The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, March 05, 1915, Page 3, Image 3

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Woman on a Pedestal. Woman is the strongest moial force on earth and the helm of ali things human. She is the mother of all living;? hers are the sacred dead. She is the most relevant thing in nature. She is as sunshine on a holiday, Balm o' Gilead, strength in weakness. She is as a full moon in harvest a perpetually recurring comfort and tonsolation; as cold water to a thirsty soul and as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land. She is a rod and a statf, a friend that sticketh closer than a brother, the eternal feminine that draws men by a single hair. The words of her mouth are sweet er than honey and smoother than butter in a lordly dish; she is a heaven-born apparition, sent to be >j n nurlh-urnrn nriv.i mnnl u meet given that men may know what God in woman can bestow. She is all things to all men?Lot's wife, Miriam with her harp, Ruth in the cornfield, Rebecca at the well, Hagar in the desert, Mary at the Sepulchre. She is Cleopatra, llelen Boadicea, Lucrctia, Borgia, Florence Nightingale, Mother Rickerdyivo.. Grace Darling, .Jenny Geddes, Annie Laurie, Bonnie Jean, Victoria Queen and Empress, the Red Virgin of the Commune, Emmeline Pankhurst. She is heaven and hell incarnated. Her love is eternal, her hate is immortal, her instinct passes the wisdom of men, her reason the wit of sages, her counsel is as the counsel of princes. She is fair as the moon, clear as the sun, terrible as any army with banners, and like dew on the gowan, is the fa' o' her fair feet. Thrones, dominions, principalities anii powers have bowed to her sway, she has crushed empires beneath her feet, the proudest of the sons of men have craved life at her hands. She suffers long and is kind: she suffers briefly and is cruel. She envies not: she is filled with jealously. She vaunts not herself; she displays her charms. She is not nuffed up; she cackles. She does not behave nnseemingly; she behaves herself unbecomingly. She seeks not her own; she fights to the death for that which is hers. She thinks no evil; she suspects the circumspect. She rejoices not in iniquity; she finds unction in scandal. She rejoices in the truth; she is the high priestess of evasion. She bears all things, she believes all things. She hopes all things; she never fails. She is strenuous and dilatory, strong and weak, resolute and irre solute, determined and vacillating, earnest and nnearnest, vigorous and debile, ardent and cold, bold and fearful and energetic and feeble, vehement and emasculate. She is love and hate, affection, and hatred, attachment and di'sliktv passion and ice, devotion and estrangement, benevolence and unkindness, charity and uncharitableness. kindness and malice. She is loyalty and insurgency, fidelity and unfaithfulness, allegience and treason, obedience and rebellion, constancy and inconstancy, truth and falsity. In the first blush of motherhood sne is rne enviea 01 pons ana an anpels; she is a thinp of divine beau ty as she cuddles to her breast her firstborn to be a Christ, or a criminal; a Judas, or a Justus; a Cassius, or a Ceasar; a Booth, or a Lincoln. To be a Moses, or a Machiavelli; a Goliah or a David; a Burns or a bibbler; a Capliostro, or a Chitchton; a Shakespeare, or a suffrapist; a preacher or a panderer; a reformer or a renepade; a man ar a manikin. Her reipn is forevel *^,nd ever; her kinpdom is without ivepinninp of days or end of niphts; she is from everlastinp to everlasti'np and the same yesterday, today and tomorrow. She walks by faith and not by sipht and her hand is the ripht hanu of fellowship. Nature made men when she was an apprentice, she made woman when she was a mistress of her heart. She is the last and the best of all created thinps, and all anpels and all furies are drawn in her imape. Her love is stronper than death, her jealousy cruel as . the prave, her hate needs no added bitterness, her sorrow is sorrow's crown. For darlinps who triumph in the battles of peace, she weaves parlands, those of Helios; for them she is ail smiles and woman-witcnery-, for her heroes who go forth beneath the banners of war and return to her breast, borne upon many a bloody shield, she ir transfigured. \ light that never shone on sea or land illuminates her face with a glory-glow, that God or man, or angel, never knew. There lies her diadem of motherhood who gave his life a ransom for many; a purple testament of blood-reu war. She hears again the tumult and the shouting, the earthquake-shout of victory, and as he is borne from her to his last bivouac, her heart is torn with mingled emotions of joy and mither-sorrow?her cry is as the cry v.;hich burst from the lips of every Brv'.ish sailor on that October morning when Nelson was lost, and Trafalgar was won. She brought sin into the world and by her came also the Resurrec tion and the Life. At her command the dreams of troubled fancy flee. It is hers to soothe the friendless grief, to wipe the deathdew from the hrow of the dying, to calm the struggling spirit ere it part and hush the groans of life's last agony. TKe day breaks. The shadows flee. The bars are down. The everlasting gates are open wide, llopu sees a star. Faith hears the rustle f angels' wings. There She stands t<> welcome you. You are hers and she is yours for ever?your mother. ?G. M. in Insurance Critic. IT"" mi : i 111'!! NOW HER FRIENDS HARDLY KNOW HER1 But This Does Not Bother Mrs. Burton, Under the ^ Circumstances. y( ui ch Houston, Texas.?In an interesting letter from this city, Mrs. S. C. Burton is writes as follows: "I think it is my duty ?* to tell you what your medicine, Cardui, [' the woman's tonic, has done for me. w 1 was down sick with womanly trouble, and my mother advised several different ^ treatments, but they didn't seem to do me any good. I lingered along for three ( . or four months, and for three weeks, .1 a was in bed, so sick I couldn't bear for wi any one to walk across the floor. st My husband advised me to try Cardui, fo the woman's tonic. 1 have taken two 1 bottles of Cardui, am feeling fine, gained ar 15 pounds and do all of my housework, si Friends hardly know me, 1 am so well." If you suffer from any of the ailments so common to women, don't allow the trouble to become chronic. Begin taking to Cardui to-day. It is purely vegetable, jtu its ingredients acting in a gentle, natural p] way on the weakened womanly constitu- I sy, tion. You run no risk in trying Cardui. I wj It has been helping weak women back to w< health and strength for more than 50 te years. It will help you. At all dealers. ho Write to: Chattanooga Medicine Co., Ladles' Advisory Dept., Chattanooga, Tenn.. for Sveeutl , , Instructions on your case and 64-page book. 'Home th Treatment for Women." sent In plain wrapper. H69-B ^ jn ? til USE POWDERED BORAX in FOR FLY PREVENTION. ^ th Ctomoloffist Recommends Inexpensive wi Mpi lind nf Snruvinir f??* th w. "feftO and Young is! Clemson College, Feb. 27.?Swat the fly before he become a fly, will be the principal point of attack in >V the Clemson College anti-fly campaign this spring and summer. Swat r? the fly while he is still an egg or ^ maggot. It is cheaper, easier, and much more practical. The best way is to spray cow or horse manure, the most common breeding jr place for flies, with something that j will kill the eggs and maggots. Ordinary commercial powdered borax g is recommended for this purpose by A. F. Conradi, state etomologist y( and head of the entomological di'vi- rp sion of Clemson College. The directions which Prof. Con- j)( radi gives are to be found in slight- * ly fuller form in Bulletin No. 1 IS of the federal bureau of entomology. S( This is a technical or professional ^ bulletin, however, and Prof. Conradi '? 1 i. 1 iL. * - *- 1 * 1 nit.-s uiLt-TtMi nif lorni 01 me ai- j rections somewhat to suit them bet- j ter to the requirements of South ' Carolinr farmers and householders and has reprinted them in a little circular which may he obtained by f( any one writing to the college. The bureau of entomology ad- j vises applying; a heaping pint meas- c ure of two teacupfuls of powdered ^ borax to every eight bushels of ' ' manure. Apply the borax part'cu- | larly around the outer edges of the pile with flour sifter or any fine : sieve, and sprinkle two or three gallons of water over the manure t| when it has been treated. Apply the j' borax to the fresh manure immediately after its removal from the stable. Flies lay their eggs in fresh manure. When the borax comes in e contact with the eggs, it prevents cm their hatching. The maggots con- li gregatc at the outer edges of a ma- s nure pile, so that most of the borax (' should b" applied there. fi The directions given above anplv w especially to horse manure. IIow- b ever, the bureau advises using the n same treatment for fly eggs and f< maggots in other manures and also ci suggests applying powdered borax to garbage and refuse of all sorts. | Water should he applied after the liarnv V?fiu Knnn onnlio/l Applications of borax in the horse ^ stable and cow barn should be fre- ^ quent and regular. These are the L two principal sources of flies and, accordingly, of a number of kinds of disease perms, since they furnish the flies which carry the perms, ^^THEoTnRKrnrBL?^^ " IvPH b j REMEDY FOR men: I ' j AT fOUfl DRUGGIST. f J mm f Headachy, Dizzy, Bilious, ''Cascarets' our Liver is full of Iiile; liowo!: Clogged, Stomach Sour, Tongue Coated, Breath Bad Get a ten cent box now. You're bilious! You have a throb tig sensation in your head, a ba?. ,stc in your mouth, your eyes burn >ur skin is yellow, with dark ring: lder your eyes; your lips are par led. No wonder you feel ugly can and ill-tempered. Your systen full of bile not properly passec F, and what you need is a cleaning i inside. Don't continue being ; lious nuisance to yourself and thosi ho love you, and don't resort t< irsh physics that irritate and injure emember that most disorders of th< omach, liver and bowels are cure; r morning with gentle, thorougl iscarets?they work while you sleej 10-cent box from your druggisi ill keep your liver and bowels i--an omach sweet, and your head cleai r months. Children love to tak< iscarets because they taste goot id never gripe or sicken. icriff Takes Still?Davis of Ocone< Makes Successful Raid. Seneca, Feb. 28.?Sheriff Davis, ir wn yesterday, announced the cap re Thursday night of a still, its op ators and products on L. Vernci'> ace near the Tugaloo river. Th? eriff got wind of the operations am ith one of his deputies,, Fred Brown ant over to that side Thursday af moon. He says that this is the first tim i has ever taken a gang in the ver\ :t, that he has frequently goiter ere just after they got through, o< st as they were starting up but thi< me he watched the.m for some timthe actual process. When the of ?ers had tired of watching eacl abbed his man in the collar a' r rew him down. The moonshi> ' ere taken so i!omi>Uuly l?y"*Su?Vi < at they readily surrendeded. The' ptured several gallons of the fi' j hed product. ! NO REASON FOR IT i i rhen Union Citizens Show a Way There can be no reason why an| sader of this who suffers the tor ires of an aching back, the annoy ice of urinary disorders, the pain id dangers of kidney ills will fail t ed the words of a neighbor wh is found relief. Read what a Unio tizen says: Mrs. R. N. Sprouse, 203 W. Mai t., Union, says: "i was in a ba ay with kidney trouble; I felt nor aus and my health was shattere< he pains in the small of my bac ere terrible and they seemed t uther me more at nijrht. I alway It thirsty and never seemed abl > r*et enough water. The kidne jcretions passed too often and I ha jch bad dizzy spells that often i did not catch hold of something would have fallen. I doctored fo ix months and finally a friend tol io to try Doan"s Kidney Pills, ot some from the Palmetto Dru o. and after I had taken one box, ?lt relieved. I kept on until I ha sed six boxes and by that time a iirns of kidney complaint left mi ince then, when I have noticed th lightest sipn of trouble, Doan's Ku ey Pills have fixed me up in fin hape." Price 50c, at all dealers. Don imply ask for a kidney r< medyet Doan's Kidney Pills?the sam hat Mrs. Sprouse had. Foster-Mi urn Co.. Prons.. P"ffr<lo. N. Y. ST. HELENA UNDER WAY. Charleston, Feb. 28.?With a cara f 7 000 ton* of supplies and cloth'n antribution by people of the Care nas and (!?.o''_ria, th-' Relyium reii< lea ner. Sr. Helena sailed out < harleston hart or thi ; morninj* baun t?r Rotterdam. Formal exercise 'a rn Iwtlil Avi luiird nn WncViinfrt<in i'rthday, Gov. Manning, State chaii lan of the n Tmanent commissio i)r relief of Belgium, being the prir ipal speaker. SOLDS& IaGRIPPI f - O dose? tvill hrea ny rtfKc of OnWc tV driver, C?:c ; I?iC:;v.V'iei \t nc\i rn tho i?vc r*t - v t.ri (Y.lcr.trl ;*n<! doc3 tic M T; i;Ov? %-r *' i Sc. A bachelor says love is a capsul sed to disguise the bitterness < latrimony. PROFESSIONAL NOTICE That, the public may know on th rst of January 1915, I decided < harge for visits in town, $2.00 ar harge for night visits in town, $2.( nd upward, according to service endered. J. G. Going, M. D wmmm ^ i t Shine Brii'nJirs the Smile of Satisfact In the "Easy,eg-Opening" Box. F. DALLEY )fcO.( Ltd., BUFFALO, N. * m'ftnim .n>v ., ,\i| SANTUC > (Lel'et over from last week, i Santudn, l-'eb. 2.'{.?Can Februi " March 1 -riNo, but April May. The r iast week looked like F< ruary, ftipurch, April and May. Seconqd Sunday the Presbytcri congregation used the Baptist chur 1 and thca pastor, Rev. Fulton, preai . 'cd a li tie sermon, fie is a go * preacher. A sill under the Fresh - terian church has given away ai ? the peobple feared a crowd wou i cause !a collapse, so the Baptist o 1 | fcred jth?> use of their building unl > I ,i ?? ^. me n pairs were made. 1 1 hftve seen again lately a di ~ cussioti as to Lincoln a martys. would like to ask if a martyr, why or how? Was John Wilkes Booth 2 Northern man or Southerner? 1 Northern sympathizer or Southern 1 Was he in favor of slavery or or "> posed to it? t. I put in some good work last wee "? especially from my point of vie\ r and oie day I thought I would whe ; my apetite so let in to fell a swoe 1 gum ree about 20 inches througl and oie of the toughest in Uniot countjand when I got through, sucl ' a kee edge was on my appetite that iy lunch was shaved off t h j face c the earth. Ever hear of a tree Ue that? It 1 reported that some white men . and rgroes were out Sunday evt.. , ing ai somehow declared war, a la j Europ A white man unlimhered his b siege gun and began to bom\ bard negro, firing three shots, but the igro took the gun away from , him. When they all found who had , the *.n they sailed awav for home 1 to p new supplies and the negro r whoaptured the gun proceeded to . let ? rural police on the scran, j See oats were sowed the last twveeks but the morning fr?o"s 1 ke1 the wetness locked in so that j I tbJand did not dry so fast, oven | uir the sun we had. Some wheat but I believe it is entire ly'too late for wheat. I am glad iome was sowed near around me, for [ am going to watch it and see ho*\ it will do. T did not wish to experiment with mine, f failed to get anv 3owod last fall, was cut off by the >*ains. I have a few cents locked im in seed wheat but T am (ro>*ng ?. ;reat it with carbon-bisulphide to <eep out weevils and sow next fall J if 1 am living and doing business.) ( Hey Denver ^oukkern Agrieulturi?t. To wink of death without eternal 1 if ? J W'o make Nature's evele less thai. . ; \ fun, 1 '.ikelvinter without spring, or germ ' " ;less seed; j ] 1 A i---"' , i '111 untold; a m'racl" 'Vith^it meaning. So our hearts 1 ( Inust road I " Intq this yearly waking deeper hhings ^ssur?g lls our faith is not in vain, J Audi lot in vain hope's sweet im- a if L c yinings. b nII.L f AY $900 FOft e \ SIMS CASE WITNESSES 1 tAmonij the items in the state ap,Dpriatit)n act of the last session of ^ p general assembly was a provision e" the payment of witness fees in ? C. !'. Sims disbarment proceed,*s, which occurred about a year n>. The appropriation necessary < this purpose aggregated over 4 ,0. \ ~ J ,Ve have some special X .gains to offer in Pianos v i Player Pianos. Shipped ?!ct from the factory. A F t * I ^al card or enquiry in i lion, will give you the in- j . nation?its interesting.! \ about them. iter Music Co.! ONESVILLE, S. C. 152 i ? ?ANNOU Z The New T s OL-.IV h?yl_ WE ANNOUNCE AN AMAZING ,',,1 A typewriter oixitjicrixcclhitcc, v Id (moments that mark the zenith of f- vel of beauty, speed and easy ac Lil raised to the ?/th power. 'Idle OLlVl-jR No. 7 embodies a and new self-acting devices never > A leap in advance which places Th a time. So smooth in action, so !i V that experts are amazed. A mode ' lightful ease of operation. A model that means a higher st k and better service. v The No. 7 is now on exhibit and : t Agencies throughout the United St t i i i The new model has more improve- same ments, refinements and new uses than fli we can even enumerate here. the f The "cushioned keyboard" with out , "anchor keys" and new automatic y0 features mean less work for the hand less strain on the eyes, less manual tvpe, ind mental effort. With all of these masterly mechan- WOIUj cal improvements we have made the a nachine more beautiful and symmet- tVneV deal. From every standpoint the M.IVKR No. 7 attains superlative ex ellence. doNothinpc yovi could wish for has It >een omitted. The new devices, re- tyPev inements, improvements and conven- ?l"h r onces found on the No. 7 represent wnt,r n enormous outlay and vastly in- etc., s rease in value?the price has not auto it een advanced one penny. We shall Yo veil continue in force our populai for t! 7-Cents-a-Day purchase plan, the Conve The OLIVER Ty\ Hiver Typewriter Building I Ready For 1 t Peoples Undert f Funeral Directors ant Have opened thoir c~ * ... n>i? ior n y ready to serve the public with a >> line of undertaking goods. Plione 210 Old P ' S I. w. EDGAR, r\ * A HOUSE A> FqrSaieat^Wa Property in the heart Every modern convei For Full Information A THE TIMES O 3 11?- BLACK ?1 WHBTvt' i-#^ J ^' *? :-^?l'.?fo\rL*i. V1 iftL "NCING? vpewriter ER NO. / MOOKl ?TV.,, ni'-, - ..a. ? x tie \ r I. I \ i'yii ISO. a ^ith automatic devices and retypewriter progress. A marit ion. Typewriting efficiency ill previous Oliccr innovation* before seen on any typewriter, e Oliver ten years ahead of its rat in touch, so easy to run. >1 that means to the typist deandard of typewriting, longer sale at all Oliver Branches and ates. as on previous Oliver models, e OLIVER No. 7, equipped with amous Printype, if desired, withextra charge. u owe it to yourself to see (he machine before you buy any vriter at any price. Note tn*> ly, speed and easy action, its erful automatic devices. Try it ny work that is ever done on vriters. Try it on many kinds >rk that no other typewriter will is a significant fact that the /riter that introduced such epnaking innovations as visible ig, visible reading, Printype, should be the first to introduce latic methods of operation. ii can rent an Oliver Typewriter iree months for four dollars nient at home. >ewriter Co. Chicago Business! t ?? ?> akisiji Co. |t I Embalmcrs I T usiness mid are now y new and up-to-date ?* i ? f ostoliice Buiidini] ^ /w /luxiager. Y v IP LOT ir Prices of city lience pply at I FFICE |