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I The Land ol H SI Uneeda Biscuit |i nu ?The Modern W Soda Cracker? g 1 Bounded on the H "' North by the Purity f| Xw of the Snows; on nil ^e ^ou^y ^e /Mi !Bi! i?r^ -,ul Im8! iiy u ti iiivj w^auu ^ of the Yropics; on fl the TLast by the || Healthfulness of jjl Scientific Baking; W on the West by the flfl Energizing Power || of the Mountains. H ' NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY j|| / Graham Crackers \ ISA | Butter Tliin Biscuit j yml LI Social Tea Biscuit J |Jjj \ Lemon Snaps y Bj i?'K of IliMnr) . | la tlte twelfth century not to ss than vided ho follows tho ordinary rules of fifteen epidemic:; of disosise ai? 1 many , health in respect of bathing, eating, famines carried off the pmple of ling- drinking and clothing. If lie is a til letland. 'the thirteenth eeni.it y saw ed with a sluggish liver, Indigestion or twenty plagues and nineteen famines, inactivity of tho alimentary canal as a while the fourteenth had a iilu k roc- whole, a man may derive more benefit ord of disease. In liijfs flu* "black to health on horseback. But that Is plague" or "black desitlu" whit-It was really a etirativo form of exorcise.? brought into the country fvrtui the I.ondon Chronicle. e:i t. caused the death of Kio.OCO per son: in I.ondon alone, whiif* in iEurope i?nwn broker* lit ciilnn. altogether people M.l vie- Pawnbrokers in China arc tho banktints to its ravages. IJn l.-lft the ; ers of the people and could not be dis"swoating sickness" appeared hi Bug-1 potised with. The poor Chinaman, unbind, eausing great dcstrv.ctioh <*f hu- | like the poor European, does not wear man life. It reappeared at vturiotjs in- | his winter clothes until they are lit 011tervals for a ?,cttlia*y the leaf tier. The j ly to he discarded. When the Chinese last terrible visitation s?f the pl;ftgtte ofiicinls order tliat summer clothing hi England was ftt ldtVJ by wltfelt | shall be donned, the poor Chinaman lOO.fMMt lives were lost in Isoiidvui alotle. i pawns his winter's suit, and with the This epidemic was followed b\ the! proceeds, supplemented by a little casb, great tire of Hide,, which destroyed It;.- he redeems his previous Rtinimcr garb UUi> houses, iiielctding all the ;r.< st or buys new attire. Pawnhroklng, densely populated portions of the city, writes Mr. Cunningham in the Chinese The rebuilding of Lot.don with some Soldier. Is to the respect ft hie Chinaregard to sr./Ttary laws appears to man of limited means a weekly round. have put the tirst cheek on*tho eptidem- ? lc diseases that had previously devas- Wliyf tated its popuhitioii. j Why do )\*e always talk of putting i on our iqpits jutd vests when we nll'layeii wiint ii?- I'lrnttril. I ways put 011 tirst our vest and then diiiiu i, in*- 1 *?? ! playeel a line oc^ii in a Ler.ulon clnirch, w,1.v ,1(> refer to tlio eeivorings of and his ree-ital after servie'e attisn tml oiir foot as shoos and Mocking* when inn It attention, lint ono morning alt- *- "* "foe-kings are* first put on? or a selection from one oi' Mirgirt's M hy ?lo wo invite* people* to wipe masses a church warden enmo into th wo mo;,n H'oir shoes? organ loft and "he-gge*,! to iivform .Mr. ^in the* olden times, eliil a father Smart that the*y Intel ele*e-iele*el lhat tlu*v ,o11 hi* son ho would warm his jacket could ue>t have* sneli liggv straff plavoel W,M'" ovor-v ol,G knew ho meant his in their eliuroh." pantaloons? "Ve?ry well, sir," was the answer; "It shall ho altered." Pnrely RnnlncM. Ne xt Sunelay dirge-like .seunwls pro- "?f saiel the shrewd husioooeloel from the* organ, anel the* warelou n"s* man, I elein t wjint te? he* sie*k, hut e*ongrntulatoel the* pla.ve*r em the* se>l- looks as if I el have to call in Dr. emu and elevating e*ffe*e*t e?f the* niu- Dorroughs fen* a couple of weeks.' sle*. "I am glael vein like* it," answered M hut for.' de-mantled his friend. Mr. Smart. Doubtless If 1 play it a "Ho ?,VCfl n,? *100- nntl thot'? n,?G"t little* quicker you will se?e* tin* reason ,'ll> "n'-v w:l-v I cnn collect it. ?Pliilawhy it affecteii you." And. suiting the* 'h-lphia Press. action to the worel, the* popular strains , ., . ,. .. .. ii.- Altruistic, of "Jump Jim ( row revsutiiieleel from , ,, ,l,o n. Afti'i* this llj-ni'v Sni i,*t "<\<tlnal,l-TUiy 'loon your father ,,Invert ? l,at lki-,1.- M-ol.. vo" ? "lo" taking piano lesaona? ' " Kathryn?IIo says It s too much of a n'( mental strain. Ileglnnld?Oh, pshaw! Vntnr of WulkinR e.n.1 You ,ook ?tr?ng enough. Kathryu-Oh. A brisk elally walk en* a riele em horse- *'!f> s,,'iUn 's,s i en me. It s on the othj . * . ... , t , ? or<u in ilm Imuao / ?l%t..? v* i/? .<!>. m'liin ;i II \ more CIHDOrUie lOririH "" * UICIIHU of physical exorcise for simplicity com- ~ ~ " ... .... * ... A Million fold. bincil with elHcleney. In walking, osperlallv If tlui ground la aome.yl.nt In- , Mr " " rl,1"rc, ,?M M""7u very large number of nmselo, " ?> ,""'v hc'" ? ',m ,"""0,n are brought Into Natural and easy play, " l Yea. be mil he. He aullieleiit. at any rale, to atimillate 11.0 ?0rrLra " -Mllwau. . .. ...... a . ace Sentinel. circulation, which in Its turn compels full expansion of the lungs and due ? ~~ " , aeration of Tim prnfeaalonnl Km>? "n <n">min* your lampa. tilling or buaineaa ...ill. .re {?"' """ ?"? "<?>* Una lo keen him lit for bia tlutiea, pro \?" ">? ??U wl1 ?he ?*-*?*? of success will eotne. ???????r ?? a?? WORTH A THOUGHT. This Statement Will Interest Scores of Union Readers. The facts below are worth a perusal by all who are anxious about their physical condition or are similarly situated to tin's resident of Union. It is a local occurrence and can be thoroughly investigated. John R. Petty, of Kxcelsior knitting mills, says: "I suffered an attack of measles twenty years ago, and it left me with a case of kidney complaint. The result was a lame, weak and aching back and I have endured agony' from it. Doan's Kidney Pills which I procured at Holmes Pharmacy have been a blessing to me. They brought me the first relief I have experienced in all these twenty years. My wife also .suffered severely from backache and there were other evidences of kidney disorders. The secretions were irregular and contained a sediment. Since taking Doan's Kidney Pills the kidney action has become normal and the backache disappeared. She feels like another woman and work is a pleasure to her." For sale by all dealers. Price 50c per box. Fo6ter-Milbur.il Co. Buffalo; N. Y., a/xlil nrrnttia T T ? .i a J T> ? ox?ix> o^uio iui vno oinieB. At)member the name?DOAN'St?and take no other. x FAMOUS FRUIT LANDS. Of the East Texas Country. Home of the Elberta peach, the strawberry, plum, pear, tomato and other fruits and vegetables. Rig money in growing for the northern markets. On February 7th and 21st, March 7th and 21st, round trip home-seekers tickets from St. I.Ouis, Thebes, Cairo or Memphis to Texas points at rate of one fare plus $2 not exceeding $15. One way colonist tickets at half fare, plu8$2on February 21st and March 21st. Write for booklet on Texas fruit lauds, map and time table. L. P. SMITH, T. P. A., Cotton Belt Route, Atlanta, (ia. Notice of Homestead Exemption. Mrs. Carrie Kay has filed her petition with me asking that a Homestead exemption in the personal property of her late husband W. E. Itav be set apart to her. Said petition will come up for a hearing 25tii May, 11)05. C. II. Kbakk, Master17 It A Union Woman Asks 1 *.''1 I r "Have you a Hour paint that will last two weeks?" Yes we have' Devoe'*.: it. has a beautiful gloss and will wean,two yejws if properly applied. Railey lumber A* M fg. Co. "I Thank the Lord!" <v. cried Hannah Plant, of Little Rock, Ark., "for the relief I got from Bucklon'o AnnUa B?1?a t. 1 I IVII o iiiinyn IV I-.11 It'll lliy 1 l'!l rful running sores, which nothing ?lse would lioal, and from which 1 had suffered for 5 years." It is a marvelous healer for cuts, burns and wounds. Guaranteed at I)r. F. C. Duke's drug store; 25c. Very Low Excursion Rates via Southern Railway. Kansas City, Mo., Southern Baptist Convention, May 10th- 17th, 1005. Itate one iirst class fare plus 50 cents for round trip. Tickets on sale May 7 to 11, inclusive, final limit May 23rd, 1005. St. Louis, Mo., National Baptist Anniversary, May 16-24, 1005. Kate, one first class fare plus 25 cents for round trip. Tickets on sale May 14, 15 and 16, with final limit May 27th. 1905. Aslieville, N. C., South AtlantioMissionary Conference, May 17-21, 1905. Rate, one first class fare plus 25 cents for the round trip. Tickets on- sale May 16-17. final limit May 23rd, 1005. Fort Worth, Texas, General Assembly Southern Presbyterian Church May 1K-26, 1005. Rate, one first class fare plus $2 for round trip. Tickets on sale May 15th, 16th, 17 th, final limit May 31st, 1005. liot Springs, Va., Southern Hardware Jobbers Association, .lube 6-0. 1005. Rate, one first class fare plus 25 cents for round trip tickets on sale June 3, 4, 5. final limit June 13th, 1905. Savannah, Ga., National Travelers Protective Association of America, May 16-28, 1905. Rate, one first class iare puis 50 cunts for round trip. Tickets on sale May 13-l-l, final limit May 20th, I90T?. .Savannah, Ga.. Fourth Annual Tournament Southern Golf Association, May 9-13, 1905. Rate, one first class fare plus twenty-five cents for round trip. Tickets on sale May 7, 8, 9, 1905, limited May 15th, 1905. The Southern Railway is the most direct line to all of the above points, operating Pullman sleeping cars, high hack vestibule coaches, with superb dining car service. . For detailed information apply to any ticket agent of this company or R. W. Hunt, Division Passenger Agent, Charleston, S. C. 0 Son Lost Mother. "Consumption runs in our family, and through it I lost my Mother," write* K. 11. Reid, of Harmony, Me. "For the past live years, however, on the slightest sign of a Cough or Cold, I have taken Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, which has saved me I from serious lung trouble." His mother's death was a sad loss for Mr. Reid, but he learned that lung trouble must not be neglected, and how to 1 cure it. Quickest relief and cure for i coughs and colds. Price 50c and $1.00; ! i guaranteed at Dr. F. C. Duke's drug J store. Trial buttle free, i One Way <o Cnlrh Kro^s. In looking over n book of travels* In Franco, written more than 100 years ago, I caiuc across an interesting bit al>out the way of catching frog* for market. The author mentions the fact that frogs were sold by the hundred in the markets, that they were classed as li.sh and tii.it only tlic hind quarters were eaten. Hut to conic to the main point lie says: "To catch the frogs the fisherman puts one of thorn in a glass vessel, which he dips into a brook, on which the creature, tinting itself in so strange a situation contined in the midst of water in a transparent machine, or, I may say, invisible prison, begins to croak most melodiously, and by his croaking makes multitudes of other frogs come to him 011 every side, as if to rescue their companion, when the frog Usher valiantly seizes his prcy."--J.oudon Chronicle. Walters 1111 <1 Tip*. A competent waiter is not a fool l>y n hmg shot, and no man is so liberal iVt any other moment of his life as when he is feeding well. A llrst class serving man at table can wheedle a quarter or half dollar out of even a stingy blatherskite by some delicate attention, by showing Just the least bit#:' Interest in his especial welfare. A tier:nan lieutenant in lined lines Is waiting in a swell hotel here. Ilis tips amount to $10 a day. Ife is incognito for the present. University graduates could do quite as '.veil. The principal trouble Is that waiting Is regarded as too servile, too menial, smacking too much of slavery. But good waiters make valuable friends and earn several times us much money as bank clerks and shop salesmen. And the calling might be dignified.?New York Press Final Discharge. Notice is hereby given that Rachel P. Jeutrie, Executrix of the Estate of Edward Jentrie, deceased, has applied to Jason M. Greer, Judge of Probate, in and for the County of Union, for a tinal discharge as such Executrix. It is Ordered, That the J 2th day of June, A. D., 1905, he fixed for hearing of Petition, and a final settlement of said Estate. Jason M. Grkeii, Probate Judge, Union County, S. C. Published in Tiik Union Times May 12th, 1905. 19-4t NOTICEL Pebble, the thoroughbred Stallion of Clough Rice, will stand this season at the Brick stable on Bachelor Street. i9-3t Johnson & Rice. POM PEIAN Massage Cream Cleanses Where Soap . and Water Fail Washing with soap and water makes the face look clean, but it cleans the surface only. It does uot clean out the impurities in the skin that make it muddy and sallow. Pompeian MassageCream goes through the surface. It sinks into every pore? reaches and loosens all foreign dirt and impurities that lodge in the . pores. It is the only facial cream free from grease and that keeps the face free from if m ?.? llVi vailllUL promote the growth of hair on the face. Price 50c and $1.00 per jar. The Rice Drug Co. Notice to Overseers. You arc hereby notified to get up hands and go over your roadH during this month, filling up the holes, opening up ditches and all such repairing as is necessary for the good condition of the road and the convenience of travel. Respectfully, 19-2t T. J. Hkimoiauoii, Sii 1 Ir. U. C. FwantedI : : ; -BY- : i Excelsior Knitting i 1 Mills. 1 5. UNION ^ r 2 s 1,000 first-class, Cedar- 2 Post, each 8 feet long J and to measure 4 inches * square at the small end; j* also 500 cords first-class * 4?ft. Pine Wood. 2 v ?APPLY TO? * J. H. GAULT, | 1 Treasurer & Manager. ;;; 19-2It ? : 2 i 4? Humor and Philosophy By DUNCAN M. SMITH ? A PERT PARAGRAPHS. Some people nrc judged by tlie enemies that tliey make. One reason why more young men do | not marry is because they find it easier ' to pay a girl compliments thuu to pay her grocer's and dressmaker's bills. |j| Blessed are the ^ >. meek, for they 5don,t ,mvo to Jg*?a have their spirits n I 'Jej iwV. \ Don') kick a | [ ^Pvl/ 1 man when he is wT/O down?n?r when i ^eisupeither, lie B 1 W . may have played fullback on . j his college team. Ordinary men must climb the ladder of fame. Only the favored few can take the elevator. There appears to he a law against people in public oftlce overworking themselves. Strange as it may seeui, the man that has tho biggest pull often docs the least work. Some people are so kind to themselves that they seem to feel as if you ought to notice It and reward them for being so good to the deserving. A woman's idea of a good man is one who gives a beggar a dime and takes j care of the baby when he is asked to do so without any protest. There are lots of folks who would be ' quite willing to do nothing if the salary were high enough. The Speckled Hamburg Hen. The lark pours out his heart In song. He is a blithesome bird. At least, this yarn my whole life long About the lark I've heard. As to its truth I can't attest; aw a not me oira x uko mo DCSt. The nightingale most sweetly sends Prom her slim throat a song of bliss. ] Her very soul In song expends And knows no other theme but this: "Oh, love Is sweet"?or so I've heard; ] j I'm sure that she's a dandy bird. Though lark and nightingale, I trow. Are creatures dear and truly blest. There is another bird I know That I esteem above the rest. She is a modest, quiet bird, This creature that's by me preferred. Unliko the lark, she cannot soar Aloft Into the ether's blue. Nor, Uko tho nightingale, outpour A song that thrills you through and through. But when she's busy, then, oh, say, ] You ought to see how she con lay I His One Opportunity. "I see they are advertising for ice cutters." i "Why don't you go? It is the only J opportunity of your life to cut any ice." Hardly. A scientist In Germany (Where germs come from, they say) Will osonlae the waiter and 80 chase the germs away. I The listless German product may Vamoose when he says, "Scat!" But will our little Yankee germs Turn up their toes for that? Couldn't Finish It. "Bobbie, what on earth nre^ou crying about now?" " 'Cause I can't f-flml nnvthlno- ho* I can smash this engine with." How very commonly common eggs look after Easter! Some women wouldn't know what to do for amusement If they were to Join the Don't Worry club. With some women a husband Is a sort of necessary evil. When her husband la unusually attentive a discreet wife will not make any Hi timed inquires into his recent movements. # (Von NCf 0 TNF ) Tbe simple life Is much pleasanter if a man lives j through force rather than through ne BEm A . away wrath, but sometimes the tender of a soft drink baa just tlie opposite qPBP ? effoctA patent medicine testimonial never thinks of getting out an extra If the subject of the wonderful cure who wrote the testimonial dies the next day. Borne newborn babies are homelier than otlters, bat not much. * T.A.MURRAH ss> has added to his stock of Stoves and Tinware a full line of Farming Implements Cotton Planters, Plows, Hoes, etc., also Bridles, Collars and Backhands. The best of quality with the most reasonable prices. 0 T. A MURRAH. J. CLOUGH WALLACE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Room 12 up Stairs Foster Building. SCA1FE & HAMBLIN, ^ATTORNEYS AT LAW. FOSTER BUILDING, UNION, S. C. D. H. MONTGOMERY, M. D. PRACTICING PHYSICIAN. Office in Opera House Building. Day calls left at Duke Drug Co. Residence Phone 147. LI-12tp F. C. DUKE, Representing* the Best and Host Liberal Life, Health and Aceldent Insurance Companies In the world. OFFICE: Room 4, Nicholson Building. J. A. BROWN, DEALER IN REAL ESTATE, STOCKS AND BONDS. HOUSE RENTING AND COLLECTING A SPH4ALTY. OFFICE ON BACHELOR STREET. Dr. J. M. Wallace Dr. fl. L. Fellers WALLAP.F ft FFII FPS - - - - ?? ? ?kbk!>v| 3_*DENTISTS^ Crown and Bridge Work A Specialty. *? 7] Offices: Rooms 1 and 2 Nicholson Building. Phone 117. The Here i no rrau SAW MILL WITH Heacock-Kinq Feed Works Engines and Boidkrs. Woodworking Machinery. Cotton GTnning, Brickiiakinq and 8iiinode and Lath Machinery. Corn Mit.de, Etc., Era. 0|bbes MACHINERY CO.* Columbia* S. C. The gibbes Shingle Machine '', w - " ~ 0 S R nin and sweat \ \ \ have no effect oa JL?yw4 H harries* treated Wff /lif K A B ne?s Oil. It re- \ E tilts tha damp, WW \ \ I I and cut. Made by Standard Oil J{ \ \t^J \ Bring your job work to The Times. We can please you, ^ #