their eyes; their heads
were bursting; the subtle liea\iuess In
chest and nostrils numbed them to the
bone. Alanson felt himself ulmost falling
when a rope struck his hand, tlung
with such force it almost drew blood.
"Send up, Jock! We'll pull you two
out safe!" the men higher up cried to
them and then, when they saw their
plight, came down like Trojans to help.
It was little short of u miracle that any
of the three got out alive. But somehow,
by the good (Jod's mercy, they
all came into reviving upper air. Jock
had the face of a dead man. At sight
of him Amy fell to sobbing. "He-he
lifted me up and bade me cling," she
said brokenly, "but stayed on the bottom
himself because"* there was not
room for two to hold in the crevice of
the wall."
"Ho won't die for it," Dr. Payne
said, looking up from his patient. Billy,
lying spent and white upon the grass,
beckoned Amy imperatively to him.
"You must marry me?right off," he
said, patting her hand. "After this 1
dare not trust you with yourself."
"ffor I," Amy said, nestling to hlin.
"You were horribly foolish to take such
risks for mo, Billy. It Is only by staying
with you I can make sure you will
never do it again."
A Lord Chancellor at Play.
It Is on record thnt the great seal of
Britain has twice boen degraded to
kitchen ttbm. In 1884, when Lord
Brougham, then lord chancellor, was
staying as a guest with the Duchoes of
Bedford, some ladles of the house party
In a frolic ventured to purloin the great
seal from the chancellor^ bedroom.
Trembling with anxiety, the great
man came downstairs to proclaim his
loss, but to his relief thoy told him of
their Joke nnd challenged him to find
his treasure. Entering into the spirit
of their fun, he at last dragged the
emblem of his authority triumphantly
from the coal box.
ouu in merry mooci, ue iea tne party
to the kHchen, whore each lady made
It pancake, with the great Real for a
pan, pouring the batter between Its
6laks.
Tills mad prank created ?o much
amusement that Lord Brougham repeated
It at Tnymonth to give pleasure
to the Marchioness of Breadalbane.?
London Answers.
No amount of argument would convince
a young couple with their first
baby that they have not done something
original.
Asthma j
yy>?-?xm- ' i^wgrT-r-^t-T'-s-^iTgZg^^sra
" My daughter had p. terrible case fi
of asthma. We tiicu almost every- 9
thing, without relief. \7e then tried 9
I Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and three S
bottles cured her." ? Emma Jane a
Entsminger, Langsville. O. j
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral I
certainly cures i^anycasea 3
I of asthma. And ii cures |
bronchitis, hoarseness,8
weak lungs, whooping-1
cough, croup, winter|
coughs, night coughs, hard 8
colds. 25c., SOc.. $1.G0. Alldrantsti. ?
Consult your doctor. If hesrvys take it, 5
then ?lo ns ho says, If ho tolls you not to S
tiiUo it, then tloii'c tr.ko it. l-lo'kuows. H
c n?nrct <w * it zrycj jnR-jBrwaACJmi-vw.Tr*>' j
Daily movements cf the howels are I
necessary to henlr't. Ayer's Fills f
arc gently laxative, purely vegetable, t
J. C. AVER.< ) ?*?" Mi\?s. |
HINTS FOR BRIDEGROOMS.
Plenty of Advice For Ilrldes, T>n* Not
a Word For tlic Men.
A tliouphtful young man of Washington
was heard to decry the other
clay the fact that, while there is a deluge
of "don't"' and "do" for the brhle
to follow, the bridegroom must shift
for himself.
"There is absolutely nothing to guide
a man but bis own awkward self. It
Isn't fair," lie said. "From the tlmo
a girl is old enough to detect sound
she understands the importance of
having things done properly at a wed
(lint:, wliile llie prospective groom 1b
only something necessary to completo
the picture. Nothing short of inspiration
okii get a man through a marriage
ceremony gracefully.
"In order to impress the bride and
spectators that he is enthusiastic about
it he appears with a sort of frozen grin
on his face that you expect to melt at
any moment anil run down his collar.
If he is too frightened to respond
in u loud voice some of the bride's girl
friends will whisper that 'it wns plainly
evident lie was unwilling from the
start.' Again, if lie replies in a loud,
stern voice another bunch in another
direction of the'church will huddle together
and express how glad they aro
that they aro not marrying liim, wliilo
the uttitude of many is that they are
signing away their life and nil worth
living for. So I, for one, think it high
time that somebody wrote a few hints
on how to behave, that we men may
appear enthusiastic about being married
without heiug ridiculous."?Washington
Post.
The Liberty Cap.
When the Uouians manumitted a
slave his head was adorned with e
small red cloth cup. As soon as this
was done he wns known as a Ilbertlr.us,
or freednian, and his name was
registered among others of the city's
"tribe3." In the year 203, when Saturnius
invaded the capital, he hoisted a
cap on the point of his spear to indicate
that all slaves who rallied around
this standard should be free. This was
the origin of the liberty cap still used
111 rai uu u h,i iiiuui.
Tragedy Averted.
"Just in tho nick of time our little
boy vas saved," writes Mrs. Watkins,
of Pleasant City, Ohio. "Pneumonia
had played sad havoc with him, and a
terrinle cough set in besides. Doctors
treated him, hut he grew worse every
day. At length we tried Dr. King's
New Discovery for Consumption, and
our darling was saved, tie's now
sound and well " Everybody ought to
know, its the only sure cure for Coughs,
Colds and all hung diseases. Guaranteed
by F. C. Duke, Druggist. Price
50e and, $1.00. Trial bottles free.
PROVED HIS CASE.
Bet some one bras about a shot
Before ohl Kikes, and, like n3 not.
Some fancy shot he would recall
That ho had made when ho was small
And rather intimate that he
Was champion shot In '43.
If some young fellow won a race.
Bikes could recall the time and place
Thnt he hnd car>S
rled off the
, prize
Jo running, much
t? ^e surprise
t^TV I every one. lie
tVyft I was. what's
1 JL more,
The champion
j 1? runner In '44.
k f Did some one drop
/ J \ around to tell
UM How trees before
Qgj his good ax
fell.
Bikes could reep'1 the time and place
Once with the r\ s not slow;
Ho was. If he u.,;. d the date,
The champion chopper In *48.
And so It v. us down through the list;
Not any sport or work was missed.
He was the best, he owned, with pride,
In all tho spacious countryside.
pui mi noreni ma( uilfl OKI uord
Wm champion liar In 1904.
Good Fortune.
Mr. Backlotz (enviously)?She has tha
greatest luck In selecting servant girls.
Mrs. Backlotz?Don't talk nonsense!
You mean she has great luck In having
jervant girls select her.?Exchange.
More Riots.
Disturbances of strikers aro not nearly
as grave as an individual disorder of
the system. Overwork, loss of sleep,
nervous tension will be followed by
utter collapse, unnless a reliable remedy
is immediately employed. There's
nothing so oflicient to cure disorders of
the Liver or Kidneys as Electric Bitters.
It's a wonderful tonic, and effective
nerviue and the greatest all around
medicine for run down systems. It
dispels Nervousness, Rheumatism, aad
Neuralgia and expels Malaria germs.
Only 50c, and satisfaction guaranteed
by F, 0. Ouke. Druggist, (
.. *. . 1 ... V^
QUEER OLD LAW.
RlBlitecnth Century Edict Ak?Iq(1
Tobuccu ChmlnR. \
In the code of laws passed by the
towns of Windsor, Hartford and Wethers
field In the yenrs 1738-39 may be
found the following on tobacco chewing:
"Forasmuch as it Is observed that
many abuses are crept in and committed
by the frequent taking of tobacko,
it -is ordered by the authority of this
court that no person uuder the age of
twenty-one years nor any other that
hath not already accustomed hlmselfe
to the use thereof shall take any tobacko
until lice hath bought a certificate
under the hands of some one who aro
approved for knowledge and skill Ip I
physicks that it is useful for htm and
also that hoc hath received a lyccnse
from the courts for the same.
"And for the regulating of those who
either by thelre former taking it have,
to tlicire apprehensions, made it necessary
to them or upon due advice nre
persuaded to the use thereof, it is ordered
that no man within this colonye
after.the publication hereof shall take
any tobacko publiqpely-in the streets,
highways or any barnyards or upon
training days, in any open places, under
the penalty of sixpence for each
offense against this order In any of the
particulars thereof, to bee paid without
gainsaying, uppon conviction by the
testimony of one witness?that is, without
Just exception?before any one magistrate.
"And the constables in the several
towns nre required to make presentment
to each particular court of such
as they do understand and can convict
to be transgressors of this order."?
Pittsburg Gazette.
lie Wouldn't A?k Farther.
Contributor?Would you take it kindly
If I were to ask you on what
grounds you refused my latest poem?
Editor?Yes. if you'll take kindly to my
true statement of the case. Contributor
(after slight hesitation)?Good dhy,
air.?Saltimorc American.
It Saved His Leg.
<fP. A. Danforth of LnGrange, (la., suffered
for six months with a frightful
running sorts on his leg; but writes that
lUrcklen's Arnica Salve wholly cured it
in five days. For Ulcers, Wounds,
Files, it's the best salve in the world.
Only 23 cts. Sold by F. C. Duke, druggist.
To Dig For It
That money's evil's root la true,
And yet I nm afraid
That if we knew where evil grew
We'd go there with a spade.
From a Safe Point.
"Did I understand that you threatened
to mop the ground with that big
Jenkins while talking to him?"
"You bet I did. but I was speaking
to him over the telephone."
Make a Discovery.
When first we love them it appears
That angel wings are sprouting;
When we'vo been married several yearsWell,
please excuse our doubting.
The Real Ruler.
"You know the Jiand that rocks the
cradle is the hand that rules the world."
"I realize thai all right. The hired
girl rocks the cradle at our house, and
I guess she is boss."
t'naiewny of Bending Pillars.
Nature has hewn many upright pillars
from the rock at various prehistoric
periods, but so far as is known
Bbe has completed but one group of
bending pillars. The causeway at Staffa,
in Scotland, Is after this original
design. The stone shafts rise perpendicularly
to a height of fifty or sixty
feet, when they curve inward in a
long, sweeping line at once graceful
and massive. In Rome places a perfect
Koman arch has been formed in this
way. The formations are so symmetrical
as to suggest the hand of the
architect.
Antlqnlty of rin.i.
Pins of various sorts have been in existence
ever since our "first parents"
clothed themselves in pa!:n loaves
which grew wild In the garden of
Etlen. As n matter of fact, pins cSnltn
a very high antiquity, tlie earliest form
being a natural thorn, which Is still
used to some extent for fastening the
dress by the peasant women of tipper
Egypt. In prehistoric times pins were
also made of the small bones of fish
and animals.
Of Conmc Xot.
"Mnrrlage," remarked the mor.illsor,
"is n lottery."
"Yes." rejoined the demoralizer, "but
it's one of the games of clianee that
clergymen do not try to discourage."?
Cincinnati Enquire^
The Viaal Tlilns.
Mrs. Knowitt?I hear you celebratod
your silver wedding last week. Mrs.
Wise?T^o. To Judge from the presents
wo received I think it was our sliver
piuted wedding.?Chicago Journal.
Working Overtime.
Eight hour laws are ignored by those
tireless, little workers?Dr. King's New
Tdfe Pills Millions are always at work
night and day, earing Indigestion, Biliousness,
Constipation, Sich Headache,
and all Stomach, Liver and Bowol
troubles. Easy, pleasant, safe sure.
Only 26c at F. 0. Duke.'a dro^ store,
jfc i , liL. -C &'*
MASONIC.
Tlic (<rnnil Nmlrr of Illluota?Cblpa
Frosii Cio Temple.
Willitiin II. Wright. wlio has succced.ed
George M. Moulton as grand master
o^the grand lodge of Illinois, Is a well
known and popular Mason and devoted
to Masonic work. He Is a native of the
Prairie State, having been born in Effingham
county In 1SG0. Mr. Wright
graduated from the law department of
the Valparaiso (Ind.) university in 1S82
and has risen In his profession until
?<iissn
WILLIAM IJ. WRIGHT.
lie Is now regarded as one of the best
lawyers in his section of the -state.
He stopped from tho grand junior
wardcnsliip into the exalted position of
grand master.
The annual report of the socretary
of Palestine lodge of Detroit Rho\t,8
the lodge now has a membership of
013.
Edgcwood eominandery of Englewood,
111., will erect a Masonic tern
pie at a cost of $">0,000. The building
will be thoroughly modern In every respect.
At the annual donation and reception
at tho Philadelphia Masonic home
nearly $10,000 fh cash and large quantities
of provisions were received as
gifts.
In an address recently Grand Orator
Ilart of California said, "Masonry is
one institution on earth that has for
its object not the making of money,
but the making of men."
The grand master of Pennsylvania
decided that no Masonic burial service
can be performed at a cremation.
The Michigan Masonic home depends
for its principal source of revenue on
the 15 cents per capita rate paid in by
the grand lodge. The board of control
requires the payment by every lodge
having a beneficiary t c the home of a
weekly rate equal to 1 cent per week
for each of its members, but not to exceed
$1 per week.
Golden Gate commandery, K. T.,
Ban Francisco, has assessed each
member 50 cents a month for triennial
purposes this year.
New Masonic temples will be erected
in Jennings, La.; Olin, In.; Lewiston,
Wash., and Jackson, Mich.
There are 178 Masonic lodges in New
Jersey, with a membership of about
24,000.
There are over 4,000 Master Masons
in the jurisdiction of Oklahoma.
The uniform rank began the year
1904 in a most prosperous condition and
is steadily growing. Limn division of
Lima, O., continues to lend in membership.
Pearl tent of Cleveland is rapidly
nenring the 1,000 mark. At present it
has 900 names on its roll.
Alabama Bees nre doing good work
and rapidly Increasing in membership.
Luckie tent of Birmingham, with 200
members, is the largest in the Jurisdiction.
Recent reports from Nova Scotia show
the Maccabees there are on the move
and doing good work.
January reports from the various Jurisdictions
show a good increase in membership.
Sept. 28 will be Maceabee day at the
world's fair.
Son* of America.
RnnA??fa 1 % ?1 ? J * ? '
vuiiiiug iu iiuiu vunuii!) jurisdictions
show the year 1003 was a
most prosperous one for the order.
Pennsylvania camps have been very
active this winter and are growing rapidly.
Reading camp recently initiated
a class of sixty-four.
Camp 481) of Philadelphia Is now the
second largest camp of tlio order. It
has a membership approximating 900.
Independent Order of Forester*.
Rapid strides were mado by the Independent
Order of Foresters duWng
the year Just closed.
There are now over 200,000 members
in good standing in the Independent
Order or Foresters, and large gains*lfro
made by the society every "month.
\Fratmnal
Af/sc&iajvy]
There are 101 Elks In congress?13
senators and 88 representatives.
T>?A O-l-? ???
?m; iviiiglJID Ul WiUUlUUM Will ITCCl
a bnlldlng In New Haven, Conn., to
serve as national headquarters of the
order. The structure will cost about
$260,000.
The Natkm?l Union and the Fraternal
Mystic Circle report splendid progress
during the year 1003.
On June 28, 1877, the Royal Arcanum
was founded, with nine members. Today
it has a membership of over 280,- j
000, ^ |
+
gjgm f
ROBT. R. BERRY, M. D.
OFFICE HOLMES PHARMACY.
i 12 to 1:30
Hours ] 2:80 to 4
( 7:80 to 8:80
Special attention given to Consumption,
Catarrh and conditions of
nose and throat.
Dr. Alexander S. Foster,
Surgeon Dentist,
JONESVILLE. SOUTH CAROLINA
Rooms over J. F. Altnan's Store.
J. CLAUDE CAUBLE,
CONTRACTOR.
Plumbing Corne flaln
Oas and U*- and: EnterSteam
Fitting prise Sts.,
UNION, S. C.
Services Guaranteed. Prices Rcastnnble.
SCAIFE & HAMBLIN,
^ATTORNEYS AT LAW>
Foster Building. Un.ion, S. C.
J. CLOCJGH WALLACE.
ATORNEY AT LAW.
Room 12 upstairs Forter Buildh:c.
S. MEANS BEATY,
ATTORNEY AT-LAW.
No. 3, Law llange.
To Cure a Cold In One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.
All druggists refund the money if it fa\la
to cure. E. W. Grove's signature on
each box. 2fio. ft lv
Dr. R. M. Dorsey,
Specialist
on diseases of ti e EYE and EAR
?and?
OPTICIAN.
Successor to II. R. Ooodcll.
Alexander's MuRic Hall, Spartan
burg, S. C. 47-lyr.
CONTRACTORS'
^BUILDERS'^
MILL SUPPLIES.
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IQMURD1 RON WORKITsUPFLY CO.
IV/J; ai a>i K^ia^BSHIKI
I to write for our confidential letter before apI
plying; for patent: it may be worth money.
I Wo promptly obtain U. 8. and Foreign
PATENTS
I and TRADE MARKS pr return ENI
TIRE attorney s fee. Send model, sketch
I or_i)hoio and we send an IMMEDIATE
I FREE report on patentability. Wo give
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SWIFT & CO.,
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I Opp. U.S. Patent Office,Washington, D.C.
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THE
Cash Bargain Store.
We have receiver! n. full lino
of spring goods at the old prices
and in this lot we have some
extra bargains.
Good yard wide Percale at
8c per yard.
Good heavy Sea Island Percale,
yaid wide, 12?c quality
at 10c per yard.
We have other bargains too
numerous to mention. Call
and examing our line and get
our prices before you buy.
Yours truly,,
Mrs. D. N. Wilburn.