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The turnpike ro* to peoples' heari I find, Lies through th< mouths, or I m take mankind.? Pclcr Piix fiT AJf trad JKBW Com JbJ of qui M+W baked MpJm packed ; M&jM please in This t warranted-?you a perfect oi bakery ' v* or u? oest Cinuum 6<ntr enl (RDM A NEGRO'S STANDPOINT." * a i A Carlisle Negro Writes of The Ne* '' gro Question. Carlisle, S. ('.?Editor I'mon Timks; I read the article in "The (| 1*111011 Times" reprinted from the Atlanta Georgian, and note that f, you say it is the key-note to the v whole situation. Now, 1 beg to say s to the editor of the Georgian, that t| while 1 am 110 editor, preacher or ^ teacher, I am a colored man and \ will speak in defence of my people. e He says tin- reign of terror must end. Every good colored citizen j says the same tiling: all our teach- t, ers, preachers and editors join the \ Georgian in condemning the negro' \ brutes. , Mr. Editor, I am one of the old- , est subscribers to Thk Timks; I , took it just after the war and have ^ been reading it ever since. As to ( the colored people hating the white j c people, it is a mistaken idea espec- j iallv regarding the old time slavery i t 01 ?ri i^viiuiwarin.April c Sartor, of this place, the captaTrrrn^ , his company, and Mr. James Doug- J \ lass, of lTnion, was 1st lieutenant, f We left home April 12th, lSfil for, Charleston, to help run Major An-; v derson out of Fort Sumter. And < those colored people that we left at ; home were faithful and loyal to their , masters and mistresses all through i ] the war, protecting them and serv- r ing them always: and those in the ( war were faithful to their masters. ] 1 was in the war with my young % master and did all I could for him,', both in camp and on the battle x Held. We are not the negroes that [ hate the white people, nor whom i j the white people hate. i Those brutes that the Georgian I ..ill ?'iii 11 i wouiu nave nrii and damnation ( preached to, never go to church and i the preachers can't preach to them. \ While the preacher is in his pulpit , these negrots are lying around in \ the woods gambling and drinking,! j or loafing around some depot. Our' preachers do condemn those brutes, : j who rape a white woman, and would put a stop to it, hut they do not ? get a chance to preach to nor u-in'fey ;v,? >, u>diurch. i lying around the town an<J'^sJm> when they ought to be at work. i, W'j heartily condemn the rapist j to u?t aw. swift justice ought of court. We Vi5TTfTrrrrne^ALterme\ lynchers for any and everything ex cept rape and when this is the! crime, the mob should Ixj careful not to lynch the wrong man. If ihe (ieorgian wants this crime stoppel, I think if the town councils would put ;i stop to all this loafing; arrest negroes that are always lying around town, it would be a step in th<* right direction. Let tlie aut;> itiea make it too hot for them to loaf; loafing leads from had to worse. Let them make those negroes go to the country and work? work will improve the negro race. TYNERS DYSPEPSIA REMEDY" . < Many Have Dyspepsia and Don't]Know It |1 I>o you belch up wind? Taste your 1 food after eating? Sec specks before < your eyes? Arc you pale and hag- i gard? Hoes your heart flutter? Are you diz/.v? I>o you liave pains in side four back" Risings or pimples on the j akin. A re you low spirited? la there , a sour taste? bad breath? Headache? Weak kidneys? bilious? Constipated? Are you nervous? If ho. you have! dyspepsia, and it is a dangerous condition. To cure, take Tyner's Dyspep- I sia Remedy. It is made for just such iroilities and symptoms. Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy removes acids from the stomach, stregthens weak atom- i achs, and cures the worst Dyajnspda or 1 Indigestion. Druggists or by express ' 1 ii(> eiits a bottle. Money refunded if ' ^ it fails to ^oyfc Rice Drug Co. W* KJ * * - .1 \nd the turnpike guide post is tne e mark of the National Biscuit pany. It points the way to the food lity?biscuit and crackers so perfectl and properly protected; so clear ind freshly kept, that they never fa: their mission to the appetite and hes ade mark always appears in red anc on each end of a dust and moisti keeps the contents in their original ?cuit Company products are thus disti re thus protected and guided, in bu products. TIONAL BISCUIT rnMD. ,i It serins tluit the (ieorgian editor Ivocatcs lynching l?>th good and id negroes; hut I think that the Id time slavery darkv niakeas good citizen as any race, according to, h chances. They love their masters nd mistresses, who, in turn love ; ie old negro; and hotli parties are ways glad t<> meet. Then if good cling exists between these older ti/.<ms of both races, what is re-1 loiisible for the ill feeling and all lis disturbance? 1 know it is not ie old darky, nor the old master, t then, must he the younger genration that knew no slavery. Now, Mr. Kditorof the (leorgian, think you are perfectly right in ailing upon the preachers and edtors to condemn those negro >rutes; hut, I also think you might lo a great deal of good in another lireetion and that is to preach race >urity?preach race purity until ou are heard from the sealjoard to he mountains. God grant'thatthe ay is not far distant when race lurity will be preached and praciced by the white j>cople all over ur land. Our negro women will ICtlOl'nWrerllCTri rr*ln il ciil,, n-wMM. believe the rapist is generally mind among mulatto negroes. Go to our public schools and you rill find 25 per cent of the children here, almost white; you will find 5 per cent yellow negroes; 50 per out ginger cake color; and only 0 per cent pure blacks. It was lot so when the Civil war was losed; then, you would have found 5 per cent yellow; 20 percent giner cake; and 05 per cent genuine icgroes. Great God! when* are re going if these conditions coninue up to the year 2000. Now, dr. Editor, preach race purity, and f you do the negro and white races ?oth will 1h3 better off, and the ountry improved, and this race latred will done away. Theyel?... i--;~ ?- *?... IMA lir^lU Ill" 15* 4l> gum I II?* 1111' rhite man: the white man doesn't hink so, and the ill feeling results rom this. Much is hoing said about immigrants, the negro is the host laborer the white people will ever get in this ountry, and to safeguard this labor Do You Think For Yourself ? t/r# w . bird and tfulp down WtflMtWl U.K" a young ;lne mar be offered jrou 1 * * * * * it. r<M.?re an intelligent thinking woman. - nmd of fUM (?Qia wtkiuHii nurvouaiivss, parrrWiu ~^murinti. t wMna ^ you that there Is onn .fried and true honest medicine OF KNOW* COMPOSITION. sold by druggists for the dire of woman's ills, t + Ttie makers of I>r. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, for the cure of weak, nervous, rundown. over-worked, debilitated, pain-racked women, knowing this medicine to l>c made up of ingredients, every one of which has the strongest possible indorsement of the leading and standard authorities of the severe I schools of practice, are perfectly willing, and in fact, are only ts>o glad to print, as they do. the formula, or list of Ingredients, of which it is composed, in plain En\jli?h, on every Dottle-wrapper. t t The formula of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Proicrlptlon will boar the most critical examliia:ion of medical experts, for It contains no ilcohol. narcotics, harmful, or habit-forming 1 rugs, and no agent enters Into it that is not ilghly recommended by the most advanced tnd leading medical teachers and authortles of their several schools of practice. These authorities recommend the ingredients >f I)r. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for the ure of exactly the same ailments for which '.his world-famed mnrtWnu No other medicine for woman's Ills has atry iuch professional endorsement as Dr. Pierce's favorite Prescription has received, in the tinmalifled recommendation of each of its ioveral Insrredients by scores of leadintr medl al rr.en <?f all the school* of practice. 19 iuch an endorsement not worthy of >-<jui tonsiderat ion ? t t + t A booklet of Inirredients, with numerous lUthorative profesional endorsement* h.v tne radius,' medical authorities of this country, rill tie mailed jrrr to any one sending name tnd address with request for same. Addr -?? )r. U V. Pierce. Buffalo, N. Y. nguished and ill insUntly recognize y Jj Egiggy raee purity must In- praeticed. The! Southern Mates have a majority of I negroes in them, yet the white people rule without any trouble. Hut : let them till up with foreigners ami they will take the government from 1 the hamfs of the Southern white i people. We hear a great deal about social equality. The whiti people, especially ladies, do not want it; and To per cent of our nej gro men do not want it. And if | any negro men want it, it is that | 2o per cent of yellow negroes. About To per cent cf the negro women want it, and judging by the white man's actions (his intercourse with negroes) about 40 per cent of them want it. Judge the tree by its fruits. I hope our next governor will include in liis message to the legislature something that will cause a law to he passed on this race purity question; for that is the cause of our trouble. Believing that I have voiced the sentiment of the hest class of negroes, I remain yours truly, B. G. Cannon. I, i ^jBMBCrar'Jfiirrinr una la< l ffi I HAyc BC'CN APCQ1JVTC0 (7 f ^ Exclusive ACXNT A tlAMMR CONMJLNSCDM :TKe Sticker is the :j Wianer Hammnr Condensed Paint lead! all i to-day, because it is made to stick. It is guaranteed to stick for live years. You can coun* on most paints for only ( three years. The great llammar Paint , i House of St. Louis guarantee their , paint to stick for five years; your, 1 money hack it it don't and this is nofcj i talk either. Come in some day and we i trill show you how this paint is hacke^l | by a guarantee of a half million dollaii ! in cash and a reputation of over a thiyi of a eenturv for square deals. We wfl f that there is onlv one HnTn3?r I Paint and that we are the only deals** I in this place who have the authoritv^ i k\1 and this pauut, , ' /. W. Bates, Jonesville, Si C. LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: ' If VOIir firnrofv DM ! ?? JV MS Ul VWW1J 111.1 lid) been over II feel high j every month, let me cut it down for you. Orders given from 2 p. tn.^ to 5' p. m. will be filled with; select stock as we; have: imore time to select it ttWn. I Thanking you for your pas* orders. 1 remain. ' \ W. Newell Smith! Phone 126. 1m j / Ms' m NATURE'8 WORD SYMBOLS. B?aa(l?? #1 Land and S?a Caaaat Ha Tald In Word*. Colors, sights nnd Bounds of nature rent In word* shrivel and lose their vitality. Odors of the forest, breezes from the sea. delicate aromas of the dawn, exhalations from < w laden m tJelds, entrancing pure breath of infancy?how can we find among dumb. Inexpressive human words any fair equivalent, any Just translation of onnli a<if>A nfTnot nnil ootianfJnne l?% !?? world of nature ?? these? llow shall we Interpret myriad shades of one color in the few words at our command? How shall we put the feeling and the ecstasy of nature into the formula of mental apprehension and Into the terms of literary expression? It Is as hopeless a task as if one stood as Interpreter beside some charming poet of alien tongue and could catch only here and there a word and ciuld render that word only by some uncouth fairtuphrase or by some term of remote Or unaccepted meaning. What charm, xvliat coherence even, could we llnd in Mitch inadequate transference to an nth- | er sphere of what was so beautiful ill Its own? S i to say that the sea is ' blue doe< indeed give a cert aill impression of one e.?l >r rather than another : J nud in a crude way suggests a general tint to our mental vision. But how opMquean I dead is t lie one word "blue" wtfion held ii|> as Uu? redacting mirror lo/otir miiitl.-s of Unit world of translucent sapphire glory lot down from ' heaven upon earth, nil* and oivan that suffusion of azure from cerulean reservoir. which drenches mil lire on rare | midsummer days! We have seen sUch * flooding molten turquoise livlit like penis liquefied and poured over seacoast, mountain and plain when it has penned as if the dial ices of the angels of the ether and the sun kept pouring i down new tides of graded sky tones on i th" glorified landscape. We have seen s ro'lt and (lower, dond and tree, hill aad valley, swun and seem to tloat in eery gradation of the great monotone i of color around us. while bar after bar s of indigo, violet, blue, lay far upon the a | sea, reiterating in it thousand changing J shades that end of tlie rainbow gamut t of color in the endless enchantments t of Its tremulously sliding, blending, ^ pver overlapping, infinitely shaded 0 scale. Oh. again, take the word silence as j the image of that great, full hronthing, ( resonant stillness of the forest far from > the dwelling of men. How flat and tin- 1 responsive and eclioless Is the word ' symbol when hung up as the silvery soundiug hoard of what nature calls ' her stillness. The term silence is but a dumb Interpreter of the serene, soundless, on going life in the deep woods. In that silence there Is speech of thousand tongues, Inaudible and voiceless, complex anil Intricate, as the flexured j Interweaving of leafy branches overimcv ami egld-vaftiH1 M?t? /that sift down ?Svl J'vJuwod VAtitt\uW^rk. FlKlitlnR the Current. Papua has swift streams well stocked with tlsh. An explorer tells of Papuan fresh water mullet which sometimes weigh as much as fifteen pounds. "These fish are wonderfully provided by nature with an appliance which helps them to combat the extraordl- j nary currents. At one moment you will see them being swept down reslstlessly* "but suddenly they shoot off Into i .the quieter water and attach them- \ selves to the rocks by a strong sticker f near the mouth. There they hang just outside the current, their tails moving : gently with It, and when they have recovered their strength they make an. other dash through the swifter wa- ' ' ' I1 a??? I THERE IS . | REYNOLD: J / ? DR. ETHAN C DEN $ TW&ktPR +Xt%>%>3V%A*X<X<X>t i HAIR : DENl J Crown, Bridgework am Office over Mutual Dry || DR. J. MONRi | --^ D E N KjV Crown and Bridge Work (|j$ A Specialty. Phone 1 TOILERS AND ENQINES. Tanks, Stacks, Stand Pipea, and Sheet Iron Work; Shafting, Pulleys, Gearing, Boxes, Mangers, etc. Mill Castings. Cast every day; work 200 hands. a ombard Foundry Machine and Boiler Work and Supply Store. Augusta. Georgia. Land For Sale. itale of South Carolina, 1 County of Union. ) by authority given to mo bv Lester i. Knight, b. M. Knight, Loila hawon, A. L. Knight, the heirs at law, ind the heirs of the body of the late drs. Mary A. Knight, I* will sell to he highest bidder, before the court touse at Union, in Union county, South Carolina, between the legal hours >f sale, on salesday in November, 1906, he following tracts of land to wit: All hose three tracts or plantations of and lying and being situate in the bounty of Union, Santuc Township, state of South Carolina, containing in the tract known as the Santuc tract 217 acres more or less, and bounded by lands of T. Jones, J no Gregory. Davis Gregory, and other lands of the Knight Estate. Also the tract known as the Low place, containg 104 acres more or less, and bounded by the Santuc tract and lands of Davis Gregory and T. Jones Also the tract known as the Fullei place, containing *236 acres more oi less, and bounded by lands ofT. Jones Jas. Salter, Jas. "Carter, and landi Terms of sale: One^thlftf^nftepur chase money to be paid in cash on daj of sale, the balance in one year. Th? credit portion to be secured by a bone and mortgage of the premises, sold with leave to the purchaser to anticipate payment in whole or in part. The credit portion to bear interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum until paid in full. These lands will be sold in their tracts separately as deeribed above, and any tract or all of thest lands may be bought at private sale by seeing or corresponding with C. D Knight. P. O., box 107, Newberry S. C. Purchaser to nnv for nnm-ru anil recording *urae. The Synod of South Carolina is to meet with the First Presbyterian church of Laurens, Octol>er 20, There are six Presbyteries embraced in this synod. a REASON FO) 5* SUN CURED w'n ^rom. iust enough F vbrifi^ to pres increase in tl Brev jH SUN ^> C^?'CC SC AH per pound, ant MM in 5c. cuts; sti R. J. RKYN W. FOSTER, X TIST. ? omcsi , * OVKR TBH PKOPUMI RANI, VA & H A I R. 1 nsTS. | i Regulating a Specialty. J Goods Co., Union, S. C. J OE WALLACET^I TI s T ?H Offices: Rooms 1 and 2 %1J 117. Nicholson Building:. SOUTHERN RAILWAY? THE SOPTH'S GREATEST SYSTEM. Unexcelled Dining Car Service. Through Pullman Sleeping Cars on all Through Trains?Convenient Schedule on all Local Trains, Winter Tourist Rates are now in effect to aH Florida jpumi^. rui rim iiiiuiuuuiuii ;as to rates, routes, etc., conjSult nearest Southern Railway ! Ticket Agent or BROOKS MORGAN, R. W. HONT, A. G. P. A., I). P. A., v Atlanta, Ga. Charleston, S. C. j7a. brown, DEALER IN V ; REAL ESTATE, STOCKS AND BONDS. HOUSE RENTING AND COLLECTING A SPECIALTY. OFFICE ON BACHELOR STREET. I ? ; V. E. DePASS. S. C. DePASS. DePASS & DePASS, i T au; nfflnoc nva* Panning Sonlr r 1-1 yr 1 Union & Glenn Springs J" I^allrvod Company. [ Time Table Effective Sept. 16,1906 I Leave Union 7:30 a. m., 12:30, and I 4:30 p. m. Arrive Buffalo 7:45 a. in., 12:45, and s 4:45 p. m. i Leave Buffalo 8:15 a. m., 1:30, and I and 5:30 p. in. 1 Arrive Union 8:30 a. m., 1 :45. and I 5:45 p. in. i Leave Union 8:40 a. m. and 2:15 p. in. r Pass Neal Shoals 9:15 a.m. and 2:45 n. m. Arrive Pride 9:30 a. m. and , 3:00 p. m. i Leave Pride 10:05 a. in., and 3:35 p. in Pass Neal Shoals 10:25 a. m., . and 3:35 p. m. Arrive Union 11:10 a. m. and 4 :30 p. m. i All trains daily. , Connection made at Pride with Sealino r/1 A ! ? T *' ' * , .mi lime mrougn trains soutli! bound in the niorninsr and northbound ! in the eveninR. M. B. Summkr, Gen'l PaasenRer Apent. R CHEWING TOBACCO ecoming tired of heavily in cured tobaccos caused S' SUN CURED to quickthe old' brands of much ig the place as favorite with ewers, because it contains >roper sweetening and fla;erv?tfie quality of the.letf \TAI no PIULU3 CURED e sun cured, but it is made lections of the genuine sun own where the best sun grows. It is like that you costing from 60c. to $1.00 d is sold at 50c. per pound ictly 10c. plugs, and is the tun cured tobacco that cai) >r chewers. OLDS TOBACCO CO*] on-S?len, N. C.,' r. * 4 ' J" ? ' >1 . ' ..