The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, June 22, 1906, Page 2, Image 2
j|Less Th
| j Closing Out <
|j? Suit of Furniture...wort
jj \ Suit of Furniture...woi
! n Fine Dresser wo
gi l Hall Hack wo
R f Fine Folding Lounge wo
|! r Cook Stove wo
j; 5 Cook Stove wo
f! !j Organs wo
l Fine Piano wo
jj jj D. Head Sewing Machini
M
;) ^ Breech Loading Shot Gui
11 Small Wares (except See^
11 half for cash.
I WONDEI
i.
am !!
1 DIFFERENCE IN T
? MATFRIAI
2$
sH
|| It is the differ
terial==the varia
f'a ty ?f drugs thai
rift difference. The
w kind of drugs i
kind that has
Ours are dru
g* strength. Theyj
a! ent. The same >
w use in compoun
& reliable, scienti:
m who know.
I ?I
The Rice
^ TIIE REO
g; s^y
$ ^ ^ VNION 11 Alt
g PHYSICIANS
(7^ Physicians are very jealc
fa ethics of the profession is rm
fa ard. Money cannot buy an (
doctor; yet hundreds of the i
this state and section are not
nof ionfc fVio nen nf flT IT KT \T C
Uiv, UOV/ V1 ULJIiilil *J
fa hut have voluntarily given ce
fa remedial effects in all disease
^ and Skin.
Glenn Springs Mineral Water
<?) OLENN SPRINGS COMPANY,
A Curiosity.
Mr. Jno. I'. Mathis has a hen
that recently layed an egg that
weighed 3-51-4 ounces, measured
<5 3-S inches around and was 3 1-4
im li' S long. He has promised to
bring this egg up to Tin: Timi:s of*1
Jl
fl
an Cost!
at Half Price. j
h $55.00 going at 527.50 ?'
;h 30.00 44 15.00 ?1
th is.50 44 9.50 | a
th 10.00 44 5.00 I f
th 15.00 44 7.50 II
th 14.00 " 7.50 II
th 40.00 44 20.00 |?
th S5.00 " 42.50 18
th. 350.00 44 175.00 ||
35.00 44 17.50 ||
45.00 44 22.50 ||
is o.o8 44 3.49 Bp
' 22.50 44 11.25 IK
i) at same rate?just one- II
* STORKJ
i&isgiigiigiigiiisiigl
1ATERIAL MAKES i
DIFFERENCE ?
. ^
ence in the ma- |g
nee in thequali- p
: makes so much j||
?re is only one ||
n our store==the ?j
no difference. p
g"s of known ?|
are never differ= j?|
.vith the skill we |?
iding. It is the
fic skill of men p
> >' \ 4 H8J
Drug Co. I
mmmsmmmmmit
IS RIGHT. ^
>?ii
IWAKK < <>. ^
C>0C>C>C>C C>C>0C-CJ??
ddS^SBSS???#)^
ENDORSE IT. g
>us of their reputation and the \h
iasured by the highest stand- q
indorsement from a reputable ^
most eminent practitioners in
, only recommending to their v
1PRINGS MINERAL WATER M
rtificates as to its efficacy and ^
is of Liver, Kidneys, Stomach ^
is Nature's Greatest Remedy. 5?
Glenn Springs, S. C.
(ice for inspection and l>y way of
proof of his statement. Call and
see this extraordinary specimen.
Removal NotlGe.
i
The Law Ofliee of DePass and HePass
has been moved to rooms Nos. I
and 2 over the People's Bank.
1
LIFE AND DEATH.
Some tine lias compared the life
of man to a 1 >ir?I that Hies from the
darkness outside into a lighted room;
there it tlits uhout for a little while
and passes ont again into darkness.
Man, like the hird comes from out.
? he knows not where, lives and
moves in light for a few short years,
then enters again into the darkness
of an unknown somewhere. Strange
figure this! We know not whence
we come nor whither we go!
Strange! and the figure must he
w rong.
I lather, should we not say that
life on earth is the dark period and
existence 1?< fore and after illumined
hy the light of eternity. We come
from where? There can he no douht
as to the answer of this; "We
come from (h?d, who is our home.
"Wordsworth speaks truly when In;
says:
"The soul that rises with us, our
our life's star,
1 lath had elsewhere its setting and
cotneth from afar;
Not in entire forgetfhlness,
And not in utter nakedness,
But trailing clouds of glory do we
coino
From Clod, who is our home."
Can wo doubt the origin of the i
soul within us; that part which is
not of the earth, that lives always,
that is a part of the great center of
all the universe, Clod himself?
Then it is not darkness from out
which we come, but light?eternal
light.
And the years of our earthly existence;
what of them? It must
be darkness then; we are unable to
see well. "Now, we see through a
glass but darkly," says a wise man
of other days. IIow pitiable the lot
of a poor human being, groping
al>out in a dimly lighted world,
stumbling over the obstacles in his
path, falling, and oh, such hard
falls! Just a- the bird strikes everything
in its (light through a dimlylighted
room, beating out its little
life against the deceiving window.
Man s es a little light, makes to it,
is checked, batlled and fall< back.
The deceptive lights of the world's
wealth, glory and fame lure him on ;
nothing meets him but disappointment
and failure. The world shuts
out the light of an infinite knowledge
and chains us down. Shakcspere
means this when he spcaksiof
the "muddy vestures of clay; M^lie
means that life is dim and even
dark because tilings material blind
the vision of tHe spiritual eye.
Men err in this life; there is never
an error in the existence l>efore
and after the earthly race has been
run. Lord Byron looked to Clod as
his home, for hear this prayer;
"To Thee I breathe my humble
strain,
Grateful for all the mercies past,
And hope, my God to thee again,
This erring life may lly at last."
Byron with all his sin and unsoundness
of philosophy, knew whence he
came and whither he wished to go;
and he looked on life as a time
when errors were so easily made,
when man was so prone to fall.
And Tennyson declared man but
"An infant crying in the night;
An infant crying for the light,
And with no language but a cry."
How true! Light is what we want,
but that we shall never have until
we stand in the eternal radiance
which emanates from the throne of
(i od.
And what is it when we go from
out the darkness of this life into the
light of another? Some call it death,
and others a valley of shadows, a
vale of tears and the like. It is
looked upon as a dire fate and a
terrible calamity with all kinds of
horrible pain and torture. 1 Jut the
exit from this life, it seems, cannot
be all of that. It is only the passing
from one room to another; it is
going upstairs. In the universe of
God there are many departments,
heaven i< only another department
of this great mansion of the Lather.
We go from the dark, diseasestricken
Basement into the larger
and more beautiful rooms above.
Why should we look on the passage
with such horror? We hear so
much about the agony of death, we
have been taught to dread it. A
ghostly reaper, he appears to us,
with a cold and sharp scythe. In
some cases, we know, pain and agony
do accompany death, but not
often. When one has come to thel
end of a well-spent life and is ready |
to lay it down, it is not only not a j
horrible time hut i
, .'liv 4> 4 4 II It IllVIIIIUlU'j
of joy and pleasure. For why do I
we hear such sweet words from dying
lips, and see such celestial light
in eyes ahout to close? The beauty i
of a death bed scene surpasses in j
sublimity any other experience on 1
earth. We see the smile of joy,
and marvel at it; for a moment,
we think that heaven - haajtesde'nd-;
ed upon us.
Some think of deatV,llimply a.j>
sleep; and why? They life tired;'
they want rest. Byron, the poet.
.1
i
?_ ?- , .
* * 1
statesman and warrior, when he
came to the end of his turbulent
life, says only this; |
"I must go to seleep now."
And Shakespere speaks of a sound
sleep after a feverish life. Sleep
means rest and quiet after toil and
trouble.
Tennyson held a beautiful idea
of death. It was only bis response
to Clod's call of "All Aboard."
With joy he goes aboard and beinns
the sweet and safe voyage over
eternal seas, lie goes back,whence
he came and sees no cause of fear,
for bis Pilot is on board.
Death is only a door through
which, after a few years of wandering
we may enter again our home.
ANOTHER STAiTaD^P j
IU mil NAIIUIN 5 ILAO. <
<
President Roosevelt Used Two Pens {
in Siijnini) the Measure Admitting (
Oklahoma and Indian Territories (
as State of Oklahoma. j
, (
Washington, J urn; H>.?Another |
star was added to the I'jiion today, ,
when President Roosevelt signed
the l>ill admitting Oklahoma and
Indian Territory as one State. The
measure also provides that Arizona ^
and Now Mexico may bo admitted
to statehood as the State of Arizona,
provided the people of the territories
vote in favor of admission on the; t
r.ns submitted to them by congress.
The signing of the meisurew;s
made the occasion of an in interesting
ceremony. Senator Beveridge
and Representative Hamilton, respectively,
the chairmen of the senate
and house committees on territories,
who have worked hard and
long to bring about the enactment
of the measure, were present; as
also were Delegate Meduire, of
Oklahoma, and a delegation of residents
of Oklahoma, Delegate Andrews
of New Mexico, Secretary
Loeb and several others.
The president used two pens in
signing the measure, writing his
lirst name "Theodore" with a solid
wild tli'll In* flu. nnnTiln r\f !
o "J Vl" V,A ^
Arizona and his family name
"Koosevelt" with an eagle quill
taken from an American eagle in
Oklahoma.?The State.
MON-AETNA HAPPENINGS.
I '
Children's Day? Baseball?Personals
The
Baptist Sunday school held
its Children's Day exercises last Sunday
night, which was quite an
enjoyable affair. The house was i
filled to its utmost. It is said to
have been the largest assembly ever
known at Mon-Aetna. The success! '
of the occasion is due to the untiring
efforts of Miss Mahala Smith,
the efficient teacher of the Monarch
graded school. Each child perform-,
ed well its part. We all feel very
grateful to her for the great kindness
she has shown us in helping to
train the children for the occasion.
Our baseball team is expecting
the Lock hart team to visit them on
next Saturday afternoon, when we;
hope to show them what our l>oys
can do in the way of returning the
kind treatment shown the Monarch
boys while at Lock hurt. 1
Mr. Kimsey Kzell, of .Jonesvillc, (
has been in our little towns for the
past few days selling stereoscopic *
views. I i
Rev. J. K. Hair was among us I J
one day last week, looking after the j
interests of the Baptist Courier. ;
Robin, j
What is the Moral? A
mouse was rummaging about B
in a man's room one line night in 6
search of a supper. Now it chanced : ^
that upon a washstand shelf there i ^
was a vessel filled with seed corn ,
that the man purposed planting.
"Aha'.'' said the mouse, "here is;
just what 1 have been looking for,
and a very nice supper it is, to he
sure!" Nimbly leaping upon the
shelf, the poor mouse attempted to j 1
climb into the di<h of corn. Splash! I
he fell backwards into a basin of j ^
water. Round and round he swam B
at a great pace, but every attempt
to climb the slippery sides of the ^
bowl resulted in failure. After g
many, many fruitless efforts to es- i g
cap*, the poor mouse surrendered j I
to the inevitible and went his way ?
to ji watery grave. ?
When We Get Home.
B V ROIIKKT T. WHISKNA XT.
When we get home
To that beautiful city beyond the
skies,
Where the angels dwell
Forever more;
Where the saints are waiting
To welcome us there.
Oh ! how our hearts will rejoice,
When we get home.
We will sing our songs of praise
In that fair land above.
We will walk with our Savior,
And trust him every hour ;
Oft ! What a blessed thing it will be
' To meet with those saints above,
And we will be with them forever
When we get home.
CMiTr
* Just received a fc
<t latest effects in i
* fiats, Chiffon I
<i Sailors, Feathers,
* Duck Hats. H?
v these goods late i
we are able to off
v customers at a gi
* from their real
p ask is that you ?
? We have any sh
V. call for.
I McLURE MERC
^ v THE UNDERSl
I LOOKOUT FOP
M
I SATURDAY, Jl
B|
At the solicitations of n
?n and customers through
& county, who could not at
??? Saturday and Monday,
| We Have Decided
| Auction
Commencing at 10 o'clock
& at 10 o'clock p. m., Sa
wlJ*
|? scores of articles that hi
& at any previous sale, will
if to the highest bidder 1
^ The many satisfied and <
f at our last sale, is the be:
i, sale was conducted on a
J the many bargains dispel
\ hundreds of dollars wortl
| mense stock is practical!]
|j will offer many good
sjf crowded out in our last s
I Do Not Confuse This Witf
We are offering some of
& our stock that will ado
land. Attend the sale an
% will be welcome whether
I BAILEY FUM
I Compare Our
% Graceful Outing
I Suits for this f
Season \
with the "crack" custom
Tailors best creations 1
and you will see that
they lack nothing in
I style, quality or fit.
Nothing has been sacrificed
in the "looks" of
our Summer Suits and |L
although made half or quarte
monontKr mfoin
!iiiciiiv~iiiiv iviani iiiCll 51 Ul
enough for all time wear anci
self in one of these snappy s
suits of your size you will b
your appearance.
$5.00 to
J Mutual Dry
jg Head to Foot (
?* ,
IjERY 1 +
>ig line of the <*
shapes, Street
flats, Braids, J*
Flowers, and ^
aving bought ?
n the season,
er them to our
reat reduction ^
value. All we
five us a look. ^
lape that you *
^ A
ANTILE CO. J
ELLERS. ^
4V
f A ? ci* ei? c4? ti? f it
tUS AGAIN |
UNt 23rd. j
nany of our friends gj
out the town and
tend our sale on last ^
to Continue Our j
Sale. ?
ft
; a. m. and closing ?|s*
turday, June 23rd, (jT
ive not been offered
be put up and so 'ft
without reservation. &
lelighted purchasers ST
st evidence that our ^
l high plane, and of 3^
sed. While we sold
h of goods, our im- ?
V unbroken, and we Jg'
things, that were S
ale. jsr
i an "Old hoss" Sale J
the finest goods in |g~
rn any home in the
d be convinced. You %
you buy or not. Sal
IITURE GO. |
m they will per- ga
pe. They are smart 86
I when vou see your.ingle
or double breasted g|
e greany pieasea with OB
$20.00
Goods Co.,1
)utfitters. ||