The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, February 10, 1905, Image 6

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I ..How i YOUR PF Beginning to get lU Atx)ut time o (52L p. will do it in best Our new stock jjjj latest. ^ Drop in and see i *11 11 Ill ub anu we wiii can UNION Tl I DR. McCREEl EYE SPECIALIST. I Office, li. & P. Dank Building. Hours, 9 to 1 HAIR ft) vt Crown, Bridgework and (| Office over Mutual Dry C " ,?)?)?)< | HAVE YOUR HOME l{2 Cabbage Plants fVZ Prices : 1000 at $1.50, r?0(Xi at $1. lis Shipped C. O. I), if desired. ! ?/ Ofhee in good condition. V 1 Vt Cabbage, Beans, Sweet Pota |\w Orders for shipment of Tomato 1*1: jjK Kwect Potato Draws sliou m. ? NATURE TELLS YOU. As Many a Union Reader Knows too Well. When the kidneys are sick, nature tells you all about it. The urine is nature's calendar. Infrequent or too frequent action; any urinary troubles tell of kidney ills. Doan's Kidney Pills cure all kidney ills. Union people testify to this. J. H^Lindsey, with business on Main m., sun residing <?n wpring ISt , s.?ys: ' F hare been troubled with a very lame back for quite a while. The kidnry accretions were da> k ami full of brick-1 dust like sediment, and caused me great inconvenience, especially at night, by causing me to get ont of bed so often. My back pained frotn my hips to my shoulder blades with a constant pain which at night would awaken me. 1 did everything I knew of, put on plasters and liniments, used bottle after bottle of medicine, but nothing helped me so much until T got Doan's Kidney Pills at Holmea Pharmacy 'I hey acted like a charm, and after using them the first day I went to bed and rested splendidly all night. Since using Doan's Kidney Pills I have not had the backache. I also tiied Doan's Ointment for : itching hemorrhoids from which 1 had ; suffered for years. It is imjaissible to express the suffering I endured, but; this wonderful medicine gave me instant relief. 1 also u-ed it for a sore which it completely cured. I would ! not be without Doan's Ointment if it j cost ten times what it docs." For sale by all dealers. Price 50c per box. Foster-Milbnrn Co. Buffalo, NY, sole agenta for the United States, liemember the name?DOAN'S?and takno other. A MILDER CLIMATE. In Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas. Stock ranges ten to twelve months ' in the year, two and three crops grow in a season. Now is the tiinc to look up a location while the land is cheap. On February 7th and 21st and March 7th and 21st, Cotton Belt Houtc will sell round trip hotne-scckcrs' tickets from ttf TI...1? >-. - -- iiicucn, v^airo and Memphis to points in above named states at rate of $15, or one fare plus $2 where it makes lens than $15. One way colonist tickets, February 21st and March 21st at half fare, plus $2. Write for map, time table, and ask about rates to any point. It.P. &MITH, T. P. A. Cotton Belt Route, Atlanta, Oa. For sale at ThbJimes office Rev. Irl * ft. Hicks ffipariacs and weather forecast Price 1 96 mnt . | MEUttt'CJT ~SK.-I?kv. ~ " - \bout.. 1 MINTING? E have more?we ? || style?best price. ^ yj of type is rhe " ^ i ? i our stock or ring ^ E mmp /\ 0 The Southern Railway is thchest | route to the alx>ve points, operating , through Pullman and Dining cars | on all through trains. * For full information apply to any < Agent Southern Roilway, or It. W. Hunt, 1 Division Passenger Agent, 1 Charleston, S. C. NEW GOODS| i --AT-- < i The Cash Bargain Store! 1 c Ladies' Fancy Turnover _ t Collars, 10c and 15c each n it Ladies' Cape collars oth- t ers sell for $1.50 and ti D $2,50, we sell for $1.00 j f4 and $2.00. ti Hand Bags, 15c, 25c, 50c, t 75c and $1.00 each. Corsets 25cand 50c each. \ IRS. D. X. WILBllV | 1 J * / incs LU.0 *Y GLYMPH, 1 BYES TESTED FREE. Take Stairway on Main Street. I and 2 to 6. t H A I F?, I i ISTS, | Regulating a Specialty. ]' ioods Co., Union, S. C. | | ?)?)?)?)?)?)?)?)?)?)?) ))<?) ' GROWN CABBAGE. |j i >, All Varieties. W j L>r> per 1000, 10000 at $1 jut 1000. ! Plants arrive at your Express Wtj i rite for Merehants' Prices. fclvi | toes and Turnips in Season. jdb ints, Sea Island Cotton Seed and ,vflc Id be booked in advance. ftlj , r.PDtTV ... ? &A| ' Enterprise, S. C. Rfj }/7> ffSi 1<7Z\ frs\ )sr-' tr< ixio: i I Low Rates via Southern Railway. The Southern Railway gives helow a few special low excursion rates I to the following points: To New Orleans, I.a., Mobile, Ala. and Pensacola, Fla. One first class fare plus twenty-five cents for the round trip from all coupon sta- , tions. Tickets on sale March l-<? limited March 11th, 1005, may l>o t extended to return March 25th, 1005, account Mardi-Gras. To Washington, D. C. Presi" dential Inauguration. For civilians, rate one first class fare plus twentyfive cents for the round trip from all coupon stations. For Military Companies and Brass Bands in uniform accompanying them in parties 20 or more on one ticket?at one cent per mile plus arhitraries. i Tickets sold March 2nd and 3rd, limited March 8th, 1005, but may be extended to March 18th, 1005. Very low rates to other points now in effect. Under the Rose By FREDERIC S. 1SHAM, Author of "The Stroller#** Copyright. 1903, by the Boweo-Monll Cxxnpeny fool una servant, she sedulously pursued her literary labors. As books were rare, being hand printed and hand Illumined, the princess' choice of volumes was not large, but Marguerite, the king's sister, possessed some rarely executed poems in their mechanical aspect. The monarch per um(.eu ucr lue use or several precious chronicles, while the abbess lu the convent near by, who esteemed Louise for her piety and accomplishments, submitted to her care a gorgeously painted, satin bound "Life of St. Agnes," a Roman virgin who died under the sanguinary persecution of Diocletian. But Jacqueliue frowulngly noticed that the saint's life lay Idle conspicuously, though flttiugly, on the altar table, while a manuscript of the "Queen of Navarre" suspiciously accompanied the Jester when he sought the pleasant nook selected for reading and conversation. It was to this spot the maid repaired one soft summer afternoon, where she found the fool and a volume?Marguerite's, by the purple binding and the Iotc knot In sliver?awaiting doubtless the coming of the princess, and at the sight of tbem?the book of romance and the Jester who brought it? what wonder her patience gave way? "You have been here now a fortnight. Monsieur Diplomat," she continued, bending the eyes which Triboulet so feared upon the other. "Thirteen days, to be exact, sweet Jacqueliue!" he answered calmly. "Indeed! Then there is some hope for you If you've kept track of time," she returned pointedly. "What mean you, gentle mistress?" he asked quietly, without even looking at her. " 'Sweet Jacqueline!' 'Gentle mistress!' You are profuse with soft words!" she cried sharply. "And yet they turn you not from anger." "Anger!" she said, her eyes flashing. "Not another man at court would dare' . to talk to me as you do." "I know, mistress," he returned Iron- ' ically, "you have a reputation for sorcery, but I think It lies more In your eyes than tn the moon." ^ ^"AndZet.I "The ruture?" he retortedj and looked from the earth to the sky. "What la the goal of yonder tiny clpud? Can you tell me that?" Thiv t an _i? - ? ' *>u gum r sue repeatec, uplifting her head. "Walt! It Is Very small. | Tho sun is already swallowing it up." : "Helglio!" yawned the Jester, outstretching his yellow pointed boot. "I catch not the moral to the fable?an \ there be one!" "The moral!" she said quickly. "Ask Marot." I "Why Marot?" bnlauclug the stick with the fool's head in his hand. "Because he dared love Queen Marguerite!" she answered impetuously. "The fool in motley; the lady in purple! How he Jested at her wedding! How i he wept when he thought himself alone!" | "He bad but himself to blame, Jacqueline." returned the other, with composure, although his eyes were now bent straight before him. "He could not climb to her; st^-could not stoop to blm. Yet, I dare sny, it was n mad i dream he would not have fpregone." ' "Not have foregone!" she exclaimed quickly. "What would he not have given to tear It from his breast?aye, though he tore his heart with it! That day, bright tand fair, when Heury d'Albret. king of Navarre, took her in his anas and iklssed her brow! When amid gay jfeaiivlUes she became his bride! Not hnfc foregone? Yes; Marot would foreg*> that day?and other lays." Still that 'Inertia; that irritating immobility. "What a tragic tale for a rammer dajr!" was his only comment. "And Calllettel" she contlnned apldly. "I listlngntshed in mien, grace"ul in ma aner. In the house of his rntron he dared look up to that noblenan's darghter, Diane de Poitiers. A Iream, a youthful dream! Enter M. [e Breze., grand seneschal of Normanly. Shrill I tell you the feat? How ^alllettci stares, moody, knitting his irows at bis cupel Of wtmt Is the ester thinking?" wn??iuer the grand seneschal will J et htufr sleep with the spaniels, JacqueIne, ov turn him out," laughed the Jestr. Angrl/ j nho clasped her hands before ' r- *"as It the way your mind would aoveT abe retorted. "A jester without a roof to cover him W .e a dog without a kennel, mlsresr ,? | "" /on but seek to flout me from my V she said sweetly. "Calllette Is ? je sncli, as you know. They were ung together. 'Twas said he coo seed his love; that tokens passed be' ften them. Rhymes he writ to her; a Dwer, perhaps, she gare him. A flowr he yet cherishes, mayhap, dried, aded, yet plucked by herl" "A flower for himself, no doubt?not given him for another!" "What mean yon7" he asked, momentarily dropping hie unruffled manner. I "Not ranch f Lightly she tripped to ft bush, broke off a flower and regardid It mischievously. "Why should people bide thgt which Is so sweet and lmW ifflwfrnVmijHi fftt ' - ^ V I rose in Lev lu;ir. *'IIideV" he said, looking at the flower. but not at her. "I trust yt>u kept the rose, Monsieur Diplomat?" she spoke up suddenly, her expression most serious. "What rose?" he asked, now become restless beneath her cutting tongue. "What rose? As If you did notknowl IIow innocent you l$ok! How many roses are there in the world? A thousand, or only one? What rose? Her rose, of course. Have you got it? I hope so, for the duke Is coming and j might ask for it!" "The duke?coming!" The next moment he was by her side and had taken her arm, almost roughly. "Speak out!" lie cried. "Some one Is coming! What duke is coming?" "You hurt inc!" she exclaimed angrily. He loosened his grasp. "What duke?" she answered scornfully. "Her duke! Your dulte! The emperor's duke!" "The Duke of Friedwakl?" be asked. "Of course! The princess' flanco, bridegroom to be. future husband, lord and master," she explained, with Indubious and positive iteration. "But the time?set for the weddinghas not expired," he protested with what she thought seemed a suspicion that she wns playing with him. "That Is easily answered," she said cheerfully. "The duke, it seems, has "Speak out I" become more and more enamored. Finally bis passion has so grown and grown be fears to let It grow any more and, as the only way out of the difficulty, petitioned the king to curtail the time of probation and relieve hlni of the constantly augmenting suspense, T* off I occasions and measuring the poor fellow's troubles by the qualms he has himself experienced, bus seen gener ously fit to cut off a few weeks of walt| lng and set the wedding for the near future." | "The princess?has she heard the king has received a letter from the duke and that bis majesty baa chang- j ed the weddlnc date?" "The princess knows, has heard all from the king. Not long since he sent for her. Will she consent? What els? oan she do? 'Tis the monarch who commands, we who obey!" "Is the court, then, only a mart, a guildhall?" he exclaimed. "A woman, even a princess, should be won, not exchanged!" Her lashes drooped. In her gaze shone once more the Ironical amusement. "Why," she snld, "from what wilds or forests have you come? The heart follows where the trader lists! Think you the princess will wear the willow?" she laughed. "How well you know women!" "Do you mean that she"? "I mean that her welfare is In strong hands; that there be few greater In all the land, none more honored. The duke's principality Is vast. But here comes the princess." The hound sprang to his feet and ran gamboling . down the path. "Ask her the rest ' yourself, most unsophisticated fool! 1 Ah," with a touch she could not resist, "what a handsome bride she will make for the duke!" I {TO 1IK COJTTnrtTED.] BEAUTIFUL SNOW. Where Is that rare But misguided gentleman who. Having nothing else to do, 4 Invented beautiful snow? Show Us the man. And, you bet, he'll also ran. i All right ' For him. but If ho thinks he did something bright Let him leave his address. And I rather guess The whole world will be in on the plan To present him with a tin can. i Beautiful, Indeed! |. we re nil agreed On that?nit. It doesn't muke a hit With us for sour apples. When a wayfarer grapples 1J With a snowstorm Which Is so warm ' That It Is twenty degrees below zero ^ He feels like playing Nero, To tiddle while tho man burned ' Who first turned The phrase, To take a few days I . Off ? 1 To scoff I While the fellow roasted to a slow Flame and ask him occasionally how ' he would like to*have about a j quarter's worth of beautiful snow, i It might do 1 From a poet's point of view, 1 But with drifts three feet high And the sky Still shaking It down And one hundred and twenty-eight feet of sidewalk to clean before you , go downtown, It's a horse of another hue, 1 And a brief Interview , With the gent who first sprang the gag Would bo more thrilling and soul sat"Jtfylng than a holiday Jag. j - _ f FOB. i The Atlanta :l "fie Greatest Jimerlcat ' ONE DOLLAR j The Sum j! The Squth's Standar FIFTY CENTS BOTH FOR SENT TO ANY ADD I E* * * HPHL combination cf these A for news, the other pure offer for every Southern hous THE WEEKLY CONST contains the news of the wei telligently presented, Its ag are worth many times Its subs page is always complete. It Children's Department ai preciated pages at the firesii contributions are of the highes THE SUNNY SOUTH leader of the South, popul: tory, and known by its great ^ new Southern writers to the 1 \ short story contests have brc fame and fortune have been m I South. It is welcomed in ov< 1 destined to be the leading Ar paper. This wonderful combinatio in a home reading offer, tt week, and 1905 will demon insure your enrollment as a HI The Great One Hundred Dollars a We have a most attractive age any American publication?by fifty toUne Hundred Do wanted in every community, and put yourself in a way proposition. Send your subscription tc take both at the combination r addressing all orders to The /Atlanta SCAIFE & HAMBI IN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. FOSTER BUILDING, UNION, S. C. J. CLOUGH WALLACE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Room 12 up Stairs Foster Building. J. A. BROWN, DEALER IN REAL ESTATE. STOCKS AND BONDS. HOUSE RENTING AND COLLECTING < A SPECIALTY. OFFICE ON BACHELOR STREET. Dr. J. M. Wall ii e Dr. II. L. Fellers WALLACE & FELLERS, : e^.DENTISTS^ Crown and Bridge Work A Specialty. i! !! Offices: Rooms 1 and 2 Nicholson Building.** ** j Phone 117. < Wall Paper! \ large and wi ll selected stock on ' land. See my line first, I'll get , four business. If you want fine 1 goods let me order them. PICTURE FRAMING. [yet me attend to tliem for you. Mj moulding the latest, my prices tin lowest. You know my work, it b dways the In st. A lot of second hand furniture to close out, yoi make . the price. Upholstering, arpet laying and repairing. Ring 168. Milling, The Pa'psr Man. The Times and Metropolitan Magazine one year for $1.80. 1QO5 Constitution i Weekly Newspaper, I PER YEAR* 7y South ; --.v </ Literary Weekly, PER. YEAR, ONLY $1.25 S O CESS IN AMERICA. W * * ' vl two weekly papers?the one :ly literary?makes an ideal ehold. 'ITUTION, 12 to 16 pages, ;k carefully orepared and in ricultural features alone | cription price- Its market | s Woman's Kingdom and B re the best read and most ap- 1 de. Its special articles and 3 >t standard. I is the recognized literary g ar throughout its wide terri- 5 work in the introduction of | literary world. Many of it? ? tught to light authors whose Bfc lade possible by The Sunny a ;r 50,000 homes today and is 1. nerican story and household n blends all that is desirabte vo complete papers every strate to you Its value and [':} fetime subscriber. Lgents' Offer I |f : Month to Jlctive Jlgenti I nts* offer?the most liberal ot jg which agents may earh from 1 liars per Month. Agent? ft Write for agency particular: \'5 to make money on a > euner paper at its pi J ate. Remit by safe men. I Constitution, 1 ATLANTA, GA. J ii ii OWN YOUR OWN HOME. If yon are nayinwr rent you a?e pacing your i(iii<11. rii lor thp pioperty in which you ljve. Why n- t be your own landior<l? The H? me I'urehiiaing f "nntrncta of the Standard (Inarm ty and Trust Company | rovhle for a loan at 5 per cent Himp'e interei-t and $7 5 ier month on the principle on ea>b $1.00h that von borrow, and you ran pay additional amounta if yon <'e?iie, thna stopping the interest ami reducing''the time in >ena\ ing the loan. ' The eompanv guarantees that vonr payments ahail no' ex<e?d per nu-nth, principal and interest combined r?*? ?l ftftA - l ? v? *>. * n VI ,\nni mnr a II* n>C IH purchased. rl h?*y will either purchase a li* m*' t or will l>uv you a lot ami furniali t> e nu*n< y with which to build any where in the Unittd Siatea. bend i?r cah for |*articnlara and the Company's 1'ro-pe* ton. lr you ileaire a profitable inv* r-tinent and do not wi*h jq burrow, we offi-r an urequniled proposition for rnonthiv aavi* ps. C. M ?R * H AM. Riecial Apt. care of Union Grocery Co., Union, S. C. Mt Very Low Rates to Washington D. C. and Return. On account Presidential Inauguration Ceremonies, Washington. D. U., March lth, 1905,the Southern Railway announces tint very low rate of One Far*' (plus 25 cents) for the round trip. Still lower rates for Military C'onipanieg and Brass Bands in uniforni, twenty or more on one party ticket. Tickets will he s Id on March 2nd and 3rd, final limit <>f March 8th, 1005. How* v< r, nn extension of final limit to have Washington not Inter tlinn midnight of March 18th, 1005 may he. had ly deporting ticket with Spe cial Agent at Washington, D. ('. on or before March 8th, 1005, ml payment of fee of ?1.00 at timo f deposit. For further inform.'tu n as to rates, schedules, sle< ping car reservations, etc. apply to any ag? nt of e?| die Southern Railway or address Bwx>kh Mono an, A. G. 1*. A. Bouthern Railway. Atlanta, Ga, Bring your job work to The Times. We have new type faces and can please you. dak