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p 0 ...THE... 1 UNDERLYING | PRINCIPLE I OP GOOD DRESS IS | GOOD TASTE. v Good taste isexempliM lied in our splendid asp sortments of clothes for [l the Spring and Slimmer [1 seasons, and added fj thereto are the important | essentials of expert tailis oring and reliable fabrics. 1 Conspicuous in our varied lines are the Spero, Michael & Son Clothes. ij I They conibino j^nod taste, i materials, excellent wort J prices. Afford us an oppoi I J. CO! Outfitters to Pai ?S8SMS8Bf?B9S98B9S2 | Warm Makes Con jjg Feet go t< | Acme C< H Makes Cor fppnt * GUAHANTH pjj No Cure, ||) 25 Cents rsa STv"w *&& ffi?P kCT -9S? i eslSai' 2Lta &k??>& ss^sstei- isi ? Will B?; Made Coluortnr. The Baptist Convention of I'nion County will likely employ Mr. J. I\ Coleman as a colporteur. Mr. Coleman is well known in I'nion County, having resided in the county for a number of years. He is a good man and a sincere, <xtrnest and e msecrated worker. The Manning Timet?'has the fol1 wing to say of ^fr. Coleman: "We letprn that Mr. .1. I'. Coleman, y.olport' ttr yf the Manning Jiapirist ehureh, has tendered his resignation and he expects to move / away shortly. Mr. Coleman has 1 neii engaged in a good work here, / that he has done good there can he / ' t o douht, and his godly walk in ! . - / life has attracted the attention and won the admiration and reverence of very many outside of his own denomination, It i- u ith sincere regret that we l?-arn of tin determination of this good man to give up the work he has so faithfully per- j formed, ami with still more regret , that we are ahuut to lose him from j our eiti/.enship. Men like ,J. |\ I Coleman are as rare in these parts j as are the prieeless gems that adorn I the coronet of kings, and a community tliat is possessed of si msin of his piety, his unostentatious religious faith, an?l untiring efforts to earry sunsh nc when* there is ^1 ami, gliidness where is sorrow, comfort where is pain, can ill afford to lose hitn, and tho community that eontains such nn ono has n man who is of more avail and who leads more Bonis aright than 100 silver-tongued orators that furnish a lip-service' fr<?ni the pulpit. The determineti< n of .Mr. Coleman to leave Manning iB a dccid- d l<"-s, which inn.-t be appreciated hy every man and Woimtu, wild it is our smcvTo In-pi IK $ ' J C' ^ p ? /r^J |Jp | / f ->? : /' 8 / 1 !#rV 1 / > W / ! Ilf I / w l />fifr'T2''' - V* i<^r' l>.,j\, ' * h late styles, dependable cmanship and moderate rlunity of showing you. HEN, rticular People. j< Weather! i ns on the o Hurting. If )rn Cure I ns on the || 1 :iil> CURE, i n m No Pay. P Per Bottle. |i Drug Co.! tin* change may he directed l?y lliin whose purpose it is to use this faithful sle phcrd to care for and lead His Mocks in other fields.'' It has heen decided hy the Cnited Spates Supreme Court that the four llawlings, father and time sons, c divided hy tin* lower court of a heinous murder in Georgia, must r< c ive the sentence of the lower court ?three of them are tohangandoi e I is given ft life sentence. r// ' / V'^"'" Ts>?Vl r / . y *! ? i. . j^o Limit! ?{t) W ^p^g Yon too would ha .o to build \?j w U> Vf. .^.'-:r biiriiH >1 >ou would fly ?. 11v- liKU ii lo rcuMtntiiid "in- JkJ jW < nvso > ; nr jivuis j??.r acre" Bj by < nricli i k J our toil nr d feeding V*jf Jfjj your plums unu thai uoi.oci-MoiKov.fli I Virguiia=Carolina Fertilizer. A K It has l ecn tho tremendous 8uccoroH W of muiiy tumors ail o\?r iho bouih.B B who started liiowiih only a few acres a B uudnoup Iiorto flow. Now,alter usinu V Ju tlnso loriiiizor3 for ninny years, these E 83 fiinncianro rub. Ill ad what they tiny in ? n our aiiuau.ic. / sk your dialer lor it,or 21 sendee. in s>nnip8 to ) ay costol wmpB pinrc and poetnyo in a copy. Jio turo | P and a U lor V iiylnia-i uroliua lwrtiliI zcrs, aud accept uo subsiltuto. f Vlr^lnU-Caroltiia Cheiirlcal Co., ? Richmond, Va. Atlanta, On. L Norton:, % n- Pnviuiniib. On. fa Uuri am, N. 0. Montgomery. Ala. I I harlcstou,!'. 0. Memphis, 'irnn. H lial.imoro, >ld. PbroVoport, Lu 1 R IncrftaaeYiar R FOR HUSBAM5 TO READ. 1 t The Sacredness of the Marriage Rcla- < tion?Duties of Husbands to LoVe Their Ulvcs. JAS. II. CAKLI3LK, LL., l>. Kphesians, v. 33: "Lot the wife 1 see that she reverence her husband." The Ib visecl Version has "fear her husband." In the Expositor's hi11** CI (1 Pinillntr linu CAlYlifc Uk\ y \J \ V V* 1 IIIMIUJ IIIIU ?v? ?X- | comments on this verse, that are | well worth reading. "The Apostle alludes to submission as the wife's duty, for she might possibly be tempted to think this superseded by the liberty of the , children of Clod. Love, he need not enjoin upon her; but he writes. "Husbands, love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church, and j gave up Himself for her. "The danger of selfishness lies on the masculine side. The man's nature is more exacting; and thesclfforgetfulness and the solicitousafTec- ' tion of the woman may blind him to his own want of the truest love. Full of business, and with a hundred cares and attractions lying outside of the domestic circle, he too readily f nans habits of s?*lf-alworption, and learns to make his wife* and home a convenience,from which he takes as his right the comfort they have to give, * imparting little of devotion and confidence in return. This lack of love denies the higher rights of marriage; it makes the wife's submission a joyless constraint. Along with this selfishness and the uneasy conscience attending it, there supervenes sometimes an irritability of temper, that chafes over domestic troubles, and makes a grievance of the most trilling mishap or inadvertence, ignoring the nntirnt. jifTrction and nnxictv " ??' - r"%* ? - , v to please. Too often, in this way, husbands grow insensibly into family tyrants, forgetting the days of youth, and the kindness of their espousals. "There are men/' says Bengcl (on this point unusually caustic), "who, out of doors, are civil and kind to all; when at home, toward their wives and children, whom they have no need to fear, they freely practice secret bitterness." The Apostle wrote his words of instruction to husbands and wives, in a Roman prison, more than eighteen hundred years ago. Bengel lived in Germany, two centuries ago. Dr. Findlay lives in England today. The dangers ..jnhich PjvuI A vvucwttct? ?r"Ties. Many a happy, appreciated wife may read the caustic words of the German preacher, and say, "My experience does not prepare me to believe this. Toe man whom 1 am expected to reverence and fear does nothing like that." Here and there a busy husband may happen to see the passage, and he will frankly and boldly feel like saving. "I do remember mv faults this day. 1 haw. too often,in my haste, spoken words that must have wounded her who would die for me. I will do so no more." Still, all husbands, even, the ten derest and most considerate, may read with prolit othov'weighty words of the Comnieirtator. He will lind ki them if standard to whieli he has not-yet fully reached. "Love your wives, even as the Christ loved the Church." What a glory this confers upon the bus* hand's part in marriage! His devotion pictures, as no other love can, the devotion of Christ to llis redeemed people. His love must therefore he a spiritual passion, the love of soul to soul, that partakes of Cod and of eternity. Of the three Creek words for love ?eros, familiar in Creek poetry and mythology, de- ( noting the tlamc of sensual passion, is not named in the New Testament; ( phila. the love of friendship, toler- | ably frequent, in its verb at least; I hut agape absorbs the forn e , ai d t anseends both. This exquisite word denotes love in its spiritual | puii'y and depth, the love of God and of Christ, and of souls to each other in Cod. This is the specific Christian affection. It is the attribute of Cod, who "loved the world, and gave His son, the "onlybegotten"?of "the Christ," who "loved tin; Church, and gave up Himself for her." Self-devotion, not self-satisfaction, is its note, * * * From verse 20 we gatlu r ti.nt ?i... i?? " v a Mil/ V, ill I/a!/ in UIO IlllMinim S lllOClt'l, not only in the rule of self-devotion, l>nt in tin? end, toward which that devotion is directed; "That lie might sanctify the church?that He might present her to Himself; a 1 glorious Church, without spot or wrinkle that she might he holy, and without blemish." The pt ifection of the wife's character will . ho to the religious husband 0110 i f 1 the dearest objects in life, lie will 1 define bir her that which is highest ' and best, as for himself. lie is put ' in charge of a sold more precious to ( him than any other, over which he ' has an influence incomparably great. ' T! is cue he cannot d< legate to any J priest or father confessor. * * * i ehirtiti?.tt husbands should tak*^( , t norc account of their offices than hey do; they should not ho strnng rs to the spiritual trials and experiences of the heart so near to them. It might lead them to walk mo-o worthily, and to seek higher religious attainments, if they considered that the shepherding of at least one soul devolves upon themselves, that they are unworthy of the name of husband without such care for the welfare of the soul linked to their own, as Christ hears toward His hridc, "the Church." WofTord College.?Southern Christian Advocate. Mon-Aetna Happenings. There were services at churches here Sunday and both were well attended. Our Sunday schools are also in a flourishing condition. The Baptist Sunday school appointed six delegates to represent them at the convention to he held with the second church of Union next Saturday and Sunday. Brother J. P. Coleman isstillwith us. The pastors of the county liopv to secure work for him as col porter in Union county, lie promises t< work for one dollar a day. Thai only means a little more than a dol lar every month from each Sundnj school in the county. Too mucl cannot he said of this Godly man lie is certainly a power behind tin throne. He never leaves a mai without giving him something t< think about. | Brethren let us come up to tin convention with our minds lixed 01 employing him to work among us We need him. lie has done, th people of Manning good, and wear sure he will do us good. Mij*s Rosa Woods is still very siel at their home near the Aetna Mills The new Methodist church build ing is hearing completion now, am presents a very handsome appear nnce. Pastor Wiggins speaks r holding a meeting in it shortly. The members of the Baptb church arc making an effort to bu, - >tui n, i ill |m:tiu& vu\;ii '/ Indies missionary society is raisin money to buy chairs for tlit* pulpil We have a number of never-tirin workers in both churches. Mrs. Dr. Jackson is quite sick i present. Rev. J. T. Going is spending a few days this week at Mt. Joy.. Rodin. Making New States. ready considered the latest stati hood propositions for four years not unprecedented. The first hi to make Colorodo a state was into duced in 1861. When Congrci passed the second or third bill, i 1868, President Johnson vetoed il and Colorado' was not (inally at mitted till/1876. MissopVi came into the Unio after a* shorter campaign; but th Ilous/ passed two bills, neither ? whUm the Senate approved, an tlyf, act as it was finally passed ywliich admitted both Missouri an \Inir/? *1 ^ A'aivi.. v | vA/iiuumu 111 v.? JaillOll compromise which divided slav ten itory on the south side froi free territory on the north of a imaginary line. | '1 he liglit over Kansas Instei from the organization of the terri tory in 18/3-1 till its admission ii 1801. Agitation over Dakota he gan early in the seventies, and ii 1870 one branch of Congress passe* a hill dividing the territory. Ii succeeding Congresses other hill were introduced, providing for th admission of the whole or part o the territory as a state, hut fo years nothing was done. Politics considerations in Congress and th absence of agreement on the part o the people of Dakota' combined t< prevent action. In I8b'7, however the division plan was adopted by s majority vote of the people, ant two years later Congress admittet the two states carved out of tin territory. How far the national idea luu developed since the Missouri com promise, when influential statesmer l,,..;.!..,! 41^ /< .1 < aioiotuu tllill V/Ullgfl'SS I UIU 110 powoi to fix conditions for the admission of states, is shown by the fact thai no one has questioned the right ol Congress to provide that no liquoi shall be sold in that part of tlx proposed state of Oklahoma known as the Indian Territory, and by tin further fact that when I tab waff admitted it was required, no one objecting, that the state constitution must prohibit polygamy.?Youth's Companion. April 15 the u.> c no Court of the United States decided that it had no jurisdiction in the case of It. N. dearie versus the State of Georgia involving the validity of thoGeorgia 3tnte law prohibiting Sunday freight-trains. In 191M Senrlo was jonvicted of violation of the Sunday laws against freight trains, lleap[>ealed to tl e Snpieme Court of the United S111? b. I'l.e cfTect is to leave n force the finding of t..e luwi r squrL iron TH (i ft We arc offering sp< 5 Ladies and Children ^ White, Tan and Blacl W^e want you to insp( ? and Wash Dress Goc ft from 5c to 40c per ya ft Eolienes, in white, bl< 5 season. We have tf 5 Just received a new I . . I* _ f 4 A _ p price o anu iuc. p Our Millinery Dep ^ lead. For this week ^ specially low prices or ^ in all the widths. : \ McLURE ME! > t the uni 1 *" ? j Did It Ever o ' That you can j u profit by buyin Manufacturer? > Manufacturer town you can : y per cent, addec e tg Do you I K Furniture Com Goods? There BR5LDY PI is I H 11 8" ; jjjj Why Not fc | Oet the Best' 0 fig There is a standard i ?f ^ Clothing as well as i <1 " 53 everything else. Fabric ii H Style and Tailorin is ii are on'v factor S? worthy of consideratio n ? in ready-to-wear clothes n Si ^rt Clothing em , gl bodies these qualities i J. fig a marked degree. !! 89 We are prepared to 1 H Clothing in all the new ii gg and Undressed Worste I m Breasted. v f H Stetson's Newest S \ || just received. | |j Mutual Dr\ j || House of ( i fc>-?I? M : | -- SOUTI 1 ! THE LAND OP BIG CK f ! v J"* i (in 111 11V II (111 you arc making all you can. '1 much. It takes too much mono; arc trying to make a living on :i renting one and paying a good I Wouldn't it he better to go whei that you can own a big farm?v \ working for you and all you rais There are thousands of acre a'ong the line of the Cotton belt to $10 an acre. The laud is in See the Southw< A trip to the Southwest woi ' I interests lay in settling there. 'J I expense. On the first, nnd third , 1 purchase a round trip ticket to a the Cotton belt Konto at very lo | for you to examine any locality i scribing this vvonde ??3wl 'i?n about cost of li L. P. SMITH, T 203 Equil 1 Umirntmrn in ?<n* i it ,> rtin K WFFK J 1 3 bWW ^ _ scial inducements on ? ^ 1 's Low Cut Shoes in 5 V <. with hose to match, a jl set our line of Woolen ^ jnM )ds. Colored Organdies I ird. Batistes, Mohairs, J# I ick and colors, for this ^ J lem at correct prices. J II ot of Turnover collars, 5 ij artment is still in the I we are making some ^ j 1 all our Taffeta Ribbons || RCANTILE GO. "5^3 ? 1 JERSELLERS. ? ..J 1 " V" ~ =jj f)Aniiv 4a Vaii I Ubblll IU IUU i save the Dealer's ig direct from the 1 That when the is in your own save the 10 to 25 I for freight. 1 enow the Bailey ipany make their ;'s a Moral. JRN1TURE CO. 13 furnish you with High Art gl ? shades of Grey, Blue Serges gB ' ds in Single and Double- gg hapes in Soft and Stiff Hats f Goods Co.,j| jood Clothes. ^ iWEST -- | C. {OPS AND PROSPERITY. your fjirm as you ought? No doubt 'he trouble is the laud costs too y to buy a big farm, and so you i small farm, or perhaps you are , j share of what you raise, in rent, re the price of good land is so little irliero every acre of the ground is i! is paying for your good profits? s of fertile land in the Southwest j , Route that can be bought for from j creasing in value each year. ;st at Small Cost. ild convince you that your best Tiie trip can be made at very little Tuesdays of each month you can ny point in the Southwest on or via i j w rates. Stop-overs will be allowed poti are interested in ec for free copies of books derful country and for full informa- < * ickets, etc. j j . P. A., tollon Ce'l Route, V able Building, Atlanta, Ga. * ^ . ..., I :