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ICHILDREN FED) ' ON OUR MM | Grow faster, and are stronger and more I u healthful than all others. JL I | Our milk is a pure product from strong, I healthy, contented cows. fj Nothing added to it, nothing taken from it. | I Nature's only perfect food. ;' I Pints 10c. I I Quarts 17 l-2c. | a Delivered dailv a* vmw -J w? j uui UUU1 Hillcrest Dairy Farm I J. F. McLURE, President. I| 1 Phone No. 227-W. 1 THE ONE Fault of our SYSTEM n.... i wu. uiiviMi system nas but one important weakness: it cannot prevent cash being withdrawn from circulation and kept in idleness in private poeketbooks and hiding places. And cash is the very lifeblood of all business. It is the essential foundation of credit, of industry and of banking. Cash belongs in the bank?through which it produces prosperity. Idle cash can do its owner no possible good. But will serve to enrich him in many ways when placed at his credit in the bank. "Large Enough to Serve Anv?Strong Enough to Protect All" ft CITIZELN^ .NATIONAL LAN" L I f hV _j?uJdenly taktfc L ill yettrih , .-our . ?t t?t A i parents have the s pa thy of. iends in this nMBw J We desire to extend to our customers, V ^ friends and others in Union and Union V County our best wishes for a very happy Y Christmas and New Year. y ^ We desire to thank each and every one for Y the continued confidence which has been ? shown in us and for the patronage which j t we have received. i X T Y V Y X A Capital and Surplus $400,000.00 X Y 1 NICHOLSON BANK & TRUST COMPANY 'i I X Member Federal Reserve System Y EMS LIE NICHOLSON, President M. A. MOORE, Cashier V W. S. NICHOLSON, L. M. JORDAN, J. ROY FANT Vice Presidents A , We desire to extend to the public in [i general and our customers in partic: \ ular, our sincere thanks for the pat' ronage of the past year. We have endeavored to sell good merchandise and j we have given you prices that were as ' low as dependable merchandise could 1 be bought. We trust the coming year will bring . , , J to you an abundant success and an y I abounding contentment. : We enter the new year with renewed p determination to serve you well. > I THE UNION CLOTHING COMPANY 1 "The New Way Store." NOTICE! J VALUABLE FARM LANDS FOR SALE j On Monday, salesday, Jan. 1 2nd, 1922, next, I will offer for | sale my farm in Cross Keys , township. Union County, S. C., 1 the same containing One Hun- ' dred Seven (107) acres, more * or less. This farm is located on the t main highway leading from i Union to Laurens, about ten 1 miles west of Union, has top soil road running right by the j door. This farm is in a high t state of cultivation and en- < joys the distinction of being 1 one of the nicest farms in ^ Union Countv. Prsctirallv - # ' C every acre of this land can be t cultivated. Located within 1 one mile of the Cross Keys 1 High School, near best coun- j try store in county, has daily , mail right by the door. Near f Padgett's Creek church. ! ' LANDS KNOWN AS THE \ LONNIE LAWSON HOME ? PLACE. ; If you are interested in the J purchase of a nice farm it will * # fi pay you to attend this sale. ^ My reason for selling is that s I have lost my health and will f have to give up farming al- 1 together. 0 SEE ME FOR TERMS. BAILEY LAWSON j Address: Union, S. C., c R. F. D. No. 2. <' WEAK; RUN-DOWN ; V Carolina Lady Got So She Conh h Just Drag.?"Cardui Built Me Up," She Declares. Kernersvllle, N. C.?In an Interest s lng statement regarding Cardul, th? s Woman's Tonic, Mrs. Wesley Mabe, o near here, recently said: "I ban | p known Cardul for years, but neve) h knew Its worth until a year or so ago h I was In a weakened, run-down cob v ditlon. I became draggy?didn't eat o> j sleep to do any good; couldn't do any a thing without a great effort. I trlet fi different remedies and medicines, ye y I continued to drag. s "I decided to give Cardul a trla. and found It was just what 1 reallj I 3 needed. It made me feel much strong e er soon after I began to use It. I be ? gan to eat more, and the nerrotu weak feeling began to leave, Soon ) j was sleeping good. j e "Cardul built me up as no othe g tonic ever did. ; 0 "I used Cardul with one daughte> c who was puny, felt bad and tired ou all the time. It brought her right out i " and soon she was as well as a glr f could be. We think there la nothlni like Cardul." Do not allow yourself to becom. weak and run-down from womanlj a troubles. Take Cardul. Tou may fln? p It Just what you really need. Foi i more than 40 years It has been used 0; IUUU1UUUD KUU IIIUU3HUUB, IDQ IOUQI . just ab Mrs. Mabe describe*. * At your druggist'*. NC-14: ! ? . t Monument Erected 0 Over Cartoonist ? ! Salem, Ore., Dec. 26.?Oregon resi- 0 dents are raising funds for the erec- a tion of a monument over the grave v of Homer Davenport, noted cartoon- n ist, who was buried at his birthplace, 8 Silvcrtn, Ore., near here, nine years 8 ago at the age of 43 years. i Davenport was raised at Silverton knew everyone for miles around and went from that little town to San c Francisco where his work first gained fame. Old timers of Silverton still talk of ? Homer Davenfort as a boy, he had ^ ear-marks of genius from the start ^ they say. ^ Most of the boy's time in school was spent in drawing pictures of th ? ^ teacher. No matter how valuable _ a book was, Davenport usually found ample room on the fly leaf for a pic-; ture. These books are cherished belongings today. No one had taken Davenport's > drawings seriously until a cousin I ^ from Chicago came and while he sat visiting, the hoy drew his picture. The cousin was delighted and pre-1 * vailed upon the elder Davenport, who I had always expressed more faith in r Homer than anyone else, to send hi son to an art school in San Francisco Soon young Ilomer was on the staff i of a San Francisco daily and it was ' hut another step to New York. 3 Davenport never forgot Oregon or a Silverton. One time, it is said, he was sent to interview Gladstone. England's great statesman. After getting by a cordon of guards, Davenport found Gladstone in his gardens. The statesman asked Haven-; port his name and where he was j f rom. "Silverton, Oregon." was the replv. Gladstone got a map, looked up Sil- ^ verton and then made his visitor wel- < j come, later inviting him to call again. The best way to die when sleeping j is on the right side. x Bachelors were taxed in England in the early years of the 18th centurv. i ? J The area of Newfoundland is just 1 about equal to that of the State of i Virginia. i } 1 * 1 < The tea tree is an evergreen plant. ^ ( Soviet Republic in no ... Mood to Celebrate Ludugovka, Tartar Republic, De>\ 11.?The fourth anniversary of the stablishment of the Soviet Republic n Russia found this peasant village >f 600 people in no mood for celebratng. Foodless and cheerless, the starving population could hu\o no icart for any sort of jubilation, even f it knew what the political maneuvers at Moscow mean. Like most Ruslian peasants, the unhappy folks of Ludogovka have neither the learning lor the will to study politics. Broad, vood and warm clothing are their ;hree desires. They haven't enough >f any of these. Winter has laid its first heavy coatng of snow on the flat prairies, and ;he peasants have started, grim-faced >n their endurance test to see how nany can survive the six months of :old and privation. Many of the founger children have been deem-d so ompletely underfed by the doe.or- ii. lie employ of the American Relief Vdniinistration that they will I c g'\ n one good hot meal a day. Ludogovka is a typical peasant vilage of the poorer class. It is 00 niles from Kazan and many miles rom the Volga and railway communcation. Unpaintcd log houses are icattercd along a main street. The louses generally have two rooms. 5ome have three. Frequently the ani nai sneas are duiii, against me houses or warmth. Many of the stables are it the back end of long vegetable, gardens which yielded few potatoes ind cabbages this year because of the Irought. The stables are chiefly deerted. There is no forage, no grain or the animals which have survived ip to this time on the dry stubble ehich will soon be under several feet 1 snow. Russia doesn't have blizzards such is are known in America. In late Oe ober or early November the snows iegin and continue gently nearly cv ry day until the earth is covered In a epth of three or four feet. This winter will not bring its cus omary round of winter sports and ecreations. There are no horses to traw the troikas and jingle the hells ?'hieh ordinarily enliven Russian iighway through the short days and ang nights of frost. The home of Ivan Ivanovieh PorofT is typical of the most povertytricken houses visited by the correpondent. Petroff is a farmer, as Tactically all the villagers are. He as the use of several dissiatines of and, more than he was able to cultiate because of lack of animals and nd seed. He had once been a sturdy iant, over six feet tall. But his raged trousers show his legs have hrunken to mere bones and his ^ craggly beard cannpt conceal the . maciation and sallowness of his face, lis wife is lying ill above a large * lasonry stove. A gangling, hollowyed boy of 16 stands listlessly and apes at the strangers. A little girl ( f eight, who is getting the Ameri- I an meals and two others, sligthly ? lder, who were not designated for the I oreign food, stand near their mother, t The furnishings of the room are a'- 1 lost nil. It has the smell of poverty < nd neglect. In good seasons Russian t easant houses are seldom clean, j 'hey are never ventilated. But the * mell of cabbage soup and tea make < he less offensive in normal years. 1 When asked what the family had i r\ nof PofrAff rvA info/1 fwn Intivnc t f green bread which lay on the stove < nd said there had been nothing else t or his family in ten days. He threw pen an adjoining room and pointed to 1 , pile of the improvised "flour" out. of > yhich the bread was made. It was j lothing but ground up grass, leaves, t un-flower seed and other trash of a I imilar character. t The visitors offered him money. He t ook it unwillingly and asked: "But i vhat shall I do with it? There is i lothing to buy in this village and I 1 an't go in search of food. Neither ?' an my family." One of the American relief work- i rs thereupon offered to buy some i lour in a village many miles away. < rhroughout the remote vilages of the i ["tartar Republic and the Samar gov- ' rnment American workers have < ound the same lack of food. 1 PHONE 167 | We sterilize all garments vith hot dry steam. We , guarantee not to slick or corch any thing. Special at* 1 ei.cion given to Parcel Post. | certainly appreciate it as , nuch or more than anyone < :lse for a trial from you. We call and deliver your 1 >ressing anywhere. When 1 rou have a hurry-up job we , ire at your service. I Hames Pressing and Repair Shop. i^iai mnnufi i?uum iiunuiiig, PHONE 167 \gent for two dye houses, argest in the South. Phone 167 and Dust-Proof Motorcycle will call. "Harry Pain" has written a buresque on Margot Asquith's diary vhioh ho calls "Marge-Askinforit." Forty-two babies in 44 years, the ecord of a woman who died near the Snglish town of Rugby in 172G, is >elieved to be still unbeaten. Girls in Hong Kong are sold at ibout five dollars a head. Although called "adoption," it is really a form >f slavery. I J. L. JOLLY'S 1 I CLEARANCE SALE I WILL CONTINUE TO I JANUARY 1, 1922. I OVERCOATS AND I BOYS' SUITS, I SHOES AND SHIRTS I GALORE! I I J. L. JOLLY I I HAS DECLARED I J WAR ON HIGH PRICES. I 1 LADIES' SUITS AND I 1 LADIES'SKIRTS AND CI OAKS | I MUST CLEAR THE DECK I I YOU BET! I SHOES FOR PAPA. I SHOES FOR MAMA, I AND SON AND DAUGHTFF TOO! I THE PRICE IS RIGHT. I THE GOODS ARE GREAT! | YOU KNOW! I STAR BRAND SHOES ARE BETTER. 1 eJ. L. JOLLY I The Store That Sells It For Less. I 'JII I?I !! ^ I ll|Mil?llN?tt?W 1 I-_~ ~ to Santiago, Dec. 22.?Opposition to i a depend abie bank :hile retaining membership in the n^At,/, rr>irwr, *2*. .eague of Nations has developed in ? A iJ i KlJ'ilVl ftvlLMD iome quarters here as a result of the j 1^. Myn rv a \r f\T? Hague's consideration of Bolivia's pe- J il\l i iifc, I/AY Or ition for a revision of the treaty of , T"*?M A HJ^I A I CTD AIM loace and commerce celebrated with & lliAilvlAL JlIvAin 3hile in 1904 and the assembly's a< - i ZSSZ'r^. I a REAL BANK is large factor in prog. u-ni:m<|C,for'a'"'"',or"' the'fo,'n?r ress for it encourages Wise, conservative inBolivian port of Antofagastn was def- vestment and enables ils friends to feel that nitely ceded to Chile under the 1901 g reaty and Bolivia now has rail m- I they may have 3 friend to fell? back upon in ess to the Pacific through Antofa- I i i f | casta and Arica. chiie. I the day of depression, While Chile, according to some H . . , , ... , eaders of opinion, achieved a "moral | We lOOK WITH mCreaSIHg ROCe Upon the ,'ictorv" at Geneva in view of the I ,i i / i I urists' i\miinKs th.u the Bolivian i><- | outlook tor the ccnur.g year, and as we enter ^nuVwK'Zl^bio'nna Zt I ?ts portals, we express our gratitude for our '^yrt?Z"ZV'i^ass ..a- | increasing circle cf friends, louncement that it would reserve the I Sflssrs I FARMERS BANK AND TRUST CO. igainst the league in this country. ja ^ v ^ w J Boonan Kivort, a writer on inter. M ? ,,EAK(f p R | | m.FJOltN. Vice Pre. national affairs, in an article in the H 1 newspaper, Diario llustrado, views ac- I C. K. MORGAN, 2nd N ice Pres. ;eptance by Chile of the postpone- g ment of the Bolivian petition an RBB3?B9EL''3EK3EaE3&BHBHBnHHBHBIIHiBI 'abdication at least of the sentiment nf our complete sovereignty." lie asks Arhat reason there is for Chile to re- be absent, "from on undertaking in selection an 1 rejection must remain .. i 1 .? tii#>K i > - ' - - nam iii .? nanuc mat (;<?"i imimiuii * "?- * I'l.mu miui iii\;m i iijii-s im Wltll the public (lOSpitC thl' UCtioilS of ?ense repudiates through a certain universal peace. ^ ;1 legally constituted board of censors feeling of anxiety and uneasiness." * ; and in presenting pictures in our theHe alludes to the advice given by L.ocal Theatres Ban ! at res, we shall at all times be guided J. Balfour at Geneva, in favor ol Picture of Beauvais by our best judgment regarding pubiirect negotiations between Chile and lie opinions. Bolivia to "settle the extremely Atlantu> Ga f Det. 27.?That the Theatres operated by the N. C. und thorny problem as a judgment w uch R Beauvajs picture> entitltMl "A s (' Knterp. Inc., subsidiary to the would not have allowed Chde to co - |>oncl Trail ? fen(urinK tho rHn.,lliwll Southern Kntorpi ises, Inc., in Union tmue in a league in winch it never . . .. T>:aito nn.i Grand ,,, " , i.i- if i i i i. t u Guide sensationally named in the '"l l,H niano anu vii.mu. should have entered blindfolded.' The . . , Stillman divorce case, will not be ex- . , writer also says Argentina withdiew ..... , . e ,. ,, , , tahcr Letdors Move . .. ... , hibited in any of the theatres opornt- ith-vc 'because she would only take part in . Fl~:i i *i . .. ... r I. ed bv companies subsidiary to th. rrom Jail lo Jail <\ league of nations in th?- full sense r, * * . _ ; ? Southern Lnterprises, Inc., in the six that word implied. ... . , .i . ... .. n nn ^ n . * . *, i . . southeastern states, is the announce Logan, \\ . \a., Dec. 2(5.?C. FrankSenator Gonzales Bullies, chairman . . ... . in- i t- . .... ... - nient issued from the general olhce.- ociiey and I-red Mooney, president jf the foreign relations commission of . , , ?? , * .. . , . f of the company here today, lhis ae- and secretary-treasurer, respectively. the senate, has been the chief oppon- .. .J r. e ,i , iv . . .- t- . >. ?r . , , tion was taken after a conference with 1 District 1 <, t inted Mine Worwers eiit of the league in the Chilean eon- , c . . , ... heads of all subsidiary companies, de- f America, and William Buzzard, a gross. He warmly supported Argen- .. .. . .... ? . , , , . , . . ., . . ., .' . ' . . ... . f .. spite the fact that the picture was re- sub-dist net president of the anion. tnas action in withdrawing from the ' . , . ' ... , , .' . .. . ... 1 , , r. . cently approved by the New i ork were placed m jail here tonight after c-ague ast De. ember and at that time * , , . , . , ...... . ^.. .. . ... f State Board of Censorship. their surrender at Hutnington, to urged Chile to quit also as an net of ou .tV ... .v . , , solidarity with her eastern neighbor. The fact that Beauvais was named Sheriff C haffin, preparatory to plead Speaking in the senate recently Sen- :>s correspondent by dames Stillman. "?g to indictments growing out of the ator Bulnes asserted that the league New York banker, in his suit for di a?"i'd march into Logan county last was "nothing loss than imposition of vorce and in this manner gained na summer. the victor on the vanquished." He tionwide notoriety is assumed to be Hie three men were released from caled it a concert of victorious na- 1''? reason for this decision. jail in Charleston Saturday midnight, (ions to make the vanquished comply "The policy of this company in the niter furnishing $10,000 hail each, with the rigorous conditions of do ! past,'' declared V. P. Freeman, gen 1 hey had been held there in connect t.' T'ennt cmfy cmfwyp shrdlhh eral manager, "has been to avoid ex 5 ;?n with the Ixgan county demonfeat." The speaker said Chile always ploiting individual nctc rs or pictures stration, several months ago, and had sustained n policy of non-inter- which would place a false premium Keeney and Mooney obtained their vention by foreign nations in its is upon prejudicial notoriety. We pre- lelense on l>uil from the Mingo counsue that were the outgrowth of the fer to present actors who have come j?il. where they had been incarwar of 1879. to the screen solely through dramatic cerated as a result of industrial trouBarros Jarpa, minister for foreign ability and merit. That policy will bles in the Tug Itiver district. affairs, in a recent statement on inter- be strictly adhered to in operating ? nntionnl relations said Chile entered through our subsidiaries in the future. Saturday was named after the the league because it did not want to "The democratic responsibility of planet Saturn. ~ " a . i'Wh- I