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An Inv Foi Fai The farmer's Saving A the question of security she first consideration. During the years of si this bank, it has gained th people of Union and vicini judicious policy to which it IlKPORE A REGULAR E INGS 1)EI Ii NICH6/ COM EMSLIE NICHOLSON, Pre> M. A. MOO I MRS. HARTS TEE FOR TEETHII Mrs. Hart's Teething Powders best remedies on the market for t are perfectly harmless, they conts injurious drugs. They cure by dc ? teria as well as changing the natu i bowels to a natural condition, j If your baby is sick from teeth ! it Mrs. Hart's Teething Powders a SOLD AT DRUi NEESE MEDICINE SCHOOL CHILDREN FED BY A. F. S. Berlin, July 1.?Complain that more school children of the middle class than the poorer class parents were fed by the American Friends' Society was m:lle by the independete socialist members at a municipal council meeting at Spandau. The burgomaster replied that the children were selected by the school doctors without regard to class strictly in accordance with the relief commissioners' instructions and experience had shown that middle class children were more under nourished than those of the less well class. f Of Queen Victoria's pranddauphters three are Queen Consorts of Spain, Norway and Roumania. MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED WIZARD MO PS can be had in two styles. The du.st mop is chemically treated ; and absorbs dust without scattering it. The polish map is treated with Wizard Polish. It cleans and polishes the floor at the same time. Wizard mops aire the convenient trianple shape which pives them access to every nook and corner. They have the adjustable elbow handle for ease in use. Wizard Mops are priced from $1.00 to $2.00. Hardware Leaders, THE UNION HARDWARE CO., UNION, S. C. L1K9V SKILLED application of vulcanizing heats, SKILLED workmanship in making the repair, FINE, proven materials used?make our EXPERT TIRE REPAIRING thoroughly dependable and lastingly satisfactory. , l^'t us prove our claims. Smith Vulcanizing Co, PHONE ?S. , I ==\ estment mers ccount is an investment and luld therefore be a matter of iccessful service rendered by e complete confidence of the ty, because of the safe and constantly adheres. DEPOSITOR IN OUR SAV'ARTMENT. INK AND TRUST PANT i. J. ROY FANT. Vice Pre*. >RE, Cashier. THING POWDERS I CHILDREN. | have proven to be one amonj* the m eething children. 1st, because they Fj dn no opiates, bromides, chloral or K lO f n/\T7 in? vMi/lWrvkAn 1 I ? ' uvivjui^ unvtuuc^, genua eft nil uiftt- M re of the juices of the stomach and Eg ing, stomach or bowel trouble give | nd it will Ret well. jg G STORES OR? I ^ CO., Hartwell. Ga. I AS FOR FARMS FROM STRAW, UNCLE SAM HOPES By Belle Roberts Washington, June 29.?Gas for heat, light and power on every grain belt farm, from the farm's own sources of supply, is an early possibility . Every farm that has waste straw, corn stalks, or even weeds, may become independent of the oil barons. The Bureau of Chemistry has produces a satisfactory gas or motor fuel from wheat straw, at i?s experiment grounds, at Arlington, Va.t and is now working on other neiu refuse, such as straw from oats, rye, and other grains, also dry weeds and cornstalks. A ton of wheat straw will make enough gas to equal in heat or power units, 40 gallons of gasoline. It possesses combustible elements verv sim ilar to coal gas, anu has a blue flame. The development of a pas for the unit farm rather than commercial manufacture is the aim. The department of agriculture hopes to find a way for each farm to utilize the kind of straw and waste that predominate in the place. At least 20 million tons of straw are burned or wasted annuaiiy in the United States FLOATING FAIR ORGANIZED Rome, July 1.?A floating fair has been organized by the Italian government and will visit Tunis, Algiers, Tangier, Lisbon, Barcelona, Marseil ius arm uenoa. it will carry samples of all thet products Italy can export and will remain from four to seven days at each port. Orders will be dispatched to producers by wireless, this enabling the buyers to receive answers the same day. If the undertaking is successful, as it is confidently expected it will be, another floating fair will be sent to North America, another to Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina and a third to Antilles, Venezuela, Peru and Chili. CRIED HIS LAST MESSAGE Provincetown, Mass., July 1.? Provincetown's town crier, said to be | the last of the profession in America, has hung up his hell and announced that he has cried his last message. For 22 years Walter Smith has plodded the two miles of the town's only street, announcing the time and place of events of internet from ??mnloa of fish to the election of a president. Now, in his 70th year, he says he is through, and there is no one in siprht to succeed him. The old crier's last cry was for the reopening of the Church of the Pilgrims founded in 1714 and which had heen closed for a year. On the northern coast of Scotland it is a favorite theory with the fishing and seafaring people that in a storm three waves are strong and violent, while the fourth is comparatively weak and less dangerous. Five Minute that* on Our Presidents By JAMES MORGAN (Copyright, 1920, by Jamas Morgan.) A GREAT FRIEND 1861?March 4, Abranam Lincoln inaugurated sixteenth president, age fifty-two. April 14, Fort Sumter surrendered. April 15, Lincoln called for 75,000 volunteers. 1862?-Sept. 22, emancipation proclamation. 1863?Nov. 19, Lincoln's Gettysburg address. 1864?Nov. 8, Re-elected president. 1865?April 14, shot by John Wilkes Booth. April 15, died, aged fiftyfive. n? 5B Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents By JAMES MORGAN O (Copyright, 1920, by Junes Morgan.) LINCOLN AWAKENED 1809?Feb. 12, Abraham Lincoln born to Thomas and Nancy Hanks Lincoln, near Hodgenville, La Rue County, La. 1816?Moved to Indiana. 1830?Moved to Illinois. 1835-43?In the Illinois Legislature. 1847-9?In Congress. 1858?July 24, challenged Douglas to the great debate. November, defeated for the Senate. 1880?May 18, nominated for President by the Republican national convention at Chioago. " THE iron-throated cannon of th Washington navy yard, breakln the stillness of a March dawn in 185 with its 100 exultant roars over th repeul of the Missouri compromise awakened Lincoln to the great mis sion for which his whole life had beei an unconscious preparation. After i single term in congress, where his crlt i(%m of the Mexican war in the mlds of that conflict had left him unavail able for a second term, and afte providentially failing to obtain the snui berth of commissioner of the genera land ofllce, he had retired to his ding; law ofllce in Springfield. The wiping out of the dead Iln< against the spread of slavery arousei him from his indifference to politico questions and drew him from his re tlremcnL "I know there is a God am that he hates injustice and slavery,' he said simply to a friend. "I see thi storm coming. I know his hand is li 1L If he has a place and work fo: me?and I think ho has, I believe I an ready." The cannon that called Lincoln t< his duty also was the signal gun tha heralded the birtli of the Rcpubllcai party. Joining the new party, he be mm?- * wMJH9H& Tt Ifet ' * * -Ammf Lincoln In 1850. came at once its leader in Illinois to his own surprise, the second mm in the balloting fot its candidate foi vice president in 185(5, and its candl date for senator in 1858 against Ste phen A. Douglas, the author of the re peraL While Lincoln made ready for tha campaign, as always in every hour o decision, he retired within himself. H< consulted no one and gave no hint o his line of attack until he called to gether a dozen friends and read t< them his opening speech, which begai with those immortal words: "A hous< divided against itself cannot stand. believe tlmt this government canno ?idure permanently half slave am half free ... It will become al one thing or all the other." Every man in the little gronp warn ed him that If he delivered the speed it would defeat him for the senate "If I had to draw a pen across mj record and erase my whole life fron sight,** he quietly replied, "and I ha< one poor gift or choice left as to who I should save from the wreck, I shouh choose that speech and leave it to thi world unerased." Douglas carried a few more leglsla ttve districts and was re-elected, bu Lincoln led in the aggregate populai vote. Lincoln had met his Hunker Hill The great unknown, who had dared t< cross swords with the foremost chain plon of the repeal, piqued the curios ity of the country. Accepting an invi tatlon to speak in New York, hli Cooper union address established till intellectual and moral right to leai the nation. Nevertheless, when zealous neigh bora had first entered him as a eandi date for president, he protested thai he was not fit for the place. Until th< convention of 1800 actually met In Chi cago, his name seldom was inentlonec for the honor outside his own state Two-thirds of the delegates renlly fa ored the nomination of Willlum H Seward, but as so often happens ir politics, the very pre-einlnence of th? New York senator made him unavail able. r~ the end Idncoln was nomi nated largely because he was the least known man en the Hat of candidates I stone walls of the Whit* ' | X House no more shut Lincoln in e from his fellows, from their hope* p and sorrows and pride, than did the 4 unhewn logs behind which he shivered 8 In the cabin home of his youth. One >t night he dreamed that he was In c (. crowd, when some one recognized hire a as the president and exclaimed In a surprise: "He is a very common look' . Ing man.** Whereupon he answered: t "Friend, the Lord prefers commor |. looking people. That is the reason h< T makes so many of them." ' Lincoln liked people, and he always I kept In touch with the mass. He did if not have to take Jthe word of polltt I clans or newspapers about whut the 9' country was thinking. He went t< II the source. 11 As he finished his dally wrestle wltl J senators and the big-wigs, he plunged j with zest Into what he called his "pub >? 11c opinion bath." Seated In his chair a with one leg thrown over Its arm, h< a received the motley crowd that poured r In through the wide open door of hit j office. Those who approached him li | awe found themselves at ease In th? ^ presence of a friend, whose mannei t said to every one what he said In c ( speech to a regiment: "I happen tem t porarlly to occupy this big White House. I am a living witness thai Abraham Lincoln. any one of your children may look t< * come here as my father's child has.' 1 The man fairly exhaled democracy f fraternity, equality. Frederick Dong las said that Lincoln was the onl] white man he ever met who did no L show consclonsly or unconsciously tha be recognized Ills color. ' Sympathy flowed In a constan f stream from Its fountain in this grea 9 heart. A mother's tears, a baby's cry f a father's plea, a crutch or an empt] " sleeve never failed to move Lincoln 9 "If he has no friend, I'll be his friend,' 1 he said mm be stopped the shooting ct. 9 a soldier, under sentence of a court I martial. : "My cor girl," he sold to a womai ? who pleaded for the life of her soldlej 1 brother, "you have come here with n< governor or senator or member od - congress to speak in your cause; yot l seem honest and truthful and yot ' don't wear hoops, and I'll be whippet 1 If I don't pardon hlin." 1 Lincoln's office w?s almost his prisoi 1 cell through four terrible years. Tht * shouts of his two little boys at plaj * always were Welcome notes of Joy t< 9 their care-weighted father. He nevei | objected to their noisily bursting li - upon nirp, ami often he Joined th< t children In their boisterous games li r the White House grounds. Tn the dark days when the naiioi . Itself was at death's door, one of th< J boys died. For weeks the gricvlni - father strove In vain to win a spirit 01 - resignation, dropping his work for f - day at a time and surrendering te hi: i sorrow. Doubtless the fortitude h< * gained at last In that wrestle wltl 1 himself became part of the heroic faltl | which lifted him above the genera -'despair when the fortunes of th< . > Union sank lowest, t) After Willie's death, the other b?j i received a double share of paternul af fectlon. Tad wus In the habit of golnf I to his father In the evening and mak . lng a report of all that had happened . since morning, usually falling usleei . in the midst of his prattle. Laying I the little fellow on the floor by th? j side of his desk, Lincoln returned t< . his heavy tasks until his own long daj . was cow/j, whon he took his sleeping t boy oo his shoulder and carried bin , off to bod. 1 Feeliri Mean? * Headache? Nausea? Dizziness? Bilious9 nessf Constipation? Lazy and good for nothing most of the time? What you need is a shaking-up of your "innards" and a gingering-up all over. The thing that'll fix you up is: * 9 Dr.THACHEflfS LIVER JW blood SYRUP An old doctor's prescription ; in use for 68 years. Enlivens your Liver, purifies * and enriches your Blood. Regulates yourBozuels and is a fine family TONIC. Get a bottle from your drug store and you'll soon be Feel in Fine!.. THE FAUST INSTANT COFFEE AND TEA IS A POWDER We make a very large pot of Coffee or Tea at a time, then take thie delicate aromatic powder out of same, discard the water, the grounds or the leaves, and have this Delicious Dry Powder, which we put in a can and hermetically seal it, then it is ready for you to put in a cup, ADD BOILING WATER, and Like Magic it makes the most Delicious Cup in the most economical way. There is Nothing Wasted when you buy the FAUST INSTANT COFFEE and TEA. You get the best, you get all the goodness that is in the Coffee or Tea. It is Absolutely Sanitary, Economical and Wholesome. TRY IT. AND BE CONVINCED. C. F. BLANKE TEA & COFFEE CO., ST. LOUIS, MO. Packers of the Celebrated FAUST COFFEE, TEA, SPICE and CHILE POWDER. || Mr. Ford Owner I Let us put the famous Goodrich 31x3.75 tire on your car. This * is an oversize tire at the same price of a regular Ford tire, while our 3. ! present stock lasts and to introduce them. * GET YOURS NOW AND AVOID TIRE TROUBLES . J ? I L % X I Hughes & Jenkins t t Union, S. C., Gadberry St., Phone 161 ;; .? OOHT BE HALF A MAN OR WOMAN / / TAKE \ 'rij'l MALTOGEN ^ AJ "King of Tonics" I J Loss of weight and energy handicaps one for V \ T* / Life's battles. Poor appetite, indigestion, body 1 IT . I fatigue?these are the symptom? of an iinppvcr- \ /\ f ishcd blood supply, JBffiT ^ MALTOGEN V ' \ ?Increases the appetite, aids digestion, is on R; [ \ cliuiinant of body-toxins (poisons), and promotes fl ? '1 proper food assimilation. Thus the Wood i< E, . ' N cleansed of impurities, and body-tissues nour- ^f; , I ished back to a healthy condition, quickly restor- ?- Vj '1 I ing normal health and increased weight. WJJ ' I j Maltogen is a pharmaceutical compound of r } ' ; fj Malt Ext, (ientian, Iron, C'ascara, .Strychnine ! ? 1 and other ?pro]>erties recommended by many *| j J prominent pfiysicians. It is the one complete iJ >. I tonic for the body system. g i M PRICE $1.20 I' [ @ For Sale In Union V t if by \ ; u Glymph's Pharmacy \ a APPLYING F()K PASS? closes his pastorate next Sunday, July f POUTS TO U. S. 4. From Lancaster, Mr. Murchinso* > goes to Columbia where he is execur Manila, P. I., June 30.?Young tive secretary of the Columbia Theo rinpinos are applying xor passports logical seminary. During Mr Murchito the United States in increasing son's stay in Lancaster he has made numbers, acording to a statement many friends, not only among his own from the executive office of the gov- congregation, but among all with ernment. Most of these are students whom he has come in contact He is who announce their intention of work- ioved and revered by all who know ing their way through school. It is him. The purpose of this meeting was sa.d that the applications for pass- to express Master's appreciation ports passed on daily for omc time of Mr Murchinson's services here and have numbered from ten to 50. to b|t] hjm GodBpced jn hia new ,d Nearly all of those Who have pass- of iaH0r.?Lancaster News. ed the examination entitling them to . ? government aid while pursuing their RETURN TO PARIS studies in tfre United States have de- 0' parte and those no wapplying for Paris, .July 1.?Mrs. Richard Monspassports are going on their own re- field, widow of the American actor, sources. ^ and Colin Clements, of New York, poet _ ~~ ' m ' and iplaywfcjghl, >have returned to GOES TO NEW WORK Paris after being held prisoners by On Sunday night, June 20, the con- the Turkish Nationalists at Urfa, gregations of the Lancaster churches Mespotamia, for three months. They met in the Presbyterian church to hold have been doing relief work among a farewell service for Rev. Hugh R. the Armenians for the past year. They ?*> Murchinson, who has been pastor of escaped to Jerablus, on the Euphrates, the Presbyterian church here for the and from there were taken to Aleppo . past eight an one-half years and by friendly Arabs. t 4 i ' ' * .