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m The turn pi to peoples' I fin a l.it s th rouy mouths, or take man hi ret It is plac AJf package Mot inno perfect of bake As an example tr their superiority over ar Juwf of the best Graham flour r Ehe Wings of The Morning By LOUIS TRACY Copyright. 11-03. by r?lwtircl J. Clode i> ?; c ' '"mil IVUTi' J.J. like::, as you will :-'l I o paupers to get her," was the earl's caustic summing up. Tin-; brutal argument rather overshot tin.- mark. The shipowner's fe* ? flushed with anger. and Lord Ventnor hastened to retrieve a false step. "I didn't exactly mean to put it thai way, Penue. but iny temper is a litth short these days. My position on boari this ship is intolerable. As a matter ol fair dealing to nie you should put s stop to your daughter's attitude to ward Anstruther on the ground thai her engagement is neither approved ol by you nor desirable under any eonsid oration."' It may be assumed from this re marl that even the earl's sardonic tempei JI'O ^ * *- ? * * " navior. Nor was it exactly pleasant tc him to note how steadily Anstrnthei advanced in the favor of every otlieei on the ship. My tacit consent the courl martial was tabooed, at any rate until tiie Orii ai reached Singapore. Every one knew that tin* quarrel lay between Itohert and Vent nor, anil it is not i > he wondered at if Iris' influence alone were sutlieient to turn the scale in favor of her lover. The shipowner refused point blank to interfere in any way during the voyage. ? "You promised your co-operation in business even if we found that the Sirdar had gone down with all hands," p.e retorted bitterlv. "Iio vmi ?i<li mo i.< make my ?t:111_11(< r believe she has eonic back in! > my life only to bring inc irretrievable ruin?" ' 'Flint oppcars (o 00 UlC 1'Csull. HO mutter how you 111:1 y endeavor 10 disguise it." "I thougiil tho days wore gone wlion a man would wish to many a woman against lior will." "Nonsense! What does slio know about it? Tho glamor of this island romance will soon wear off. It would ho different if Anstrutlior were able to maintain her even decently, lie is an absolute beggar. 1 tell you. IMdn't lie ship 011 your vessel as a steward? Take my tip. Peane. Till him how matters stand with you. and lie will rool off." CIIAPTKli XVII. SI K AltTIirU DE.WK was sitting alone in his cabin in a state of deep dejection when lie was aroused by a knack, and Itobort entered. "Can you give nie half an hour?" he asked. "I have something to say to you before we land." (Plant W cod's j Southern-Grown | Watermelon and Cantaloupe Seed I S if you want quality, sv/cci- 1 ? ness an?l the best melons 1 that it in possible to prow. n Northern or Western grown .j |J seed doesn't begin to compare n whcnyoucondder the quality J H of the fruit produced. ft Wood's Descriptive Catalogue H tells all about tlie best kinds to j 4, plant Mailed free. We are Headquarters for I Cow Peas, Soja Beans, 1 Sorghums, Millet Seed, | Ensilage Corn, Alfalfa n and all Southern Seeds. Write for u prices and Descriptive Catalogue. 1 T. W. WOOD & SONS, I SEEDSMEN, RICHMOND. VA. . / . ' ke road HwflU HRS *h their HSS ? ' / mis HHK hid.? EBaKg er Pindar. ^HhK ?And the turnpike guide post is the trade mark of the National Biscuil Company. It points the way to the too E quality?biscuit and crackers so perfec red and properly protected; so cle< ced and freshly kept, that they never f; 2 in their mission to the appetite and he lis trade mark always appears in red an :ed on each end of a dust and moist .at keeps the contents in their original 1 Biscuit Company products are thus dist >u are thus protected and guided, in b\ xy products. y a package of GRAHAM CRACKERS. You v >y ordinary Graham crackers you ever tasted. Thi enhanced by perfect baking. slATlONAL BISCUIT COMPAN i ' The shipowner silently motioned him to 11 sent. j "It concerns Iris and myself," continued Anstrutlier. "I gathered from yottr words when we met on tlio island that both you and Lord Vent nor ro; garded Iris as his lordship's promised i bride. From your point of view the | arrangement was perhaps natural and equitable, but since your daughter left | Hongkong it happens that she and I ' have fallen in love with each other. No; please listen to me. I am not hero to urge my claims on you. T Won i.< ?_>.. . -?.| in L-ouii li^iH vi'W'O the whole house of peers opposed to me. At this moment I want to tell you, her father, why she could never, lj *?v>ovv u?uW niiior circumstances. marry Lord Vent nor." i 1 Then ho proceeded to place before . the astounded baronet a detailed history* of his recent career. It was a sordid story of woman's perfidy twice told. It carried conviction in every sentence. At I In* conclusion Sir Arthur bowed his head hotwecu his hands. I eanttol choose but believe you," i.?* ...i '-V-.t i.ntt* in* auiiiuiai nuniMi,>. jvi nnur you to be so unjustly convicted by n tribunal composed of your brother officers "They ? r,;!u not help themselves. To k acquit me meant .Unit tliey discredited ' stiffsnn importidit government mission", not to mention some bought Chinese evidence." I "Hut you are powerless now. You can hnrdl.\ liope to have your ease revised. What chance is there that your name will ever lie cleared?" ' j "Mrs. Costobell can do it if she will. The vagaries of sueli a woman are not to be depended on. If Lord Ventnor has cast her off her hatred may prove stronger than her passion. Anyhow, I should be the last man to despair of (tod's providence. Compare the condition of Iris and myself today with our plight on the ledge!" The shipowner sighed heavily. "I hope your faith will be justified, if it is not the more likely thing to happen?1 ?miet.stnnd that my daughter and you intend to get married whether I give or withhold my sa notion V" Anstruther rose and opened the door. "1 have ventured to tell you," lie sakl, "why she should not marry Lord Ventnor. When I come to you and ask you for her. which I pray may he soon, it will be time enough to answer that question should you tlion decide to I put it." It must hi; remembered that Robert know n dliing whatever of the older man's predicament, while the baronet, full of his own troubles, was in no inooil to take a reasonable view of Anstruther's position. Thus, for a little while, these two were driven apart, aiul Anstrutliev disdained to urge the plea that not many weeks would elapse before he would be a richer man than his rival. The chief sufferer was Sir Arthur I>eano. . Had Iris guessed how her father was j tormented she would not have remained on the bridge. radiant and mirthful, while the gray bailed baronet gazed stony eyed despair at some inomo. niida which ho extracted from his papers. [ro BK CONTINUED.] Iloynl Itoniln. People will discover at last that royal roads to any tiling can 110 more bo laid in iron than lliey can in dust; that there are. in fact, no royal roads to anywhere worth going to; that If there wen it would that instant cease to bo Wdl'lll Ift ft I I < r i i\ T tnonii en on *!?? tiling to be obtained arc in any way estimable in terms of price, for thoro arc two classes of precious things in I ho world those that (Jod gives us for nothing sun, air and life, both mortal life and Immortal, and the secondarily precious tilings which he gives us for a price. These secondarily precious i things, worldly wine and milk, can only he bought for definite money. They never can he cheapened. No cheating nor bargaining will ever get < a single thing out of nature's establish- ' ment at half price. Do we want to bo ' strong? We must work. To lie huu- j gry? Wo must starve. To be happy? j .We must lie kind. To ho wise? We | ) i si BB HEESI inly ail to d white. ;ure proof , condition. inguished and ^Ojk jying the most rill instantly recognize :y contain all the good M :;::ctr!iTs:.'i: Clin. I >Jr. Mist? KMrhtly. I?iiw? 1 i i .i i M1 I '.-'iv to-aw? iv.-!!. Ml !!"i !\c >p right on, Mr. ! .'i'.-.i;:;;: 5'il <r :!;?; your pvopos:-.l :d have my a::s\wr ready by the I it;:.' volt Law t it out of yottr system. Philadelphia I tv.v. (>:i Ofoc:- Mrc'Jts. > . <!In\v <" >es your sister i" - un ':p erne::} ring I gave he-. !!.? ?'?y ? Hot* Voting Brother? wen. its ; vuh- too entail. She has 4t rt F lit!' I (l.;i; . , , . n? > i ? i- .n . i? on tvhcMi t II%0!i*?r foil AVS <-;iII.? f *llc*fv Danger from the Plague: , There's grave danger from the plug"? of Coughs and colds that are so prevalent. unless you take Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, C< ughs and Colds Sirs. Geo. H. Wells, of Forest City, Me., writes. '"It's a Godsend to people living in climates where coughs and colds prevail. I find it quickly ends them." It prevents Pneumonia, cures LnGrippe, gives wonderful relief in Asthma and Hay Fever, and make-1 weak lungs strong enough toward oiT Consumption, Coughs and Colds. 50c and $! 00 Guaranteed by Dako Drug , Co. Trial hotte free. Tlic**To?irln<i?* W'njr. ; ?Tlrt.-? Ih- ii VCi^ C^lUgcrous phro*, you say. And do th? poor people who live on the mountain have to travel this way every day? ! Guide?Ob, no! They tire not such fools! They go up by a much easier road. We only bring the tourists round tills way.?Pearson's Weekly. blood Poisoning results from chronic constipation, which is quickly cured hy Dr. King's New Life Pills. They remove all posisonous i germs from the system and infuse new life and vigor: cure sour stomach, nausea, headache, dizziness and colic, without griping ?r discomfort. 25c. Guaranteed by Duke Drug Co. JinnoH l.lrU'N Text. This is told of James Lick, the eccentric San Francisco millionaire, who founded the famous observatory bearing bis name. When taking any one into bis service lie always asked the person to plant si tree upside down? the roots in the stir, the branches underground. If there were any protest the man was sit once sent siway, Lick ssiying that he wanted only men who woni*i ooey orders strictly. A Young Mother at 70. "My mother lias suddenly been made youg at 70. Twenty years of intense suffering from dyspepsia bad entirely disabled her, until six months ago, when she began taking l.lectric Hitters, which have completely cured her. ami restored the strength and activity she had in the prime of life," writes Mrs \V. L. (iilpatrick, of Danfurth, Me. t treat est restorative inedieine on the globe. Sets Stomach, Liver and Kidneys right, purities the blond, and cures Malaria, Biliousness and Weaknesses Wonderful Nerve Tonic. Price f>0c. Guaranteed by Duke Drug Co. Tlie nni'Klnr'H (iriinp. "Did it ever strike you that a burglar of all men is most sensitive to the litness of tilings':" "Can't say it ever did. I low do you make it out?" "Mo always throws light on his shady transactions with a dark lantern."? l?a 11 iniore A meriici l'erfiiine of Kloiveri. It i>? claimed tlmt the perfume of flowei-s disappears as soon as the starch iu tlie petals is exhausted, and it may, it is said, be restored by placing the flowers In a solution of sugar, when the formation of starch and the emission of fragrance will be at once resumed. A Badly Burned Girl >r b ?v, man or woman, is quickly out >f pain if IhickIon's Arnica S'alve is apdird promptly. G. J. Weieh, of TeK>nsba, Mich., says: "I uso it in my airiily for cuts sores and all skin inuries, and find it perfect." Quickest hie cure known. Best healing alive nnden ?tf>o Dttke Drtf^ Ou* i 3^ I of liberally ubinpr our fertili- E 3 zera, Is to payvli a raortgago 9 3 on tho old farm Jte.id the fol- I 1 lowing from Mcsois. Wherry fc 3 & Son.owncro of tho Magnolia f 1 Fruit Farm. Durant. Miss.: I I "We made $000 from onu aero R slrawborrlcs. on which your a H fertilizers wcro used. Eight K u yco.rBugowoboughtibisplnco P H at 530 per ncio. It woo then K M considered to have been worn 9 a out twenty yenis boforo, but C flrm.-r-'-jS by liberally using u M Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers | Eg undor pcao and volvot beans, 0 ? we can now grow almost any- H thing, and havo been ottered B , $350 per aero for tho place. Wo H i experimented with a great fe many brands of fertilizers, f, i but find the highest per-cent. si i l cheaper." Now don'tyou think ? j Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers ! would cnablo you to> pay oil a n ! mortgngo if you had onoV IB ! Well, don't uso any other. JBk^B 1 Vlrglala-CaroIlnaChemicalCo. | Richmond. Vn. JZ ]P S3 Durham'. N. C. 16^9 a Charleston, 8. C. MSB? B Baltimore, Aid. * IeVm |j Savannah, Ua. K Montgomery, Ala. (VI H Memphis, Tuna, YJ|]| if Bhroveport, La. VA] {S A I'nlr of ('otliller*. A man with n envious fondness for skullcaps was the Abbe do St. Martin, | who, In the seventeenth century, made uiiiirM'ii nuiniMMirt I'.y ins yagurirs. lie always wore nine ol' these articles (o keep off (ho cold and, furthermore, nine pairs of stockings. His mo le of passing the night was more remarkable still. lie caused to be constructed for himself a bed of ricks, beneath which was a furnace, so arrange I that he could regulate it to the degree of warmth he might require, and his bod was fitted with only a very small opening. through which Jho ' ludicrous was the contrivance which the great French mathematician, Fourier, designed and used for the protection of his health. Ho Incased himself In a species of box. the interior of which, by some mechanical means, was kept at the only temperature at which he felt he could live without inconvenience. While enveloped In this clinnsy affair ho was necessarily confined to one spot, but ho provided means for the freedom of his head and hands. Even the ills of asthma and rheumatism, one would have thought, were preferable to existence under such circumstances as this, but the French mathematician, wo must believe, was of a different opinion.?London Standard.'. . ' " . . . Vitality ot n Frosr's Heart. There is no living creature, according to a Philadelphia surgeon, that lias a heart with so much vitality as a frog, especially the species commonly known as the water frog. It is generally known that the nnnntie frosr will ?nr. vivo for months after the hind legs have been removed. Of course lie cannot hop about as he could before losing his principal means of transit, but his fore legs help liim to crawl wllerevcr he desires to go. When I began to learn surgery I made a special dissection of a frog one day. I laid the various parts of the body 011 a table and discovered that life was extinct within a few hours in every organ except the heart. The heart showed valvular motion for a day after it had been severed entirely from the body. I am not aware that any other creature's heart is possessed of such vitality. ? Philadelphia Telegraph. llniiimern. Hammers are represented on the monuments of Kgypt twenty centuries before our era. They greatly resembled the hammers now in use, save that there were 110 claws on the back for the extraction of nails. The first hammer was undoubtedly a stone liehl in tllf? Cllliw linmninl... i......... otl some time during the middle ages. Illuminated manuscripts of the eleveniii century represent carpenters with claw hammers. Hammers are of all sizes, from the dainty Instruments used l?y the jeweler, which weigh less than half an ounce, to the gigantic hammer of shipbuilding establishments, some of which weigh as much as fifty tons and have a falling force of from 00 to 100. Every trade has its own hammer and Its own way of using it. l.i'Krnd of Samlinr I.nkc. One of the features of Je.vpore, in India, Is the wonderful Sambur salt lake, concerning which there is a curious legend. The story runs that an old fakir long ago told one of the rajahs that if he wanted to ho rich he should ride a horse as far as he could go without once looking back, and the land as far as ho could travel would become a hold of silver, always provided he did not turn. lie rode for thirty miles, and then, curiosity overcoming liiin, he looked back, with tho result that instead of tho promised field of silver he found a lake of salt. The Knlher of Science. Hippocrates is looked upon by anatomists as the father of the science, lie died in I>77 It. C. Tlic modern science began in Italy in tiie thirteenth century. The llrst anatomical plates, designed to show the size and relative position of the bodily organs, were prepared and colored by Titian. AH the great painters and sculptors have been careful students of anatomy. Michael Angelo, llapliael and Leonardo da Vinci were noted for their anatomical refeacchca. -aamn?..<7 "i . m - 1 i I II AIR < DEN'l 3 Crown, Bridge work an< . *2 . . . Office *>v-er Mutual Dry II DR. J. MONR i Crown and Bridge Work tjY3 A Specialty. Phono gjaBs^-sssssEssdgBsaass^E \ rity Indeed. ' Siripklu < ('.it ict timed from Italy)? An ! ; >, yo" are. I cli 1 not "see Naples ! ami Visa Aw,1.v Ilnml (ab3ently) ! \Y!nt a pity.* APy Sloper. j i I'nill comparatively invent times the only l?:ir>\>w was a largo pile of brush or hw biMM-h-.-s. dragged across the field 1 y a.team of oxen. I _ THe New York Sunday Herald OUKATKST PAPICK Pl'BI.U?IEl>. Issues a Special Southern Edition with Exclusive News from all Sec. tions of the South. This edition is a complete Sun day Newspaper, and is full of interesting facts from all parts of the World. THE N. Y. SEN DAY HERALD. Comic Magazine Section will interest old and young. Get a copy of the New York Sunday Herald and learn what a wonderful amount of information and interesting facts can he contained in all Up-tO-d?nytx^.-r?r" ? 1110 New i ork Sunday Herald is on sale at our Agent's store, E. II. Scaifc. 11 -4t. ~P0ST Office DIRECTORY. Hours of Opening, Closing and Delivery of the Daily Mails at the 11 n 1 rt *> 1Dai> f A Art ** WUIUII [U91 UII1UO. Post office opens at K o'clock every day (except Sunday) and closes at 6 o'clock p. in. Post ottice open for delivery of mail on Sunday from 12:30 to 1:30 p m. Mail for train No. 9, due here at 9 a. nl.. closes at 8:45 a. m. Mail for train No. 14, due here at .11:3o a. m., closes at 11 :10 a. in. Mail for train No. 13, due here at 2:35 p. m , closes at 2:10 p. m. i *??Miul.?pr train No. JjO. duo here at ?T:5J*p. m., closes" qt 8>Jf> 'p. *~m.. each day. Persons should remember and observe these hours in order to be accommodated at fhe post office in receiving or sending mail matter through this office. Feb. 1908. j. C. huntku, Post. Master. "more cheap rates ro TEXAS Arkansas and the Southwest. One-way tickets at haff fare plus plus $2. Round trip tickets at less than one-way fare. From Memphis via Cotton Belt Route. MARCH 6 TO 20. Stop-overs both ways and 21 days return limit on round trip tickets. Write for map, folder and piek your date and say when and where you want to go and we will give you full information by return mail. L. I>. SMITH. T.P.A. Cotton Belt Route, 203 Equitable Bldg. BOILERS AND ENGINES. Tanks, Stacks, Stand Pipes, I and Sheet Iron Work; Shaft- j ing, Pulleys, Clearing, Boxes, Mangers, etc. Mill Castings. Cast every day; work 200 hands. Lombard Foundry Vachine and Boiler Work and Supply Store. Augusta, GeorgiaFinal Discharge. Notice is hereby given that It. (}. Hill, Administrator of tire estate of A. Hole Lyles,deceased. has applied to Jason M. Greer, Judge of Probate, in and for the county of Union, for a final discharge as such Administrator. It is ordered. That the 18th day of April, A. H. 1000, be fixed for hearing of Petition, and a final settlement of said estate. Jason M. Gkekr, , Probate Judge Union C unity, S. C. Published in Tim Union Timks iviarcn 10, iu o. I l-4t. Notice. Notice is hereby given that the Bonks of Registration of the Town of Union are now open nn<l qualified electors desiring registration certificates for municipal election to he held on June 5th, 19oH, can obtain same by applying to I me at the atore of Jacob < 'ohen on Main street in the town of Union The hooks of regi iration will be closed on May I Ifith, 190G, at 9-p in o'clock. n. W. Molunax, ' Supervisor of Registration of the Town 49 Uitioa. ^ ? HAIR, nsTs. S i Regulating a Specialty. % Goods Co., Union, S. C. 5 OE WALLACE, i T I S | Offices: Rooms 1 and 2 'Ml 117. Nicholson Building. wtt SOUTHERN JtAILWAY THE SOUTH'S GREATEST SYSTEM. VP ' HI* ?f 'Jnexcelled Dining Car Service. -* Sj Through Pullman Sleeping Cars I on all Through Trains?Con- 1 venlent Schedule on all j Local Trains, Winter Tourist Rates are now in effect to all Florida points. For full information as to rates^ routes, etc., Consult nearest Southern Ralhvay Ticket Agent or BROOKS MORGAN, R. W. HUNT, A. G. P. A., D. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. Charleston, S. C. Union & Glenn Springs Railroad Co. Time Table Effective Aug. 1, 1906. ^ Leave Union 7 a, in., 1.00, -1.00 and [ $8. 50 p. m. i Arrive Buffalo 7.15 a. in., 1.15, 4.15 iiiki ^*.23 p. ni. Leave Buffalo 8.15 a. m., 1.45, 5.00 and 1 $8.39 p. m. Arrive Union 8.30 a. m., 2.00, 5.15 and $8.45 p. m. Leave Union 9 00 a. in. and 5.25 p. in. Pass Neal Shoals 9.50 a. in. and 0.10 p. in. Arrive Pride 10.15 a. in. and 6.35 p. in. Leave Pride 10.35 a. in. and 0.50 p. m. Pass Neal Shoals 11 00 a. in. and 7.10 p. m. Arrive Union 11.50 a, in. and 8.00 p. ni. All trains daily unless otherwise noted. Week days only. ^Saturdays and Sundays only. Connection made at Pride with Seaboard Air Line through trains South bound in the morning and North bound in the evening. Interchangeable mileage sold by the Seaboard Air Line will be honored by , the U. & G. S..R. R. ' vM.. 11. SUMMER,* Gim Pass. Agent. F. C. DUKE, Representing the Best and Most Liberal Life, Health and Accident Insurance Companies in the world, OFFICE: Room 4, Nicholson Building. SCAIFE & HAMBLIN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. FOSTER BUILDING, UNION, S. C. J. A. BROWN, DEALER IN **^9* '' REAL ESTATE, STOCKS AND BONDS. HOUSE RENTING AND COLLECTING A SPECIALTY. OFFICE ON BACHELOR STREET. V. E. DePASS. S. C. DePASS. DePASS & DePASS, Law Offices Over Peoples Bank. l-l y , ?* ISAW MILLS. LIGHT, MEDIUM AND HEAVY WOOD-WORKINQ MACHINERY FOR EVERY KINn OF WORK H ENGINES AND BOILERS | AND SIZES AND FOR EVERY CLASS OF SERVICE, fj ASK POR OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE Hi PLACING YOUR ORDER. ilBBES MACHINERY COMPANY If COLUMBIA, S C. ^ HA^R^ALSAM ? .>1 Ftean.-a and bosiitiflta tlia hair. Uljwtv' ** P?ii l'rnmotu a luxuriant growth. V w-.J r,"vor Fr.lla to Rratoro CJray r ltnlr to l's Youthful Oolor. .?"trf'T Curn aralp <' 'Mwi h hair tailing. Change of Law Offices. Dt'Pnff & IVPnKH hnv?r movod ilx ir Iraw offic s inim-vliat. l.v ? ver Ihu Paujilv# l&ui. ii*#*