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g*?3BaSHHS?afiSBSS s Reducing | IN TIA S SICKI m isij PN on eg) ' Sickness in the borne ji5$ also. By placing yo ?g| scription in our care ... eliinmate all worry a^ ^ the medicine is right HI guarantee the quality @ every detail of all med b' I The Rice ES^B^8S898I^B^?S?S?^ ? Tin: rko i 2k ^ 1 UNION HAJRI &>. 0". & . &>. *?'. { M* *^VVVVVlif^VVV1 | GLENN SPRINGS t ?% The use of this water is j&T sife and pleasant remedy. It JJ Complaint, Ghronic Heptatits & and General Debility followin] /W! arrhoea, Dropsy, Dysentery, M nal and Cystic Diseases, Hoei ^ tamenial Derangement, and Highly recommended by the ft GLENN SPRINGS COMPANY, I ATLANTA SCHOOL OP MEDICINE, Largest medical college in this sect tion of high grade. Clinical advan h facilities for practical laboratory ? and dissecting Equipment new ai 2 eated physicians experienced in pr< required for graduation. Largest Baltimore and New Orleans will he 2 catalogue M. Beats The Music Cure. * To keep the body in tune." writes Mr- Marv Brown, L'O Lafayette Place, P MU'hkeepsie, X. V. "I take I ?r. King's New Life Pills. They are the >n st reliable and pleasant laxative I have found." Best for the Stomach, 1 I l'.?r Uiwl UAn>(.1u i L.. ..11 ?? ?wTTtin. \ Miaiauiccvi uy mi druggists, 25c. Opening Books oi Subscription. 8 a c of South Carolina, County of Union. Pursuant to a commission issued to ihe undersigned corporators I?y Jesse T. <?antt, Secretary of State, dated June 25, MKK5, notice is hereby given th.it books of subscription to the capital stock of the Carolina-Virginia HopA '? Company, will be opened at the oliii-e ??f 1 lames Grocery Company, in the town of Union, in the County and State aforesaid, on Saturday, July 7. lft R, at 12 o'clock M. The proposed orporatiou will have a capital stock of Twenty-flvj thousand dollars, divid d into sliares of the par value of one hundred dollars each, with its princi]>al office at Union, South Carolina, and will be empowered to engage in ; carltonating soft <1 rinks in bottles, manufacturing svrtip. etc. L.J. Hoiks, W. J. >AKIIA IT, Corporators. Union, 8. C., July 2, lUud. I I "JRl MESS 1 m 1 "? f I brings worry there ^ ur physician's pre- ; you can at least g| ; to whether or not r . We unqualifiedly ^ and correctness in nm lieine we compound. ma w a a Drug Co. i wii'aopffljRflnRapaagBaJiDiaBB . i [H HIGIIT. & OWARE CO. | C*C*C*C*C*C *CC*C*C*C'i!^ IINERAL WATER, t w a sure relief to sufferers?a ; will cure Dyspepsia, Liver 3J , Jaundice, Torpor of Liver, jjr ? upon Malarial Diseases, Di- IP Hemorrhoids, Uterine, Re- ujf metaturia, Rheumatism, Caother female complaints. ledical Profession. SJ I Glenn Springs, S. C. x l>CC> - - > -C>C <5 5# | Box 257, ATLANTA, OA. "j ion of South. Dignified institu- | line's most excellent. Unusual J work in pathology, bacteriology n id complete. Faculty of 35 win fessional teaching. Four courses J Medical ('ollege bui Iding bet ween linished l>y Sept. 1">. Write for ( a Halt' The World Wonders. I low the other half lives Those who , use I'.uekleu's Arnica Salve never won der if it will cure Cuts, Wounds, Burns, Sores an I all Sk in eruptions; they know it will. Mrs Grant Shy, 1F50 K. Hey- j nolds St Springfield, 111., savs: ''Ire-! g ml it one of the absolute necessities of housekeeping." Guaranteed by all druggists, Citation to Kindred and Creditors, j State of Soutb Carolina, ) County of Union. f By Jason M. Greer, Ks<j., Probate Judge. Whereas, D. B. Free, Jr., has made suit to me to grant him Getters of Administration on the estate of andef- ] fects of Kalph Means, deceased. These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and ereditorsof the said Ralph Means, rloiUlll Cj /l< 1 I.*.? I ~ ..v<a mm, mcy uc ana appear, before me, in the Court of Probate, to b?* held at Union C. H.t South Carolina, on tbe 12th day of July, next, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, i if any they have, why the said Admin- i istration should not be granted. (>iven under my hand and, eeal this 27th day of July, Anno u Domini, Jason M. Crekr, Probate Ju/tjgp. j Published on the 29th day of Jury, liMi, in Tun Union Times. 26-2t 4- L WHEN THE PATRIOTS WAVEREI D* John Witherspoon's Stirr jyWords. Which Brought the C ** tinental Congress to The Point Decision on the Eventful fourth July. 1776. On tin* morning of the Fo.urth July, 177??, the members of the CV tinental Congress, in session at I'l adelphia, were deliberating on proposed Declaration of Indepei enee. Thomas Jefferson. John 1 ants, !'> njunin Franklin, lh> Sherman and Hubert K. Livingst< composing the committee appoin for the purpose, had reported s era I days before the doeuinent t is now familiar to every Aincru schoolboy, I>111 action had Im n laved, and on this event ful inorni when the Congress began its li consideration, the vital charaetei the Declaration was recognized w th" growing hesitancy of an av responsibility. The patriots now saw that tl were at the edge of an action which all chance of retreat wo be cut off; that they wore prep ing to expose themselves, their fa ilies, and their estates to harsh prisals if their revolution fail At this crisis of painful silenc patriot arose?a man not very in years, hut showing signs of proaehing age in his frosted loc In vehement tones he said: \ There is a tide in the affairs man, a nick of time. We p ceive it now before us. Tl ! noble instrument upon your tal j which insures immortality to I author, should be subscribed t very morning, by every per the house. He who will not spond to its accents, and str every nerve to carry into eff 1 its provisions, is unworthy 1 name of a freeman. Althoi these gray hairs must soon scend into the sepulchre, I wo infinitely rather they would scend thither by the hand of 1 public executioner, than des at this crisis the sacred cause my country. The speaker ceased. Confide and determination returned to t iissi'inhlv mill fiirllivvilli flin linn' ation of Independence was adopt It was signed that day by J? Hancock, President of thet'ongn On August 2nd, the engrossed < < was signed by the fifty-three nu I>ers then present, and subsequer ! three others affixed their namerf. i The man whose words broil ! the Continental Congress to act I was John Witherspoon, of New J sey, the President of Princeton C lege. He was bom in Giffo Haddingtonshire, Scotland, Feb ary 5, 1722, and died near Prir ton, N. J., September 15, 1704. graduate of Edinburgh Universi he became a prominent Calvanii iwistor, essayist, and educator, declined the presidency of Prin ton in 17<>(>, but accepted a sec( invitation, and was inaugurated 17<>8. Dr. Witherspoon was a most j voted patriot. Throughout the V of Independence his energies w I given freely to the service of Colonies.?The Scrap Book. A Pounding. The members of the Second R tist Church on last Saturday nig very heavily and yet very pleasan |H?undcd their pastor, Rev. 1). Richardson. Tliey all gathered his hopie, bringing with them mc necessaries and even luxuries life; such as flour, meats, la sugar, hams and meal. Mr. Richardson was much s prised and affected by this show love and esteem. However, was equal to the occasion and gi a pleasant evening to his mem! and friends. All enjoyed giv and were fully repaid by the ivc tion tendered them by their past Major Earle and the Wrecks. Major Jim. 11..Earle, of the n road commission, was on the sou hound train, delayed here o Monday night. When seen Tu day morning he appeared tired <1 much worn out from his nig! discomforts. "Why don't you do someth for this road?" queried a hy-stni or. "We are improving itnsfast possible," was the reply. "We laying seventy-live pound rails fr Columhia now, and it won't I>< |< In-fore the entire road will he good as the host. These si: pound rails won't hold your trai but the other will alright." Major Earle went on to tell the improvements, how the Ik would be ballasted through 1 isin-glass country Ik Iow here, a alx>ut the heavy rails and ti These improvements will not made a day too soon, for I ni has long suffered from the |K>or ; eomodations of the Southern rt way. ) POINTLESS PENNINUS. IlKJ TIMK?HKAl'TIFIKK, IIKALKIt, COH011 RK? TOU, TEST. 0^ So often we hear the expression: Of "Time will tell." When we stop and think we find that time will do many tilings, work many changes, ! uf and erase many remunihranees from m_ the mind of man. Myron knew ,jj_ well the power of time when he said: j|1(, "Time! the heantilier of the dead, j,j. Adorner of the ruin, comforter i.i And onlv healer when the heart glM". hat h bled? ,n Time! the corrector where our t,.,j judgments err, rV_ The test of truth, love, sole phihat lost ?pher.' ..m It is all this and may he more, de- Shakespeare once said that the Ug evil that men do lives after them, n..j and the good is oft interred with . ((|- their bones. As a rule, the reverse ,jj|, of this is true. When one dies, V(,,j and has been laid to rest, what arej i the thoughts about him? "He was h,.v ' a good soul," says one. "I was in l,'v j trouble and he helped me out," nld says another. "The man loved his fellowman," adds still another. im_ And the thoughts <lo not turn to ri,_ the sin and wickedness of his life; e(j all that is forgot, and as the years ;e lapse, more beautiful still grows the | 0jd memory of our dead. Year after ap- year the goodness of their lives i seems to inerense. and love for the dead grows every day. The dear .'mother in life, seems in the years after death to assume angelic shape; |pr~ I the father becomes like a god. i . Time renders beautiful our dead. ; .?' And over the wreek and ruin of J|. life it casts a light that sweetens | . those inemories and renders them 1 in beautiful. The toilsome days and r.e~ years of school life are pleasant to ai1? the mind after the lapse of a few SP ' years, however dark and trouble-! P some they were in passing. The j *|> old soldier recalls with a relish the | bitter days in camp, on the march 4 and in battle. Why? Time has 4p" adorned them with a bcaufy they ? never |H)Sscsscd. erl As a healer of human ills and woes, time has not an equal. The 1 sorrow that all but breaks the heart ncc today may he healed by this great i physician. The pains that seem, 'ar" unbearable are subject to his power. e(*.! Those bitter jealousies and bates, ",n that disease mind, heart and subse- i L'88< quently body, are wijjed out hy the Py passage of time. Wounds of mind i,n" and body are healed by time. Pain dly is relieved, sorrows wiped away, and tears are dried in time. B^t Man, in his rashness, forms judg- f 1,,n ments, and often acts upon this false idea immediately. Hut let him wait even a little while and he r(l. is more likely to have nearer a corru" reet idea, and in consequence his l('e" act will l>e nearer just. Why do - men 111 seuimg great quesnons, dy, take time for thought and deliberate tion? In order that they may adHe just matters in their minds, may ec- make possible a correct solution or >nd settlement. How often does man L in 'err, and time must at last set right his actions! There are many of us, de- who for years have nursed sortie! far grudge, until time showed us the ere error. Time is the surest arbiter the; man's affairs. As a test of truth there is none like it. All other tests have de' fects and must break down some- i t'mes, but time will prove anything. "You can fool some of thei nP" I people all the time; you can fool all the j>eople some of the time, hut you cannot fool all the people all the time," once said a Kentucky1 sage; and he was right. Facts iny may be misrepresented for a while, truth may be perverted, but time will clear IIWIIV the. iihstrnetirmu and truth will rise alx>ve all error. I ur* What is one of the great arguments for the tr ?th of Christianity today? 'lt> The answer is readily seen. Hi !,V(' eause the truths that existed in the )('rs Christian doctrine nearly two thousand years ago, still exist. "ICvery P" generation has sat as a jury upon ,,r- the evidences of Christianity and found them true," says the great jurist I'helps. Time will prove the truth or error of any idea, belief or teaching. ' Time will prove the sincerity or I th-; insincerity of love. A love that ver (.an stand the tost of years is indeed |('s" true, for insincerity cannot hold up in<l tin? mask for long. How beautiful 't s it is to see a love that goes on and on, growing in strength and sweet-; h?g ness as tin? years go hy! If the "> judgment of man or woman err in j matters of love, time will correct, it; i"'(' if the judgment he correct, time! "m will but strengthen love, thereby ">g proving it. i,s Time is often cruel and seemingly <ty | unjust. In testing, so many sorns, i rows, <lisap|H?intinents and inexpli- . i cable circumstances attend it; muchj must be Ixjrnc to prove love. But ,('s I a love that cannot stand the crucial Ihe ; test is not fit to be called love. He-. nd ward is so much greater when the tost is strict, hence the sweetness of 1*1 it all, when, after years of testing, on Jove reaps its reward; and if we bene lieve in the justice of life, we must dl- believe that true love will be rewarded. \CLEAN UF ? ' * We can now offer you spec fJ Summer Goods. We have ft in White Lawns, Piques (? Wash Goods and other < & determined to close out if $1 inducements. We ventur p have the largest line of Mi and as it is against our & stuff, we have put the kni ? % Ladies' 50c Collars Ri ? All Low Cut Shoes a | McLURE MERCi tl ? The Undersi 1 ..OUR IMPORTED MATT j JUST j| China's Durable i ft Japan's Beautiful ft here shown in a g 2 of patterns and co 2 better yet: This \ j 20 Per Cent ( I Price: 1! We furnish best g f Paper and \t I ..GO-CA i" | Any pattern or s V, fancy, we can 1 | Quality, Style, Elega If That's the Bai {bailey furn I DID YOl EV WHAT A DIFFERENCE I Some people say that F1 Pepper is Pepper. We want things sold under the name < and all the things sold unde are not Pepper. We guarantee to sell you articles as cheap as anybody i thing that they claim to be further more we guarantee pound of Pepper is absolutely any test to which you subjeci of Flour that we sell you is 2 Flour, unadulterated and none Give us your orders for will give you good stuff at the IT I union Uroc > SALE!j? 1 :ial inducements on i a lot of Remnants j# H ?, Madras, Colored H goods that we are j# V prices will be any ? e to say that we Ilinery in the city, rule to carry over ? fe in it. ?# * ithicsd to 2k. } it Cut Prices. ? WILE CO., \ ellers. % i. -kt tk *i? *|? rk fk r 4T I LINE OF.. I INC I in -r :i 1 1 5tand=by and || Novelties are j| Teat profusion j| lorings. And || veek we give Iff Regular if S. '| ~ rade of Carpet II ly it too. RTS.. | tyle you may < ii give you. JI nee, Then Price, ;| ley Motto. l IITURE CO.! * & ?i ER THINK IT MIGHT MAKE? our is Flour and thai to tell you that all the Flour is not Flour, A r the name of Pepper i either of the above else will sell you anythe same grade; and absolutely that every , 4iiivi will II1CCI t it, and every barrel i Pure Winter Wheat ? better to be had. these articles and we , ? best prices. i ;ery Co. k3