IC AI
CALCIUM
JUST
I THE UNION H.'
I UNIO
TWor
You
Thorn's a wide world
cliilthvn- and its gntew
mi-Mi oi a savings aeeou
May we a-'< if you 1
of today arc learning s
aivount plan. Those oh
advantage. Shall your i
too?
"Large Knoiigh to Serve Ai
CJTL
NATION^
I REMOVE
We beg to annoii
into the old Union
and extend a cordi
friends and elision*
not go wrong io buy
us. We buv for cas
means that we save
MULLINAX FAUCI
The Ne\
I ??
and cattle, pr
Hold by general stores and <1
" of satisfactory results, or money
j.lete line of Caro-Vet Retncdici
^ \Ve are sending FREE to c
j IS pages "Tanners' Veterinary
I nnil tells how to treat live stock
| CAROLINA REMEDIES C<
Days are Numbered
For Australian Flagsh
Sydney, N. S. W., May 10 (1
Mail).?The days of II. M. A. S. At
tralia, former flagship of the C'-oi
ntonwealth nevy, are numbered a
JLOAD
ARSENATE
ARRIVED
IRDWARE COMPANY
'N, S. C.
1
Id for
r Kiddies
!' a Movement awaiting your
ay ento.'ed by the establishnt.
snow how many, many children
ystenmlie thrift on the savings
ildren will start life with a big
hildren not have this advantage,
iy,?Strong Enought to Protect All"
JENv3
\ I . BANK.
il NOTICE
ince that we have moved
Clothing Co.'s building
al invitation to all our
ers to visit us. You will
your clothing needs from
h and sell for cash. That
you money.
?TT CLOTHING CO.
v Way Store
vitality of your horses, mules. cattlo, 0
in results in health, growth and pro* 9
renewal in all nature. Yoii can uest f;
livestock by using
Remedies
k vigor and strength, and increase
Cam Vet treatment prepared by tho !
ve stock disease and disorder.
Remedies
ring Use:
ii'1 it ion Powder for ? 1*%
iit 1 cattle, price 7iia. t 1 n
due Condition Pow- I MCmk Si
Igg-Producer, ]>rico % Mm
nic for horses, males V||hhP^ |j
rug stores, under a positive guarantee I
refunded. Your dealer carries a com- |j
ach farmer an authoritative hook of
Guide", which gives the symptoms 1
diseases. Ask for your copy. gj
)., Inc., Mfgrs., UNION, S. 0. i
she will he scrapped, in accordance
ip with the Washington conference
agreement, after a heroic career. She
[jy originally cost 2,000,000 pounds and
is- equipment for her North Sea servm
ice involved hundreds of thousands
nd of pounds additional.
ALTO
TODAY
A METRO CLASSIC
"ALIAS
LADYFINGERS"
is the drama of a crook
who took the love cure
?and the star is
BERT LYTELL
A
BAYARD VEILLER
Pr<idiif*f iivn
Adapted by Lenore J. Coffee from
Jackson Gregory's story
ADDED
"IN FOR LIFE"
An Educational Comedy
TOMORROW
SNOWY BAKER
?IN?
"THE SHADOW OF
LIGHTNING RIDGE"
Large Telescope on
Observatory Hill
Delaware, O., June 28.?Within the
next few years, there will arise on
Observatory hill on the campus al
Ohio Wesleyan University here, n
huge concrete bulk, with a long fingei
pionting skyward. It will be the
third largest telescope in the world.
At that time, an old man may loot
from the doorway of an out-of datt
brick house near the great instrument,
and recognize in it a monumenl
to his perseverance and the dominat
ing ideal of a life that will have passed
the four-score and ten mark.
If he is there to see it, he will be
f comparatively peniless, as money goes
but rich in happiness.
If he is not there to nee it, he hat
said he will be just as satisfied?be
cause he knows it will be there
whether he is or not.
Professor lliram M. Perkins, nov
89 years of age, started teaching
mathematics and astronomy years ag<
at Ohio Wesleyan, a poor man. Dining
the lon.PT years of teaching sinc<
then he had amassed a fortune oi
close to $200,000 by fortunate invest
ments. But he will die a poor man
Nearly every cent that he has earnet
and scraped together will be repre
sented in the "third largest telescopi
in the world."
A story that passes understanding
is unfolded in the simple announce
ment by trustees of Ohio Wesleyai
that $250,000 has been contributed foi
the installation of the telescope. A1
but $75,000 of the quarter of millioi
dollars was given by Prof. Perkins
the remainder by his sister and broth
er-in-law.
Professor Perkins has lived wit!
one dominating goal?to be able tx
turn enough money over to Ohio Wes
leyan University for the purchase o:
such a telescope. Not only did he de
vote all his income from his invest
ments to his telescope fund, but h<
often contributed to it from his
meager salary as a college professor
I he and Mrs. Perkins trimming theii
, household budget to make the sacri
fice possible.
And the story of self sacrifice is not
on a par with the efforts of Professoi
Perkins to dodge recognition for hi^
remarkable gift.
He has steadfastly r< fused any acknowledgement
from his alma matei
and has driven the college press bureau
to distraction by refusing to permit
the use of his name in connection
with the Rift.
"I don't care whether I live to see
the telescope and the new observatory
completed or not," he Is quoted
by Prof. C. C. Crump, now head of
the department of astronomy. "The
knowledge that the university is to
have them is sufficient."
Prof. Perkins gives the telescope
at the urge of an ideal that has held
sway in his whole life?the belief that
the study of the stars outclasses all
others in teachinc the mniptt.r nnil
power of God, and in inculcating principles
of true religion.
Under the terms of his gift, the telescope
is to be used first for the instruction
of all the students of the
University; second, it is to be turned
over to the public at regular intervals,
and after that it is to be used
for research.
Bids For Supplies
For Poor House.
325 lbs. plain flour, 12 lbs. Kite tobacco,
25 lbs. sugar, 15 lbs. coffee, 12
bars Ostagon soap (large size), 10
pkgs. Gold Dust powders.
For Cour.ty Chain Gang.
10 lbs. apple sun cured tobacco, 20
lbs. grits, 100 lbs. self-rising flour, 3
bus. meal, 90 lbs. fat back bacon, 10
n?s. iara, a ids. conee, 12 lbs. sugar,
7(10 bus. oats.
Bids must be in by Friday.
J. V. Askew,
Supervisor
Mrs. Joe Chambers and children are
visitinjjf relatives in the lower part
of the state.
' 11?1
The Yankee Spirit
The story of many a big Yankee i
triumph abroad proves that the American
can, and does adapt himself
quickly enough to the ways and *
methods of foreigners when he finds
he must gain his ends, writes Frederick
Simpich of the State Department
in The Nation's Business.
"If Americans know so little about
foreign prejudices and preference, in
commercial dealings," says one man
I know, who has served Uncle Sam
on four con' inents, "how did we put
everything from motor cars to sewing
machines, in every land from India
to A rgentina, if our British and
Germ?n competitors know so much
more than we know about how to
trade?" _
Down in Cartagena, on a hot day,
old man Crankshaft dropped into our
Consulate to cool off, ease his prickly
heat, and talk mining machinery.
For thirty years he's rafted it up
jungle rivers and toted it over slippery
trails on mule back.
"Read a magazine article on the
boat coming down,"he said. "A sermon
bv some P. H. Dee who savs
we'll never make good oversea trad- *
ers til we learn more foreign lan- <
guage and methods. . . . Still, when 1 <
horned into Honduras in the UD's, all ^
the Spanish I knew was that manana ^
meant tomorrow and pajama meant
tonight. . . . My commissions totaled i
$10,000 011 that six month's trip. We <
may not h .ve the trick of tongue, <
but we've some other useful little <
gifts! Of course I've learned more
Spanish since, blanquillos, for example,
means eggs?or blankets, i
which is it? Languages are a big '
help, as the P. H. Dee says. But I <
find I've got goods the Latins want, <
and they've got money, we usually <
trade?somehow!"
1 Japanese Police Arrest '
Carriers of Mikoshi '
i
Tokio, June 26.?The police of Ja- <
pan with their modern ideas have
shattered another very convenient
[ ''superstition" of those who wished, to
wreak vengeance on their enemies. It
, has been the custom, when a person
did not do as his neighbors wished
him, for a crowd'of youths with a
mikoshi or shrine, to parade the
streets and when the shrine struck a
( house it was taken as an indication
that the occupant had displeased the
gods.
Invariably it was found that the
house struck wus that of somebody
' who had displeased the crowd. Rer
cently the residence of a man who had
failed to contribute to the fund for
' Kanda festival, was wrecked after being
"struck by the mikoshi." The
practical police arrested 54 of tli/
| carriers of the mikoshi.
Towns Give Way
j To Irrigation Waters
? El Paso, Texas, June 28.?Within
less than 200 miles from El Paso five
r old towns gradually have given away
_| iu irrigation wmers, ana rneir iormer
sites are now farm lands.
Cantadera, a peaceful Mexican village
200 years ago, on the banks of
the Rio Grnde, is one of the places
which has been wiped out. Although
it withstood the storms and hardships
and some attacks from the Apaches
v/ithin the past two centuries, the
water has washed away the thick
abode walls.
Cantadero had a population of 400
persons, ther towns wiped out slowly
by the waters from the Rio Grande
and the Elephant Butte dam water::
were Canta Ricio, With a population
of 300; San Algina, 250; San Jose
250; Alamoeito 300. Each had its ancient
churches, stores, cemeteries and
school houses. These are to be seen
no more, save for a few crumbling
walls which the water has not entireIj
melted down.
Commends Rotary
Club's Stand '
"The Rotary Club stands for goo 1
citizenship and represents the senti
inents of law-abiding citizens a.id of *
clean and wholesome business ar<* *
professional practice. To have it voice <
itself on the side of law anj order i <
very gratifying. i
"It is perfectly proper for those ^
nnu in-ntrvt; III aeillUlTUCy i'.nu JLVI
that the stability of democracy do- ^
pends on respect for law, to openly *
express themselves against violations <
ol the law. 4
"Your action is a strong and timely i
refutation of the false statement, that
i
'the best people' are against the law.
and that, consequently, the law cannot
be enforced. ?
"We hope that your good example
will be followed by others and we ^
know that such an act will meet with
the approval of all good citizens who
feel that defiance of any law is infee- *
tious and can be finally destructive 01 ?
all orderdly government."?From lettor
addressed to Rotary Clubs in Lou- 4
isiana by Director Larre.
Card of Thanks
We desire to express our deep appreciation
of the great kindness <
shown our loved one, Mr. F. II. Lackey
during his long illness and death. i
We will never forget the sympathy
and the loving ministrations rendered 4
by our friends. We cherish every tok- 4
en of kindness and pray the blessings 4
of God upon each one. 4
Wife and Children. ^
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS 4
46 ACRES six miles from Union, new *
dwelling, good b?m, fine orchard, 4
land lays well and in good state of 4
cultivation, a pick up at $1600 for n'jj
quick sale. E. P. Kelly & Bro. llj
V - # '
| TWO B
[Real
I Gi
{ AT THE
j BA1
ji c a nniinn /
f
? 40-inch White Organdies
% Yard wide Khaki Cloth, j
32-inch Dress Ginghams,
'X Extra heavy Blue Overall
Good smooth Apron Ginj
& Huck Towels, each .
? 22 x 44 regular 50c Turk
12 Mummie Imported Po
? 36-inch, $1.50 quality B1
<|> 9-4 or 81-inch Unbleach
X Children's Fancy Top So<
Ladies' Black Cotton Hos
X Ladies' Silk Hose, slight!
and Brown, very specii
X Ladies' 50c Silk Lisle Ho
? Men's Pin Check Pants, p
X 33-inch Bleached Pajam
X Ladies' and Misses' $5.0(
Louis Heels, srteciallv \
X Men's and Bovs' Veniila
Bie lot small Children's S
Children's Ribbed Hose,
| Satisfaction or Y
Our Store V
I Tho niH I
S I IIU UIU I
X
[SPE
I For Frid
T
T
y 75c quality Men's Nainsc
10c quality Men's Socks.
25r quality Ladies' seam
75c quality Men's Dress
& 75c quality Men's All Wc
X $1.00 quality 72 x 90 H<
|* 75c quality Embroidered
f each
!? 15c quality Ladies' Gauz
? 10c quality Straw Tickir
X 50c quality 36-inch Whit
X 35c aualitv 40-inrh Rnrls
[ Rick Rack Braid, all colo
"t Picot Ribbon, 3-4 inch, al
^ Satin Ribbon, 5-8 inch, al
WHY PAY
j J. F. McLi
^ ^ ^ ^r|
lie DAYS
Barg;
iving
OLD RELI
PTEF
IY AND MONI
>, yard
rard
r yard
1 Cloth, yard
{hams, yard
ish Towels, each
ngee, yard
lack Taffeta Silk (black onl;
ed Sheeting, yard
:ks, pair
;e, pair
y imperfect, in Black, Gra
ad, pair
>se 35c pair, three pairs for
>air
la Checks, yard
) Black Satin strap pumps ii
jrKed at, pair
ted Sandals, SZ.SfTvahies, j
iandals, including E. C. Sku
pair
our Money Back E\
if ill be Closed Tuesday, Jul;
tollable Bi
i
<? ?? *
ay and Satur
>ok Union Suits, each . . .
nair
I
up back Lisle Hose, pair . .
Shirts, each
>ol Golf Caps, each
Mimed Sheets, each ....
I Pink Nainsook Envelope (
e Vests, each
ig, yard
e Gabardine, yard
ip, yard . . .
rs, yard
II colors, yard
II colors, yard
MORE ELSEWHE
ire Dry Gooi
of | ..
m ^
i
>
able!
*
ik Z ?
<Y t
JAY, |
.5c I "
19c f
T
..... .14c
iSc |
iOc 4*
10c | *
33c f
98c |
y),yard . ,98c y
25c
15c |
y, Nude, White | ,n.
25c
$1.00 X
98c
10c |
n low and baby *}*
$3.48 t
ia'r . . .$1,98 %
ffers, pair . 98c
10c %
ery Time |
f4 If
%
day |
X
49c
4c |
15c X
50c X
50c &
.. . . . . .59c |
Chemises, X
50c
10c >
...... .5c %
25c X (J)
25c X
2 l-2c |
15c t
5c i
>RE? X
lis Go. |
m
^ A. A^A A ^
*
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