The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, February 15, 1907, Page 6, Image 6

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& &&&&&>&} 3 3 3 3 3 | THE I * i t *k ? 1 ci in I JliU 1 Will give the quicke & Incn 1?; I o 0 a = a This car will be ' jV ^ improved conditi ^ livered anywher j| they have tried ^ Harris, arid Maj. & thing in the feed I o The Other Side. ?;c~w Jl< There was trouble in the big house a at the corner. The afternoon papers reported the sudden death of Hcnry^ Bargham, one of the city's merchant h princes, a man of wide interests and j many friendships and broad-minded 11 citizenship. To the two young women in the great house all this was >' nothing. What had the city to do l< with it, or any one except themselves? >' imtw nnt in the mnrninc as usual, with the merry, affectionate " >vot*l of farewell that had never failed '1 tfotough all the years. At eleven o'clock he was brought home,?and the !s very props of life had fallen. Eleanor Barghani, the daughter, was ' stronger than her mother. She was G young, and she had much of her fa- j titer's steady strength, although no one ; ~ had realized it because it never had n been called upon before. Her mother, * .who had passed from a petted girl- ' hood in her father's home to a petted ) womanhood in her husband's, was com- ! pletely crushed. She would sec no one, 1 e answer no message, decide nothing. So after the first stunned hours, the daughter quietly took control. In those hours her young face had grown old- 'l er and full of bitterness. She could e see nothing but cruelty in this that had come upon them. s There were letters and telegrams ^ and messages, hundreds of them. El- 1 eanor read them all,?with her eyes,? 8 and put them away to be acknowledged s later; her heart had not read them. - Yet on the second afternoon there came a letter that caught her attention. S"R. W. Rurgess," she read, glancing at the signature tirst, as she always did, "Letter Carrier, Route 27"? why, that must be their own postman! With a faint emotion of surprise she turned back and read the letter. It **\vas brief, but when she had finished it there were two words that she could not put away. "Nobody knows how much help and encouragement a life like Mr. Bargham's gives to us who stand in small places; it makes us feel that we've got live tlic same kind ot lives, aitnougn BKwHPp^>? course in an infinitely smaller place." The second was, "We lost our only daughter last month, so wc know. That is why her mother and I have ventured I A tissue builder, reconstructor, builds up waste force, makes strong nerves and muscle. You will realize after taking Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea what a wonderful benefit it will be to ^ , von. ?5 cents. Tea or Tablets. The Rice Drug Co. > ' 4 m GREAT Vl PvPfV RENE, I st and best results ;ases yield of milk i lur first orde fur Third here in a few da1 ? ion of your cows e in the city. W Sucrene and saj J. W. McLure. I line. Hay, Cori rC-C-C- <> -C> -S> - - j send our sympathy today." The morning alter the funeral E nor gave word that she wanted to s te postman when he came, and wh tc double ring of the door bell w eard she hurried down to the door "1 wanted to thank you for i wither and myself,' she said to t lue-coated carrier. "It hurt us tl ou and your wife should be so go t us when we had known nothing our sorrow." The postman looked down the stre ill of the springtime beauty of n ;aves and buds. "How should you know?" he ask imply. "But we might have!" Eleanor cri inssionatcly. "We might if we li mly thought!" He shook his head. "It takes thir -like this?to make us understai tost of us. We didn't before. Ni ou'd be suroriscd to know how oft wonder if 1 am carrying sad ne\ Vhen you've had sorrow yourself y jel as if patr of you belonged to t rybody else in trouble." "I never thought of it that wa; lie girl said, with a quick breath. "You will, miss," he answered, qui /. "I didn't at first till my wife he d me." The postman went on down t treet and Eleanor closed the dot ier eyes wer no longer hard. Dim hrough the aching loneliness, she 1 ;an to understand the beautiful otl ide of sorrow.?Youths' Compatiio PRICES: Hollow Ground $2. X^^^Double Concave lor Exrta Heavy \ BeardaS3 Pair In LeatherCase 15. Strop SI. Razor 1 roubles Possible " 365 Clean Shaves Every Year jgWr Get Q from yo dealer on ' 1^1^^ days trial, wi NO OBLIGATION TO PURCHA For sale by Union Hardware C ESfli ' Person' [ Comple ; you ever had from at ?r ind butter, and does it r was for 1 To Was for a ys. Let us have y< and your increase c 'e refer you to three r it is the finest thir Ask them, and sent n, Oats, Cotton Seed The ITone >C-CC-CC-C-^ - ^ C- - Ednorsed by the Country. iCC "The most popular remedy in Otsegt en county, and the best friend of m; family," writes Win. M. Dietz, edito: as and publisher of the Otsego Journal Gilbertsville, N. Y., "is Dr. King': my New Discovery. It has proved to hi , , an uuanioic cure inr cougns and coias c making short work of the worst o lat them. We always keep a bottle in tin od house. I believe it to be the most val Df liable prescription known for Lung an< Throat diseases.' Guaranteed to neve disappoint the takfr, by all druggists et. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free ew ! Angclo Patricola refused to play a ec'' a recital in Greenville because his fa vorite instrument, a Stcinway grand LCj could not be procured. After an hour' delay he decided to appear, and afte the concert was over Pres. James fount that Signor Patricolo had smashc< ': two chords in his efforts to product ns 1 the required volume, en vs. ! "lI! Women Who Wear Well. :v-! It is astonishing how great a chango a ? I few years of married life often make In ^' , the appearance and disposition of many women. The freshness, the charm, the et- brilliance vanish like the bloom from a lp. peach which is rudely handled. The matron is only a dim shadow, a faint echo of the charming maiden. There are two 'le reasons for this change, ignorance and >r. neglect. Few young women appreciate |y, the shock to the system through the w. change which comes with marriage and motherhood. Many neglect to deal with lcr the unpleasant pelvic drains and weak11 nesses which too often come with mar riage and motherhood, not understandlw I that this secret drain is robbing the cheel ^ of its freshness and the form of it , fairness. As surely as the general health suffer ^ when there is derangement of the healtl j-jj- of the delicate womanly organs, so sure]] when these organs are established ii 00 health the face nnd form at once witnea 50 to thefact in renewed comeliness. Nearl; a million women have found health an< oo happiness in the use of Dr. Pierce's Fa vorite Prescription. It makes weak worn en strong and sick women well. Ingredl ents on lai>el?contains no alcohol o harmful habit-forming drugs, mad ^ wholly of those native, American, medic inal roots most highly recommended b leading medical authorities of all the set eral schools of practice for the cure c woman's peculiar ailments. no For nursing mothers.or for those broker down in health by too frequent bearing o ur children, also for the expectant mother? to prepare the system for the coming o ?f) baby and making Its advent easy am almost painless, there is no medicine quit tu so good as "Favorite Prescription." I I , can do no harm in any condition of th op! ; system. It is a most potent invtgoratln tonic, and strengthening nr.rvin,. nio<?i | adapted to woman's delicate system by physician of large experience in the treat ment of wo man's peculiar ailments. I)r. Pierce may be consulted by lette free of charge. Address Dr. R. V. Pierct 0 Invalids' Hotel and burgical Instituu lluffaio, N. Y. i DON 01 Who Keei tely Bala ly cow food. Puts the so quickly that you can n, Our Second w i Car of 30,i aur order and you w >f milk and butter. < of the best judges of lg they have ever u 1 us your orders. W I Meal, and Hulls. ;y-Savers. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy a Favorite ) "We prefer Chamberlain's Cough v Remedy to any other for our children." ai r says Mr. L. J. Woodbury, of Twining, tl Mich. "It has also done the work for hi j us in hard colds and croup, and we al r, take pleasure in recommending it." ki For sale by Union Drug Co. P< { d< H The mayor of Kingston died Feb. ^ 112, from injuries sustained in the earth- cj quake. He was sixty-eight years old. n< ; n B "Regular as the Sun" n is an expression as old as the race. No doubt the rising and setting of the sun j " is the most regular performance in j I, the universe, unless it is the action oi; \\ s the liver and bowels when regulated |. with Dr. King's New Life Pills. Gu-: r aranteed by all druggists. 25c. i \\ 1 j ' The boxing match which was to come j 2 off in Greenville between "Buck Fos-jnn ter, the fighting fireman, and Jack'0, Stivens, of Birmingham, may be pro-; . hibited. "Everybody Should Know" says C. G. Hays, a prominent business 1 man of Bluff, Mo., "that Bucklen's Arnica Salve is the quickest and surest i healing salve ever applied to a sore, 1 burn or wound, or to a case oi piles. 1 I'vp used it and know what I'm talking about." Guaranteed by all druggists, s 25c. 1 President Alfred Walter, of the Sca' board Air Line, died in New York on Feb. 12th. He was elected president 5 six or eight months ago to succeed ; J. M. Barr. i s Skin Diseases of Twenty Years' Stand! j ing Cured. " l want you to know how much i 5 Chamberlain's Salve has done for me. J It has cured my face of a skin disease 1 of almost twenty years' standing. I have been treated by several as smart * physicians as we have in this country 1* and they did me no good, but two r boxes of this salve has cured me.? e i Mrs. Fannie Griffin, Troy, Ala. Cham' | beflain's Salve is for sale by Union y 1 Drug Co. f Hundreds of people in Martins FerI | ry, O., are suffering severely from the i. old. The temperature is five degrees j delow zero and in many homes the' ? i people are actually frost bitten. t o * For Rheumatism Sufferers. * The quick relief from pain afforded by applying Chamberlain's Pain Halm ; r makes it a favorite with sufferers from ', ' Rheumatism, sciatica, lame back, lumh ; bago, and deep seated and muscular ( pains. For sale by Union Drug Co. | ) I : THE >s a Cow need Rati cow in a healthy, he > appreciate the results. 'as for 2, and 900 Pounds 'ill be greatly plea* Dnly $1.50 per sack cows and what is g ised,-=Mr. J. A. Bro^ e will save you moi 9MPAN^ f I^ > f -C- - - - - - <^ The Limit of Life. HQ The most eminent medical scientists 'e unanimous in the conclusion that ; le generally accepted limtiation of uman life is many years below the x ttainment possible with the advanced sho nowledge of which the race is now syv< assessed. The critical period, that jtermines its duration, seems to be , ma .'tween 50 and 60 years; the proper the ire of the body during this decade j mnot be too strongly urged; careless-; etc ess then being fatal to longevity, j fac aUtre's best helper after 50 is Electric itters, the scientific tonic medicine j Pjj lat revitalizes every organ of the cai ody. Guarnteed by all druggists. V _j lari Cupid had a busy time on board ,the ma fittekind; there were four couples who unt *d fallen in love and Commissioner fatson was informed of the condition {J" f affairs and read the marriage pere- f?e tony, which was translated into Gerlan by the U. S. interpreter. J}?' ver sur Jui 1 are 9 ^B ^ TOBACCO (loi IS a delicious chew, H t" made from the best K ere North Carolina leaf;H Srl a leaf that has a spec- H ?r0e, ial texture, a special H flavor and whichH makes RED EYE al ^ specially fine and satis- H fying chewing tobacco. H yk Most people prefer it H nc to tobacco costing one M dollar per pound. m 88 Write for Special Prices. pre 8jflB jfiM tor DAYi ion. I ? arty condition. | >. 1 5 5SSES^55E5isES w ;ed with the S of 100 lbs de- V ood for them, 5? ?vn, Mr. J. T. ^ ley on every= h j / W L 9 I I '' [;C ?:CCCCCC^ W MUCH FERTILIZER TO APPLY. he question, "How much fertilizer uld be used per acre?" cannot be anired definitely, but only In a general y. It Is sometimes put In this form: 'hat Is the most profitable amount that y be applied per acre?" Neither can question In the amended form be ictly and accurately answered. The I, its character, condition, preparation, ? may be well known, or controllable tors, but we know not what the seas may be, says Hon. R. J. Redding, ? ector Georgia Experiment Station, De- ? intent of Agriculture, In the Vlrglnlaollna Fertilizer Almanac. >^e know that some crops will bear ger amounts of fertilizers with reasone assurance of profitable returns than y be expected of other soils. A crop t occupies the soil from the fall season 11 spring, or early summer, will bear ivier fertilizing than will a crop that planted In the spring and ripens for vest in midsummer. The first case la strated by oats, wheat, or other small In, or grnss, especially when sown In fall of the year. Such a crop occuf> the soil during the late fall and wln, and early spring?during which peas the rains are usually abundant? enlng for harvest in late spring, or y early summer, before the burning nmer heat and possible drouths of le and July. Oats and wheat therefore i Ideal crops for liberal fertilizing, orn is rather an uncertain crop on the Unary dry uplands of the South. It i but a short period in which to develits flowers?tassels and silks?cover- \ : but a few days. If very dry weather ill prevail when this critical period is iroachlng, and for some time after it passed, the crops may prove a greater less failure. There can be no second jri, no secona period or Dlooming. t Is different in the case of cotton, tch commences to bloom and make f it in June (or even earlier) and con- | 1 ues throughout the summer until eked by a severe frost in November, has a number of "chances." otten is therefore another Ideal crop liberal fertilizing. A small amount fertilisers applied per acre will no lbt yield a larger percentage profit its cost than will a larger amount. Illustrate: An application of $2 worth fertilizer per acre may cause an inased yield of cotton (at 10 cents per ***/ ind) of the value of $6 to $8, or a profit ' . 200 to 300 per cent, on its cost. I havo * quently had such results. But it .does : follow that twice as heavy an applllon will produce twice as large rets, or that three times as much would ise three times as great an Increase the yield. In other words, the rate increase in the yield of cotton will I be In proportion to the increase In > amount of fertilizers applied. Two lars* worth of fertilizer per acre may id an Increase in the crop of $6; but worth would not therefore bring an rease of $18. tilt rnrAfnl nhonrvoHnw has -* ' wvw. .awvll ??0 nUUTfll illKIt application of $6 to $6 worth ofYArtllrs (properly balanced) is a Rafe amount apply per acre on cotton. Many termIn Georgia have necured satisfactory urns from an application of ao muoh 800 pounds per acre. j hlnk GOO pounds a perfectly safe limit t -m upland In fairly good condition, well ipared and properly cultivated In coti. For corn. I would limit the amount 200 to 300 pounds per acre on old upids. E. DoPASS. S. C. DePASS. DePASS & DePASS, Law Offices Over Peoples Bank. L y x ^ 4 i * *?