"01 all sad words of tongue or pen, The saddest are these, it might have been." How often are these words on the lips of men who didn't act at the proper time. It is too late after the fire. The only time is now. And we are the ones to insure your property, because 1. We put you in only the best companies. 2. We never fail to keep your policy in force. 3. We extend you every accommodation. Savings, Loan & Trust Company, IXSURANCE DEPARTMENT. English and Richardson. Managers. A BOOK OF INTEREST the most absorbing one of all greater than any work of fiction is a bank book. Its tale is never too long nor its pages too many, and the long row of figures so dry in other books are intensely inter esting. Kut in order to enjoy its pages each man must have one of his own. You can not borrow this book. You must own it. You can do this by opening an account with the Savings, Loan & Trust Co., which numbers among its customers many of the best people of Union county, both rich and poor. And the weather man says: "Cold doings between now and April first." That means weeks of discomfort without a warm house or office. You can work better or rest better with a warm, comfortable house, such as comes only from a steady fire. Our high grade coal (no trash and cinders) makes the best fires. You may still buy much without risk. Phone 279. We do the rest. Monroe Ice and Fuel Company. OF THEM, STRAIGHT AND FINE. 40 Our buyer has come in from the West with a big lot of fine Farm Mules and Horses, especially selected for the needs of our farmers. It is a good lot of animals, and you can get just what you want out of them. Remember that every 1 V , animal we sell is guar- ' " l . I anteed a miresented I ' fX-f'','-'" p.: , - ' . -V.' '-. ,' f " t-i Come right along and see them. It will be our delight to please you. We have been selling stock all our lives and we know what our people want. Armfield Bros. A BREATH OF THE PAST. A VUitor Describes what One May 5c and Hear on Going to the Home of a Qood Old Woman in South Carolina. T. the Editor of Thr Jtmrna : In a little house on the plantation of Mr. IL J. Funderburk there lives an old lady who, more man any one we have ever seen, give one a glimpse into the past, a hint of the Roneby days when this country was in its in fancy. Stepping in the door of her hum ble borne one bright winter evening we were kindly invited to take seats while she finished preparing her evening meal, which consisted of some nicely fried meat and a small cake of bread cooked in the fire place in an old fashioned skillet The small repast, however, looked and smelled very appetizing. We have come, said I, "to see some of the things we have heard of you having had so long if you don't mind showing them. Aunt Clary. "No," said she, "I don't mind." And so she sat and talked to us about those long gone days and seemed to take pleasure in showing to us the things she has had so long. Her father was Mr. Harkle Harris and married Miss Elizabeth Davis. They lived about two miles from the present town ot l'ageland, h. (J. Unto them were born ten children. "Aunt Clary" is the only living member of that large family. In the days of her girlhood she says that deer were plentiful about here and she very often helped her father clean them for cooking. There were no cooking stoves, no machines, no buggies and no baby cradles in those days. And yet the babies slept just as soundly and smiled just as sweetly and were just as happy in their little home-made boxes with their rockers to them as the babies are now in their silk lined carriages, ah tanning tools were made on the farm then and they milked in vessels known as the "milk piggin," one of which Aunt Clary has now. It is 50 years old. They churned in wooden churns then, too. They didn't raise much wheat in those days and what they raised was thrashed out with poles and so they only ate biscuit onco a week, every Sunday morning for breakfast. There were no hats for the women, and so they all wore sunbonnets to church. Aunt Clary remembers when folks here first began to eat onions, okra. tomatoes and blackberries. She says they didn't know how to cook the berries and so cooked the pies without any sugar and ob.how bitter they were. One old doctor got wrathy and went to cursing because folks were ing onions and tomatoes, be cause," said he, "now they will stop having the fever. Poor doctor! Happy people. Will some one take the hint? Good whiskey could bo bought then at 30 cents a gallon. Wonder if anybody wishes they had lived then? If ycu do I wish you had too. "Aunt Clary" has a dress that her mother wove and wore, and a spin ning wheel that she uses yet. She has white counterpanes that she picked the cotton from the seeds and spun it and wove it herself. She doesn t know the date of her birth, but was married at the 8ge of twenty-seven to Mr. Thomas Dees, Rev. Jackson Stevens, a Methodist minister, performing the ceremony. She has the first set of plates she went to housekeeping with. They are white with a blue edge. She also has two curious looking little pitchers that were bought before the civil war. She has her wedding dress. She never Lad her picture taken in her life. Her busband died in the fall after the war closed from some disease contracted during the war. She never married any more, but worked faithfully and raised her only child, a three-year-boy. He is living in Union county, North Car olina. She has lived a pure, spotless life through all the years, and we believe that when she embarks on the un known sea all will be well with her soul. May she be spared to live many years yet, and when the end of her long life comes, may she meet her dear old friends that she talks so kindly about who have been gone so many years. When "Aunt Clary" was a girl they had to sell their cotton in Che raw, S. C, and do their marketing there, as Monroe was not much more than a place where the roads crossed. EDS. V. Fl'NIKRIll'RK. Took All His Money. Often all a man earns coca to doctors or for medicines, to cure a stomach, liver or kidney trouble that Dr. Kings New Life Pills would quickly cure at slight cost. Best for dyspepsia, in digestion, biliousness, constipation, jaundice, malaria and debility. 25c., at English Drug Company's. Good Receipt Book for ten cents at The Journal office. BEE S LAXATIYE COUGH SYRUP KILIIVtS COUQHS AND COLDS Dr. Muea Auu-faia Pill, relieve pain Narva. A woman went 'o I be telephone of fice milh a kirk. She saki she tried fur half an hour to c4 the acaaer to a telephone rail aud ahe wanted to know the reason wb.r. "What la your naniberV ased the manager. "Ob, hsre no phone oorseiTes," was the astonishing reply. -I was Mine my oeljhbor'a." Kansas City Journal. Won't Need a Crutch. When Editor J. P. Soasman of Cor nelius. N. C, bruised his leg badly, it started an ugly sore. Many salves and ointments proved worthless, then Bucklen's Arnica Salve healed thor oughly. Nothing is so prompt and sure for ulcers, boils, burns, bruises, cuts, corns, sores, pimples, eczema or piles. 25c., at English Drug Co. s. The Fountain Head of Life Is The Stomach A ana who has a weak and impaired tfoaaach and ho dors aot properly difeat his food will sooa and that his blood has become waak aad iatpovamhed, aad that his whole body is improperly aad asMmfiearly aonraaed. Dr. picaeea coldem medical discoyemt mtakea fe atomtaem treat, promote fe oar a ttotlr. la Ice: reotorea tke Imat appetite, aaetee maelmllatlom perfect. larltoratca tkm liter aad mmrttlea mm eaHekea the ml 4. It la t km treat klood-awaker, Itaam-mmll4ep mm rcataratlr. merre tonic. It mtakea mtem atraat Im mor, act! re la malm mm cool Im laffrmeamU This "Discovery" is a para, flyceria extract of Aaiericaa saedical roots? absolutely Irea (root alcohol aad ail injurious, habit-forminj drugs. AU HS iai mi teats are printed oa its wrappers. It has no relationship with secret nostra int. In every in ( red tent it endorsed by the leaders ia aU the schools af net ic inc. Uoa't accept a secret nostrum at a substitute lor this tiaae-provea rented y oa iwri corosmo. Ass roua HrwHeoas. They most know of many cures ma J by it during past 40 years, riht in your awa Beihborhood. World's Dispensary Medical Association. Dr. R.V. Pierce. Pres., Buffalo, N. Y. The Doctor Man will Getcha If You Don't Watch Out All shoes get their hardest knocks and go to pieces twice as quickly in the wet of winter as in the dry weeks of summer. Muddy, slushy, wet walking is far more responsible for sickness than damp or cold air. A good pair of rubber boots, overshoes or arctics will make your winter less costly. Melrose ttl BOSTON XmmW&MWWA b' the trade mark. VSliWlm. If you, dealer doesn't alMW2m "J will MALDEN RUBBER. SHOEi AND COv Maiden Rubbers, Arctics. Boots are the surest "ounce of prevention." Made stout and strong of the purest Para gum and durable cloth fabrics, they easily outwear, two to one, any other brands of rubber foot wear. Made in all styles, from infants' over shoes to men's hip boots. Easily identified handle these liranJs, writ tit (hat you are supplied. rs, Write for Price List CRADDOCK-TERRY CO. I mVJ iVhw aw m m a $tmt&V LyncisDuro, va. Largest Manufacturers and Disiribtitert of Shoes In the South ric Gone after More Horses, Mules and Brood Mares. Ma J. W. Fowler, our buyer has gone to the western markets and expects to have a fine lot of stock in this weeh Come and see them. In the mean time, with Buggies and Vehicles of all kinds, we can make the price that will do you good. New Harness sold, traded, or old re paired. Anything in the Horse, Mule, Vehicle, or Harness line to suit. Cash or credit; sale or swap Nice Livery Turnouts on short notice. Don't lose money by failing to see us. Fowler t Lee. Be Up-to-Date Staple FST rn