The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, November 11, 1921, Image 3
'Fake Yeast Vitamon
Tablets To Clear
The Skin
Build Firm "Stay-There*' Flesh?Increase Energy.
If you want to quickly clean your skin and completion, put some firm healthy
flesh on your bones, iucrease your nerve force and power and look and feci 100
^ per cent, better, simply try taking two of Mastin's tiny yeast VITAMON Tablet*
^ with cach^meal and watch tho s *
Tablets contain liiglily,concentrated
yeast-vitainines as well as
the two other still more impor- ( ...
tant vitamincs (Fat soluble A * '," ^MyhgHl
and Water soluble C) and aro
now being used by thousands. \w fit r
They positively will not upset J s V/Yo
the stomach or cause gas, but, / S ??.' '/ ^ff?
on the contrary, arc a great aid (-^
to digestion, to overcome consti- ^ j' J
pation and as a general condi- ygi .* , *.'ArT ^^ESf
tioner of tho whole system. Pim- tf> *
pies, boils and skin eruptions AT I /
aeem to vanish like magic, the
complexion becomes fresh and
clear, the cheeks glow with ruddy TV
health, tho flesh becomes firm, 1\
the eyes bright. Mastin's VITA
MON Tablets are positively J
guaranteed to give you new r U M Yk
^ oalth, energy and ambition and ~
improve your appearance. Do W what us* *r* fins f**tur*? with an oily,
not accept imitations or Bubsti- mottled skin, flabby flash, sunken cheeks,
tut fa You can iret MnstinV pouches under th* eyes or careworn, sicklyvffiiMON
Esst-'r' ^
food druggist. L?
-m.MASTINS W
Are Positively Guaranteed
to Put On Firm Flesh,
Clear the Skin and Increase
MKOKigiiim. yeast Energy When Taken With
rauini Tablet1 Every Meal or Money Back
.. . . ?
1
j ARMISTICE DAY { \
I + p
1( Is our newest Legal Holiday?the day on which a J
?| "f
grateful people celebrate the victory of the self-goven.
ing peoples, won on European battlefields three years X j
"' i ?
aK?- X 5
" T
4 This bank joins in honoring this occasion, and in pay- V
' ' T '
. ^ ing tribute to those whose .courage and whose sacrifice 4 i
|! made it possible. T
| i I
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS n00,00? . | \
I b t
i NITHOI ION RANIf *, TRUST Pfl f t
y ~ Miviiv/iA/vii umiAv u. a ivvu i w. *
T Member Federal1 Reserve System.
KMSl.tE NICHOLSON, Pres.. M. A MOORE. Caxhier {
W S NICHOLSON. I? M. JORDAN. J ROY KANT
V* A
t Vlee President* - <>- ??
' r '
I ? '?! f~' \
FREE ALUMINUM WARE
We give coupons with each purchase. See our E
premium list. p
Special For Saturday j
25 lbs. Sugar $1.75 |
100 lbs. Sugar $6.50 I
Bran and Shorts $1.40 L
Horse Feed $2.00
Cash and you take it.
FRESH OYSTERS
FRESH PORK SAUSAGE
, HARRIS-WOODWARD COMPANY
?
Land Sale "
_ _ ' ' ?? , , For Best Results
I offer for sale my farm of 63
acres, located one mile from West ?jse
4 Springs on the Appalachian Highway;
good residence, containing five rooms ^ 'U
r and all necessary outounainga, gooa m>nAI ~ _
orchard, land lies comparatively level luArVU \i!K JT
and hioat of it in cultivation produc- W A
ing good crops. If you like to see this
Blace journey up the Appalachian f l\/p QTAPV
[ighway to one milt of West Springs ^ .
Cash sale only. For further par. REMEDIES
ticulara call on or write *
1218-6t JPm.'liney.aR.'2. Sold ly Druggist, and Chain
1 1
Caesar was a painting and gem ? ?? .. .
fancier. Subscribe to The Union Times.
r
\ -
' fTa&L. HiVw. \ ' .."v ? \
ADDRESS OF
PRESIDENT
At the Burial of an Unknown American
Soldier, Arlington Cemetery,
November 11, 1921.
Mr. Secretary of War and Ladies
and Gentlemen: We are met today
to pay the impersonal tribute. The
1 name of him whose body lies before
us tepk flight with his irtiperishr-ble
soul. We know not whence he came,
but only that his death marks hiiv
with the everlasting glory of an j
American dying for his country.
He might have come from any one
of millions of American homes. Some
mother gave him in her love and tenderness,
and with him her most cherished
hopes. Hundreds of mothers
are wondering today, finding a touch
of solace in the possibility that the
Nation bows in grief over tne body of
one she bore to live and die, if need
be, for the Republic. If we give rein
to -fancy, a score of sympathetic
chords are touched, for in this body
there once glowed the soul of an
American, with the aspirations and
ambitions of a citizen who cherished
life and its opportunities. He may
have been a native of an adopted son;
that matters little, because they glorii
d the same loyalty, they sacriliced
alike.
We do not know his station in life,
because from every station came the
patriotic response of the five millions,
l recall, the days of creating armies,
rg of shells and rain of bullets, men
. rcivi'u vne muraerous seas to re ich
iho battle lines for maintained nationality
and preserved civilization. The
ser\ ice flag marked n\ansion and cottage
alike, and riches were corgmon
to all homes in the consciousness of
service to country.
We do not know the eminence of
his birth, but we do know the glory of
ais death. He died for his country
and greater devotion hath no man
than this. He died unquestioning, un
c mplaining, with faith in his heart
and hope on his lips, that his country
should triumph and its civilization
.-.uvvive. As a typical soldier of this
r present at i v;> democracy, he fouglfl
; nd d'ed believing in the indisputa
be jestico <f his country's cause
C'o.is i: us of the world's upheaval, ap
liaising the magnitude of a war the
like of which had never horrified hu
nianity before, perhaps he believed hi:
to be a service destined to change the
tide of human affairs. '
In the death gloom of gas, the^urst
ing of shells and rain of bulets, men
face more intimately the great God
over all, their souls are aflame, and
consciousness expands and hearts nr?
searched. With the din of battle, the
glow of conflict, and the supreme triai
of courage, come involuntarily the
hurried appraisal of life and the contemplation
of death's great mystery.
On the threshold of eternity, many a
soldier, I can well believe, wondered
how his ebbing blood would color the
stream of human life, flowing on after
his sacrifice. His patriotism was none
the less if no craved more than triumph
of country; rather, it was greater
if he hoped for a victory for all
human kind. Indeed, I revere that
citizen whose confidence in the right
aousness of his country inspired be
lief that its triumph is the victory of
humanity.
This American soldier went foi*th t:
battle with no hatred for any people
D the world, but bating war and hat
ing the purpose of every war for conquest.
He cherished our nationa1
ights, and abhorred the threat of
n vvtnrl inn ??*
Mkitivu UUI.UIIHI/IUII, UUU 111 UIU lUUUl"
strom of destruction and suffering and
loath he fired his shot for liberation
of the captive conscience of the world.
In advancing toward his objective was
-omewhere a thought of a world
awakened; and we are here to testify
mdying, gratitude and reverence for
that thought of a wider freedom.
On such an occasion as this, amid
such a scene, our thoughts alternate
between defenders living and defenders
dead. A grateful Republic will
be worthy of them both. Our part is
o atone for the losses of heroic dead
bv making a better Republic for the
living.
Sleeping in these hallowed grounds
are thousands of Americans who have
given their blood for the baptism of
freedom and its maintenance, armed
exponents of the Nation's conscience
Ti is better and nobler for their deeds.
Burirl here is rather more than a sign
of tne government's favor, it is a
suggestion of a tomb in the heart of
the Nation, sorrowing for its noble
dead.
Today's ceremonies proclaim that
hero unknown is not unhonored.
We gather him to the Nation's breast,
within the shadow of the Capitol, of
the towering shaft that honors Washington.
the great father, and of the
exquisite monument to Lincoln, the
martyred savior. Here the inspirations
of yesterday and the conscience
of today forever united to make the
Republic worthy of his death for flag
and country.
Ours are lofty resolutions today, as
with tribute to the dead we consecrate
ourselves to a better order for
the living. With all my heart, I wish
we might say to the defenders who
survive, to mothers who sorrow, to
widows and children who mourn, that
no such sacrifice shall be asked again.
It was my fortune recently to see a
demonstration of modern warfare. It
is no longer a conflict in chivnlry, no
more a test of militant manhood. It
is only cruel deliberate, scientific destruction.
There was no contending |
enemy, only the theoretical defense of
a hypothetjc objective. But the atTHEN
Yc
YOUF
We are pleased to believi
surest method by which o
ance of the better man whi
Few men ever find their
velop more than a fraction
men ever reach the bed n
when a man begins to save
in him is a man who can
command that his wishes be
"Large Enough to Serve Any?
cjttiz
Nf A TTAN A
< ^
*
' . . I ,
'K \ /
tack was made with nl! ths rtlentl??*
methods of mod?rn destruction. There
was the rain of ruin from the aircraft
the thunder of artillery, followed
by the unspeakable devastation r
wrought- by bursting shells; there \
were mortars belching the:r bombs of *
desolation; machine guns concentrat- 1
ing their leaden storms; there was tho c
infantry, advancing, firing and fall- ?
ing?like men with souls sacrificing t
for the decision. The flying missiles
were revealed by illuminating tracers. e
so that we could note their flight and ^
appraise their deadlines?. The air
was streaked with tiny flames mark- e
ing the flight of massed destruction; ^
while the effectiveness of the theoretical
defense was impressed by the c
simulation of dead and wounded '
among those going forward, undaunt- . A
ed and unheeding. As this panorama '
of unutterable destruction visualized {)
the horrors of modern conflict, there '
grew on me the sense of the failure t
of a civilization which can leave its,
problems to such cruel arbitrament, F
Surely no one in authorby, with human
attributes and a full appraisal t
of the patriotic loyalty of his country
men, could ask the manhood of kingdom,
empire, or republic to make such
sacrifice until all reason had failed, v
until appeal to justice through uni'cr- F
standiner had been denied, until everv !
effort of love and consideration for n
fellow men had been exhausted, until S
freedom itself and in\ iolate honor had v
been brutally threatened. j s
I speak hot as a pacifist fearing
war, tut as enc who loves justiec and c
hates war. I speak a3 one who be- j
licvcs the highest function of govern- |
ment is to give its citizens the secur-1 .Ly
of peace, the opportunity to *
achieve, and the pursuit of happiness. ?
The loftiest tribute we can bestow
today?the heroically earned tribute
?fashioned in delib ?ratc conviction,
out of unclouded thought, neither
shadowed by remorse nor made vain
by fancies, is the commitment of this
Republic to an advancement never
made before. If American achievenent
is a cherished pride at home,
f our unselfishness among nations
is all we wish it to be, and ours is a
helpful example in the world, then let
as give of our influence and strength,
vea, of our aspirations and convictions,
to put mankind on a little higher
plane, exulting and exalting, with
var's distressing and depressing tragdies
barred from the stage of right- II
,-ous civilization. I
There have been a thousand defenses
justly and patriotically made;
a thousand offenses which reason ant?
righteousness ought to "have stayed,
^.et us beseech all men to join us in
seeking the rule under which reason
and righteousness shall prevail.
Standing today on hallowed ground,
conscious that all America has halted
o share in the tribute of heart and
mind and soul to this fellow American,
and knowing that tin; world is
luting this expression of the Repubiic's
mindfulness, it is fitting to say
hat his sacrifice, and that ol the mil
i.ons dead, snail not Le in vain. There H
must be, there shall be, the command- B
.ng voice of a conscious civilization B
againBt armed warfare. B
As we return this poor clay to its E
mother soil, garlanded by love and S
overed with the decorations that only fl
tational can bestow, I can sense the
slayers of our people, of all peoples,
ohat this Armistice Day shall mark
he beginning of a new and lasting
ra of peace on earth, good will
mong men. Let me join in that
prayer.
- Our Father who ?re-in~heavon, halowed
by Thy name. Thy kingdom
^ome, Tny will be done on earth, as
.t is in heaven. Give us this day our
iaily bread, and forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass
against us. And lead us not
.nto temptation, but deliver us from
[evil, for Thine is the kingdom, and the
power, and the glory, forever. Amen.
WOOLEN GOODS !
i
I give great care in cleaning. We
have been very successful in cleaning
all kinds of woolen goods, and
other heavy fabrics. Why *ake
chances on having your clothes cleaned
when you can profit by our ex
perience? Phone us and we will
call promptly and return your suit
looking just right in the shortest
time possible. Phone 107. We will
call and deliver your clothes in a dust
proof motorcycle, anywhere.
i n _ 1 B
names rressmg ana
Repair Shop.
Nicholson Bank Building.
PHONE 167
Agents For Two Dye Houses.
LAND SALE"
I ofTer my farm, containing one hun
tired acres, located within one mile of ^
West Springs, and within one-fourth
mile of the Appalachian Highway, be- r
tween Union and West Springs. Forty
or more acres in cultivation. Two
good tenant houses with outbuildings.
Land productive. Well watered. No
gullies. Will sell for part cash, balance
in two equal annual payments.
See or write me if interested.
J. C. McCravy,
1217-6t Jonesville, S. C-. R. 2.
Chinese merchants import thousands
of tons of used newspapers for
wrapping packages.
m Will Find
ISRLF
d that saving money is the
ne may seek the acquaint0
is the real man in us all.
iselves.' Few men ever de1
of their capabilities. Few
ock of understanding. But
money, ho soon learns that
enforce tribute of life, and
done!
-Strong Enough to Protect AH."
:ENv5
L BANK?
Kcfton L
Mln Madge Fa r entertained a I
lumber of friends Saturday night in *
lonor of Miss Lula Farr from Adamsmrg.
Those present were: Misses*
..ily, Mildred and Hawley Inman, Gee
i?d Seth Garner, Mark Fowler and
Smith Adams. All seemed to enjoy
he occasion. _
Miss Mary Sanders was the week- F
nd guest of her cousin. Miss Ora
Ulatns.
Miss Essie Howell is spending sev- y
ral days with her sister, Mrs. Akin *
idams, near Kelysl.
Mrs. Nancy Inman, who underwent
. very serious operation, is slowly
improving. She has many friends
vho wish her a speedy recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Inman, Browney ir
nd Van Howell, Wily Sanders, Smith p
Vdams spent Sunday at the home of d
his writer. g
Miss Madge Whitney and Willie tl
''arr spent Monday in Gaffney. ir
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Bailey and lit- tl
le son, Robert Farr, and Ollie Farr a
-pent Sunday at the home of Mrs. b
Travis McCuilough near WilkinsviUe. o:
Mrs. G. L. Inman spent a short 8;
vhile with her daughter, Mrs. R. C. j
'arr, Sunday. j y
H< well's school opened Monday n
rorning with Mr. and Mrs. Florence cl
Imith from Clifton as teachers. We b
irish them much success during the o
chool months. tl
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyle Garner and h
hildren were the week-end guests of h
liss Ida Gamer.
NO
Just Ev
We write this advertise
Sale business you see s<
our goods; and 1 am su
cheaper from me! Re;
15 and 25c Ginghams
12V> and 15c Outing
12i/> and 15c Bleaching __
15 and 25c Percale
All Wool Storm Serge, 44
All Wool French Serge __
Sweaters of every descrip
Good Overalls for
A Good Work Shirt for __
Baby Blankets
Baby Blankets
Baby Blankets
Good Blanket __ __ __
Good Blanket __
Better Wool Nap
Children's Wool Middy Sui
All Colors Crepe de Chine,
36 pairs of samplo Shoes,
lu more ot those good sar
last.
Remember, good peop!
above prices. We arc
ery pair is guaranteed
want Star Brand Shoe:
J. L
SEL
You must place your
Ford cars. The sales dcpai
yourself worry by placing
Realizing as well as yoi
much everybody wants a 1
a FORD on, and the seco
FORD and pay for it as h
Plan No. 1.?Pay cash i
Plan No. 2.?One-third
monthly payments with in
Think this over and we
with you and if you will
how liberal our terms are
J. W. LlPStt
J. L BOLTON
Many Human His
Tolmpur
Hire, Rich, Red Blood Nouru
Dise
Vaste Product* or Imparities Cat
Skin Disorders and i
How S. S. S. Clears the E
Your system is continually taking
i nutrition and throwing off waste
roducts. This process goes on all
uring life. But, sometimes the orans
do not properly function and
lese waste products, instead of passlg
out through the pores of the skin,
irough the kidneys and through the
limentary canal, are absorbed in the
lood. Then the blood becomes poisned,
and cannot properly nourish the
ystem.
Ill health sets in. You may lose
our strength ana vitality; or you
lay have rheumatic pains in the musics
and joints; or you may bo troulcd
with bad boils, sores or some
thur skin eruptions. All because of i
he poisonous waste products in the
lood. Nature now needs help. She
as done her best but i3 failing. A
SA1
ery Day
iment to show you there'
> much about. Compare
re you can buy it eve y
ad the prices below:
inches,
ition, from
its - yard
black and tan, to go as long ;
nple Ladies' Coat Suits at h?
!e, everything else is in
) exclusive agents for Sta
to be so!id leather, or ^
s, come to the Star Bran
.. JOL
LS IT FOR LES
orders in advance if you w
rtmcnt is ahead of the manu
: your order ahead.
. I Ksjm
rmit "-mi. ^
i do how hard it is to get
FORD, we have two plans n<
nd one is so easy that any c
12 I 1UA2S.
vhen you arc delivered the F
cash on delivery, balance
iterest and insurance on defc
will be only too glad to gc
only do just a little figurin
i.
Yours for more FORDS,
1MB, DEALER, JONESV
.DEALER, UNION, S.C
4
???f
Are Due
ities in the Blood
hes the Body and Fights Off
ase.
ise Many Forms of Rheumatism,
a Lowered Vitality.
Hood of Waste Products.
blood purifier should be used at once
to assist nature to throw off these
waste products.
S. S. S., the standard blood purifier
and system builder, is the ideal
remedy in these cases. The effect of
S. S. S. is to rid the system of the
poisons which are causing the trou- #
ble. For over 60 years, S. S. S. has
proven to be of unusual merit.
Get S. S. S. at your druggist. Use
it strictly according to directions and
write Chief Medical Director, Swift
Specific Co., 721 S. S. S. Laboratory,
Atlanta, Ga., and let him help you
regain your health and strength. He
is helping people every day. Ask him
to send you his illustrated booklet,
"Facta About the Blood"?free. S.S.Sja
sold by all drug stores.
LE I
Prices I
s nothing to this Big B
our prices, compare B
uay in iiie ween.
10c
10c
10c
12?/2C
98c
98c
98c up to $7.48
98c
45c
50c
65c
75c
$1.49
$2.49
$3.85
$4.98, $6.98, $7.98 gj
$1.49 Eg
as they last at $2.98 B
ilf price as long as they ?|
i proportion to the ?
it Brand Shoes. Ev- 5
i new pair. If you M
d Store. a
LY
>s I
ish prompt delivery on |
factory. You will save
nj)
\i)
money, and also, how
)w that we will sell you
>ne who tries can own a
ORD.
divided into ten equal
?rred payments.
> over the second plan
rr \\ya ..,-111
^ ww viiiAiiV JfUU W 111 C5Ct? V
ILLE, S. C. I
., PHONE 289 |
, St