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^ ^ __ miii aT rf I OFTEN I Bpil^ MAKES I | l^^^QUICKWEEpj" ^THECURE > (^PJI^THAT'S SUREI 5 I DR. KING'S?J ^ I NEW DISCOVERY t I COUGHS AND COLDS;? WHOOPING COUGH " AND ALL TROUBLES OF | or1 THROAT AND LUNGS PROMPT USE WILL OFTEN PREVENT ,,p PNEUMONIA AND CONSUMPTION i"!! PRICE SOc and Sl.OO SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY m. AM / DRUGGISTS I" ?w3?i?bmwwhw?iiwwm?hwmiw???bi all 1 th ptl ?FOR THE BEST? ? foi J U1I Hardware ? ? scl Cutlery ? ' | kn Paints ,n | foi Oils I B ; or : r? SEE US j H( Jo th< l_* I i". T! union ncii owdi e to. i ?M Int , Have Your House Wired * en ON EASY TERMS ? , Sin = W!1 We will wire your house at a very reasonable S price and allow you to pay for same in twelve monthly installments. By contracting: for a big lot of meters we are able to offer you meters for $10.50 which have been selling for tin I $13.50. We shall be glad to have you call upon tous for estimates and further particulars. tr? ______________________________________________________ ue rni a i ri i_;_ Ini; I municipal ueciric Ligni I and Water Works 1= Phone 144 R. A. Easterling, Supt. | <ii, Inasmuch as he i- trying to do j WHEN THE KIDNEYS FAIL about everything else there is to be 1 done, Mr. Bleast- probably wants! lt . _, , ? _ . _. . ... to do all the traveling for South! Un'on Pe0P|e Ha?e Found That III ?? Carolina himself instead of letting! Health Quickly Follows. wi the proper officials do it at the pro-! ha I per time and for proper reasona.? ! Bo you ever feel that you simply ean't tht . . Chariotte Olreerver. p any furtdier-^bat you inuirt have re.it tHl m m m ; troin thut lame and aching back?relief . uu?.. u/?* ? ! fron? the constant, dead-tired feeling? % YOU Want a Better Jobr* j freedom from those stabbing. darting ,v ThMqufftipo will be naked you aluioet 1 by -bam dews men" Hjokliy S **' k . h n.?ovinF uric acfd wll "'" C lil" '] flS$Tllr 1,'Sr "vj, N^turall, a lite of unusual activi'j . .you HhouhJ uualify at I)raus:hoD h. f or double die dutieH of the kidrievH and prt (ftwin^H . Columbia or piUfl havo i,roU(tht ncw Btrengtb to ,r? " a SiiV. Au^?^? <"? > or Nftflh- thouttandH of bad backw and quick relief I vtne, iwb. + m * - to weakened kidneyH. Let tnem do the see Dr. J.,B. Hftrtw.ll, one of the S?u^/OU- Co^inon* proof in Union M( OlOHt notetf Tfftntint minHirmnriwa i*? * ? - , ? .?7rT?rT?~* ?I w* *4Wer Liavia, 51 Honth Hi., Union, ithe foreign -field, died at Hwang- S. C., *ayn: "My kidneys 'were weak hien, China, Jan. 3. He haa labor- *"'1 *au?ed my hack to aehe. Doan'a a?J ed Among the'heathen for over half K^aey RHs which I prpruired frora the ?ec . * Palmetto Drug Co., entirely relieved me at a century. ~m m + and after taking them, I enjoyed good Cor (\ r? ..?i o i # n~ healthX I'cafi gay Chat tliiflremedy w ah n I)r, Routh, df the Rockefeller excellent one for kidney complaint.'' hookworm treatment comnoitwion, , .... . J* >1 ^Urg *^".y J rvo^tOrzw- m?w York, aolr,agenta Jo^tbe Uhitcd Car lecture# and medicine will be given, j*4*1* oihar. < * * , \ v? i tit. ?V I r HOW HE GOT LIZ By G. B. MARTIN When I wjis n young feller jlst git i' old enough to make up to theglrli the toy? used to laugh at me foi tint. I Uou't thluk myself that li is because I was so awfully stuold t I was dreadful homely. , Thai is what put me at n disadvantage y eyes and my hair were a different lor, and I was !dnd o* rawboned I I was good for above the othei ys was tliat I could lick any of 'em it when It came to sprucln' up foi dance I hadn't a ghost of a shov mgjdde the worst lookiu' feller it e lot. dy ale mother tolc me onet: "Elijub you want to win a woman's favoi sotnepln for her. I,et her sec thai u think kindly of her. Yonr fathei isn't a good lookiu' man when ] irriod him, Jlst a rawboned farm 's boy, and I ink him in preferenei the best lookiu' feller in them part) cause he used to come ronnd whci hailn't not bin' to do nud churn ant ilk for me. When I saw him churn or 8uttin' on a stool tnilkin' to snv< s work I forgot his red hair and hi) ^cklen and his big knees and elbowi il sot my heart right on to him." I didn't forget what mother said id when Liz Bunker come to tah< o school and I thort she was tin rtyest. thing of womankind I'<T evei nn and WHUted her mighty bad ] ide up my mind IM try to make hei rgit my ugliness somepin like fathei ide mother forglt hls'n. But wha' uld 1 do? Liz didn't churn or mill ws. She taught younkers reodln' itln* and 'rithmelic. I could't. spel r at that. I couldn't go tot hei hool and say, "See here. Liz, yot t go out aud sprywl yourself or e grass and I'll teach 'em for you.' couldn't say that 'cause I dldn'i ow enough. )ne day after school I mot Liz com home, and she was eryin". 'Why, Liz,'' 1 asked, "what y' cryln r?' 'Oh, don't bother me." 'I wish you'd tell uie." 'It's them big ones. I enn't mak< 11 behave by beiu' kind to 'em. anc a not strong enough to whip 'em." 'How old are the children that mak< i disturbance?" 'Children! They ain't children. Bet Hiker's twenty and strong as an ox hn Wllklna Is nearer twenty-one ough he isn't quite as big as Ben leu there's Ollie Smith?he's eighteen d can whip either of the other two.' : remembered what mother'd said t I didn't let on about it to Liz. 1 lil to her, says I: 'I didn't know y' tuk such old tper o your school. ICf I had I'd 'a' beet scholar myself. I hain't got no edl Jon, and I want some. Will y' take > into your school?" ix said she would. So the next daj vent round. X set on a bench witli arithmetic before me, and while 1 La a studyln' I jlst kep* an eye or km Mir walHn' 1 * ?fc> A no o' their trick*. Pmrty eooa OllU lith threw a apitball aero** th? loot and hit Lucy BUis la the eya. 1 ir by Us*a expression that she dread what was comln', but I didn't say diln\ She reprored OUle gentle-like, 1 he sent another ball at Ben HookBen throwM it back. John Wilis threw a book at Ben, and there m a racket on sure 'naff, lllas Bunker," says I, "which one o' we boys would you like to see made behave fust?" Any one on 'em," ahc said, her voice (nblln*. I think." I said, "you'd better givo a recess. A lesson hi good behavior ght break some o' the school fnrure. ftchoo! dismissed." said TAz. iVe all went out on to the grass plot front of the schoolhouse, and I told lie that his lesson would come first; it I proposed to give sepurnto lesis and if any one not glttin' taught inners interfered I'd break every ne In his body some time, even If I ln't do it then. I think this kep" ti off durln* what follered. Anyly. no one of 'em interfered to holn other. I soon laid Ollle on the is*, and T pommeled him till he waa e all over. Then I tnk John, who is the tdprsest of the three, hut he isn't fiprhtln' for a purty sehooltenebas I was. and at last I downed him Ih a blow that broke bis Jaw. Hen d he didn't want no lesson, no > Instruction wrs over and school c !n attain with all the scholars prest except John, who couldn't tec Its th a broken Jaw. and he was oxeusfrom school for the rest o* the dajf; Vhon school was ont I walked homs Ih f Iz She was the most grateftl 1 you erer seen. She said I needn't ne any more, 'cause she'd give me ate lessons, but 1 went the next r to see the effect o' my Instructions deportment. t was the quietest school you ever in. John Williams nerer come l?cV. 1 the other two o' raj beiisyior tolars was as quiet as idee. After tool I tole 'em that If they needed r more leeaons Miss Banker would id for me, bat they'd, learned It *f! oucet, and lie didn't have to send me. jyt: 'ho private lessons wian't n^ech >d to me for larntn'. bat they wie for acq akin'. Lis would never hare had th a feller ae me if it heda't'lieen the way rd helped her oat o'jher qbt* After eh, I iot.iej.vtfe Jm iwl Jt 'tr/;. ' j. ' fytt*.- '; ' T'r/r/i fV HIDDEN JIOARDSc Fartunei Burled or Tuoktd Away In Wasteful Neglect. None cau estimate the wealth bid den In the days of the war between the states. Down mountain slopes, across the great plantations and along tho streets of cities of the south are trails of lost fortunes Ou the MIsrIs aippl river the shanty boaters tell tales of kettles of gold coin and money that ? were buried in the brakes or revealed r in the caving hank of the Mississippi t by h cascade of coin rushing down the . crumbling slope into the flood Now t and then some sharp darky appears ,a . with a handful of old gold, t A mathematician might estimate the quantity of nugget gold hidden by the r placer miners, the loggers, tinkers. tramps, soldiers?all the kinds of for r tunes that are tucked away in useless 7 and wasteful neglect In nil parts of , the country?in stockings, mattresses, old clothes, garrets, cellars, hollow trees, hovels, mansions, caches of des r peradoes ami hidings of foreigners. If t only one in 10.000 hides $100 that la r never found, and In every village and [ town the proportion Is larger, among . farmers and back country people much ? larger, the loss will amount to $'XH), 3 mm Alio ciiiiuces are mui lucre is ;i j hundred million dollars of hidden for I tur.es in this country now? gold. sil . ver. precious stones and paper wealth 3 Many a farm, many a city property. 3 goes Into neglect and decay because 3 the heirs never knew of it.?Raymond S. Spears in Harper's Weekly. 1 3 Falconry. In medieval times falconry was exceedingly popular. To he seen with o hawk upon the wrist was the seal of n gentleman, and bis rank was also known by the species of hawk he was using?for a king the gor-lalcon. for a prince the falcon-gentle, for u dubo the falcon of the rock, the peregrine falcon for an earl, for a ludy the merlin, the nobby for a young man, the goshawk for the yeoman and for the serv lug man the kestrel. 9 Had to Swallow Many Things. An amusing anecdote is related Of the Into Huncarinti stntosmiiii TiKzn. I who when one day dining at the Hofburg with the Austrian emperor placed a largo pear upon his plate at dessert The emperor remarked to his minis- = tor that cold fruit after n hot dinner i was injurious to the digestion. I Tlsza replied. "The stomach of a J Hungarian premier, your majesty, is I obliged to be a strong one." Changed Plane. A Chicago banker was dictating a letter to bis stenographer. Mr. So-and-s^.*' he ordered, | "that I will meet him in Schenectady." "How do you spell Schenectady7" asked the stenographer. 1 "S-c. S-c?er?er?er? Teli him 1'U C meet him in Albany."?Chicago Post. 1 . Arohttecturally Speaking. ""I am the architect of my own for' tone." said Mr. Dustln Stax. "Well," replied Mr. Holden Howes. r "by being your own architect you're 1 liable to get some curious effects, but 1 yon do save a lot of money on plans 1 and specifications."?Washington Star. L > - I. The Pity of It. } "Do you believe necessity 1a the jJ mother of invention 7" ; ^ "Tee. and she la also doaely related ^ to the promissory note."?Birmingham Age-Herald. C p The C^mt of All. N - 'A tnan dropped his wig in the treet, and a boy picked it np and handed it to him. "Thanks, my boy," said the ?wn r of the wig. "Yon arc the first genuine hair restorer I hare ever e Men."?New York Journal. Old Tim* Bear Test. In the sixteenth century testers were appointed in England whose duty it was "to test and assize the beer to see if it be fit for n man's body." One of the methods of testing ale was in spilling some of it on a wooden seat when the tester, attired in leathern breeches, sat down thereon. If he adhered to his seat the beer was adulterated with saccharine substances: if he could rise without inconvenience it was not adulterated.?London Mail. Chance For a Meal. "I had been hmt three days in the . woods without food when suddenly 1 was confronted by a bis black bear. . "What did you do?" p "What would you have done?" ej "I think 1 should have eaten the * bear." Hew It Happened. "Why. Johnnie':" "What?" "How did yon get the baek of jour neck so sunburned?" "W'y, 1 was fnein' the sun with uij back w'en I was In swlmmlft'." Cheaper. 1 "1 am KoitiR'on a fishing trip." I "1 didn't know yon liked to flab." "1 don't" "Then srby do yon go on a flatting trip?" "1 can't afford any other kind." She Didn't Understand. "Do you understand men. Mhta ttlrt?" "Dear ine. no." ' "Are weSrtt a mystery to yon?" "Indeed, yes. Von in particular are a mystery to me.'1 " aalty:5 -rtat flatters me." T **- " ? ray . &U O ^oasts " Bakes - Steams - Stews - Fries - Boils ^ Ix cooking in an Ideal" Fireless Cooker entailed jg if extra labor?extra expense?extra time and trouble?it V would still be the part of wisdom to buy and use it. \?& Why? Simply because food cooked in an "Ideal" is S& more healthy and nutritious, and anything that tends towards a better condition of the health is to be desired ?? Jr and claimed. . 3J w Foods cooked in the ordinary way lose largely of M Q nutriment which is boiled, fried, steamed or evaporated 0 away. Naturally the delicate flavor and tender, nutri- 101 ^ * tious parts of the food go first, leaving a greatly impaired jggk residue. ^ J9 On the other hand, the food you cook in an "Ideal" J J if Fireless Cook Stove comes out just as you put it in?with I f every particle in weight, nutrition and flavor retained, w? The process is simple?it can't get out?that's all. B| More than that is accomplished. Apiece of uieat so ^ g * tough you could hardly cut it if cooked on a fire stove, if J J cooked in an "Ideal" will come out so tender and tasty 3* 1 f it will almost melt on your tongue. V* a This is not a fairy tale?it's a fact. ~ "1 X Separate lids for each compartment?water sealed top? |V W solid aluminum lining?celebrated ''Wear-Ever" Alumi- W $ num Cooking Utensils?perfect insulation?beautlfuUy fin- w HI ished vnlranljpH hurHwruvl r-aso WtM I BAILEY FURNITURE & LUMBER CO. | ^ Leading Home Furnishers. CAROLINA SPECIAL SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Premier Carrier of the South. IN CONNECTION WITH C. N O. ft T. P. RAILWAY onsisting of First. Class Coaches, Pullman Drawing Room Sleeping Car, Pullmat Observation Sleeping Car and Dining Car Sorrier. SOLID BETWEEN * Charleston and Cincinnati ; ON THE FOLLOWING CONVENIENT SCHEDULE: WESTBOUND NO. 7 KASTBOUND NO. R ,v Charleston 9.00 A. M Lv Cincinnati fl.30 P. M ,v Summer ville 9.38 A. M Lv Aaheville 10 26 A. M .. rvlnnkt. 1 M V U ? - O i . _ U .. ? ? ? ?? iv wiuiuuM. i.w a . au ni n^iii?ni;urK ?l.W T. JHL v Union 3.07 P. M Ar Union ... ; 2.37 P. M ,v .Spartanburg 4.15 P. M Ar Columbia 4.35 P. M ,r Asheville 7.30 P. M Ac Snmmervill? .... 8.00 P. M ,r Cincinnati 0.53 A. M Ar Charleston _T 8.46 P. M Connecting at Cincinnati with through trains (or Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, 8t axil, Seattle, St. Louis, Kansas City, Denver, Ran Pranoiseo, and Points West and 'orthweat. E. H. Coapman, V. P. & 6. S. H. Hardwick, P. T. Iff. H. F. Cary, 6. P. A. J. L Meek, A. S. P. A. W. L Mcfiee. 0. P. A. THE DIXIE CAFE Is now prepared to serve its customers In (he best of style. Model Kitchen, Model Dining Room and Prompt Service at Reasonable Prices. OYSTERS SERVED JTN ALE STYLES Regular Meals 25c. Open Day and Night. Hot and Cold Lunch. THE DIXIE C A.FE Phone 72 Main Street Union, S. C. The huccosh of your aim may de- J rtD f\ U A J ADTI A! end upon the target. It's, much |LFIm? Da Ha !yI/\I% I ImI wjier to hit a cow thAn a rabbit. . I KOOH W. 2, ((ICMISW RHlMNfi, Aic. OTICB HOURS: | ( F" _____ - ?? ? m a A a'r^k L)K* I* . M. JIAIK DENTIST SI kru-lioMtrr 0,,,ce ?ver Mutu" Dry wumfVll I Goods Co. Liver Medicine - The reputation of this oM, rall?? I Picture Framing ble medicine, for :constipetion, is* '' _'' ?* SSSbllSd. It docirnot *imit*te I and Wall Paper other medicines. It is better than I .. ?.!. ^ , . others,, or it would not be the *- I Furniture Repaired end Polished. erite liver pcrndec, with a larger I Lounge*, Sofas Wd Ch*1rS OOV yethan^^ cabined. ered. M*tt*es*ea. made over. Church Cushions to 6rder. MDK PAVfcll in aamfod dolors at The times. Tdwnattia Block. Hi * Ik '