University of South Carolina Libraries
' 6 1- * . * Lv > . ** •• PROHIBITION DEPARTMENT. will use both in lint) case'. Will 'you then turn them on this im- ; moral carcass of a dispensary and EDITED BY JAS.E. PEURIfOY AND W. W. SMOAK, u a ;,! vote for the establishment of a THE NON CHURCH MEMBER AND WHISKEY. The case of thechurch member carefully and point out anything and the stands very non church different dispensary in Union. If you say we have the blind tiger now which is as you say as bad, 1 answer: 1st. He is not there Ly your a.id my coiifcut^ that^sa great gain to our con- sciances, and toour personal char- member wrong in my argument. So far in this as 1 have been ahln to gather the v <y fight to keep the dispensary. only excuse these people givo for The churdi member is of course favoring the dispensary is the under the most solemnobligation old thread bare so called argu- acter, and to the public consci- to stand with thechurch against! menr t j, at prohibition won’t pro-ence and public morals; ‘Jud, the worst enemy the church has. i,ibit. As a matter of fact 1 The blind tiger is iu hiding and If selling and drinking whiskey i believe the prohibition law i- dare not obtrude birnsdf on helps the courcu in saving s iuis better enforced even in ( ninidsceul f'jnvs .in public piaccr. and preparing the earth for the Ocunty foday than any law on Isn’t that a great gain. When L coming of her Ixird, then the (||0 Tne laws against used to go ft out my home to Gatl- ut^Mrch member miist sta^nd for murder, assaults, fraud and theft i wmio we had the d.speneary it If they hinder this work of ;j re no f a< wo |j enforced as the 1 me, ‘ w< ‘ u hl turn up their bottles the church then the church mem-; i aw against the sale of li.|iior. ber must oppose them. More people go* unpunished lor these crime* than for the crime No Mason can afford to com fort and .aid the enemy of Masonry. No member of any organization can afford lo aid of selling liquor in this county. Does any one of these good citi zens propose to remedy this evil to my face and drink and yell and throw'the empty bottle down iu the road to tempt the small boy to drink its dregs and to cut my horses feet. Under prohibition they met me. 1 hedifftrence whs like going out of purgatory t*| paradise, so far as my comfort and convenience were concerned; “^rd. Th*- blind tiger in his hid ing is an advertisement of public dis approve! and hence is to our credit. The dispensary is au advertisement; of public approval and hence of our' shameful lack of conscience, or high moral sense. Any nun that knows that where w hiskey is sold by law the | moral standard is low. And every man on goin^ into a town who is in formed that they have prohibition there knows at once that the preach-1 ers and cl.arches have been doing something there, or at least that the majority of the peojde there have mightv high no ions of right. !th. The dispensary is convenient, public and constant temptation to the i drunkard, to the young and uniniti ated. In short, it, the dispensary, is a hard downward pull on evervthing good in thecommunity. Next week we want to consider the 1 Pall and Winter HATS All tlie latest and new: in and that organization’s enemy. To 0 f j aw j eP( { ne c g by repealing the dc so is dishonest, traitorous. No laws against crime and surrender- churchman can afford to appeal ing to'the crimal. Those who to a church member on any f avor t i, e dispensary say the lower plain than his duty to God i cas08 are different. 1 ask them and His church. The political | to appoint the most intelligent one among them to show u» where the analogy breaks down. Any Church members as such have'one must see that if it is right to nothing to do with po litics, nor'prohibit the sale of liquor and can they descend to the low plain , wrong lo j,cense it, then the they didn’t dare do that, it they financial side of this question, had whiskey they had it, if they 1 were drunk they kept quiet when F. C. Hickson, in Union times. MRS. W. A. BLACK - o THE LADIES STORE. *nd financial features of this issue have no place in the church as remedy for violuttng the law is not repealing Hie law. but the enforcement of the law Aud rLlit here I want to ask Ihofc who condemn whiskey but ap prove of i!ie dispensary because I prohibition is a failure it they! of asking what will pay. Ac- coiding to his religion it pays to do right though the heavens fall, and it is disastrous to do wrong. With the nou-chuich member the CaseisdiHerent. He is under UO personal obligation to the church. If the church performs are making or lave ever made services for society and for the i any serious effort to enforce the state, if it purifies society and law. My observation has been conserves the highest interests oU that those wbocrvdo ,, 'n prrhibi- the state, it it above everything I turn want it to fail. Some men else protects life, liberty and have turned against prohibition property, thea every citizen is iu Union lately because it does under obligation t<> help tfie | prohib t. They say it is too hard church, and he is a bad citizen who would injure the church. But his duty is to the state and not to the church; that is, his service for the church is a civil service and not a religious ser vice. In addiessing ourselves to the non church member, we there fore appeal to him as a citizen, and as a man. All civil governmet rests on moral principles. The basis of all their laws is in man’s moral nature. The essence of all crime against the state is moral evil. What ever is morally right is consistent frith good government and is good law, whatever is morally wrong is subversive of good government and is bad law . Any law which instigates and cnltivatea. immoralities will undermine and tend to destroy all law and government. Man is capable of civic government only because he is a moral being, has a moral nature. Not reason, hot conscience, the moral sense, is the basis of human govern ment. a Let us apply these principles to the dispensary. Does tT e dis pensary help or injure good morals? Does it promote obedi ence to law, or lawlessness. Does it any way make better? Does it in any sense protect life, liberty and property? Does it tend to promote human happi ness? Does it in any way aid the state to perform its proper func tions? If it does none .of these things, and I suppose no one would say it does, how can » to get a drink now. And I dare say there i* not a man in Union County today who takes his drink would be in favor of shutting the lid down so tight that they could not get a drink unless it be some who already see whiskey i? their rum and want to quit it entirely. The confirmed drunkard who isn’t such a foot or devil that he wants to be a drunkard favors prohibi tion. The strongest appeals I have ever had to work for prohi bition have come from drunk ards . They beg me to help them to quit. Still addessing myself to the iutelligen*., conscientious citizen, who is without faith iu prohibi tion either because he never had any, or because he is discouraged by the failure of the law, I ask, have you considered what you will get in its stead when you es tablish a dispensary? To establish a dispensary in Union will be to place here a magnet which will draw every immoral element in the County to it, or to make it plainer to some folks, it will be to drag a corrupting carcass to the highest eminence and thus attract every moral buzzard in the county to it. Your blind tiger, or lawless citi zens, your drunkards, your frauds, your vile womeh, your low typ? politicians, will all draw nigh and find a friend and helper here. It will prove* the best rounding up and corraling device the devil ever had for handling his cattle. Dispensaries have always bred blind -tigers. Ihey have always bred graft (or theft good citizen, or a man who has and fraud aie the better words.) any regard for m«ral duties favor They have always bred deuoa a dispensary. Will some one gogues and low type politica answer that question? rings. Whiskey wherever soJ< There are certain* citizens of breeds lust in men and women Union, who have pretty good i and gathcn'about it vile men and consciences, who acknowledge women. Consider also that >a !u*n that whiskey is an evil an i who this dispensary is established will not publicly advocate its use here as a lawful institutioa it er sale, but who are going to vote will be a veritable gatling gun to lor the dispensarv,—they don’t, shoot to deaf h^tho cliurcke!.,-the say so but I belbve they will, homes, the schools, the uwfc, the It ia to try to stir up reason and every good aud decent person or conscience in this class of citi- thing in Union County, sens that I am writing this My fellow citizens, I have article. I beg that they will do credited you with reason and con- me the kindness to read me science, and assumed that you ABOUT ADVERT1SIXG—XO. 1 The Perambulating Showcase By Herbert Kaufman. The newspaper is a hu;;e shop window, carried about the ci‘7 and delivered daily into hundreds cf t 1 ; ds of homes, to he exam ined at the leisure of the reader. Th is sh op window is unlike the actual plate edass show case only in o/. -v «... it l..splay of descriptions ins:. . of articles. You have often been impressed by the difference between the decorations of two window-trimmers, each of whom employed the same materials for his work. The one drew your attention and held it by the grace and cleverness and art manifested in his display. The other realized so little of the possibilities in the materials placed at his disposal that un less some one called your attention to his bungling you would have gone on unconscious of its existence. An advertiser must know that he gets his results in accordance with the skill exercised in preparing his verbal displays. He must make people stop and pause. His copy has to stand out. He must not only make a show of things that are attractive to the eye but are attractive to the people’s needs as well. The window-trimmer must not make the mistake of thinking that the showiest stocks are the most salable. The advertiser mus.t not make the mistake of thinking that the showiest words are the most clinching. i Windows are too few in number to be used with indiscretion. The good merchant puts those goods back of his plate glass which nine people out of ten will want after they have seen them. The good advertiser tells about goods which nine readers out of ten will buy if they can be convinced. Newspaper space itself is only the win dow, just as the showcase is but a frame for merchandise pictures. A window on a crowd ed street in the best neighborhood, where prosperous persons pass continually, is more desirable than one in a cheap, sparsely settled neighborhood. ’ An advertiserrient in a news paper with the most reader^ and the most prosperous ones possesses a great advantage over the same copy in a medium circulating among persons who possess less means. It „ would be foolish for a skop to build its win dows in iiie alleyway—an i just as much so to put i*s advertising imo newspapers which are distributed among “alley-dwellers.” * (Copyright, 19US, by Ttlbune Company, Chicago.) Let Kodol Digest What You Eat Then You Can Eat What You Like. You once could eat anything you wanted, and jour stomach would digest it. stomach, and then.'fore will do the same work as the stomach, when it is well and gtrong’—the only difference Hut now there's some thinjrs which i>. Ktslul never tstiml- andKodnl your stomach won’t digest. Your is the only digest ant today, that will stomacli absolutely refuses to accom module you when you eat certain food—so you have been forced by your stomach* to cat food which you de tested, and paNS up those delicacies that you would have really enjoyed. There is now a way to eat any thiny you like, if you will let Kodol digest it. Kodol will do this, too. It won’t talk hack or command, but will go right ahead with it> work and digest all the food you eat. Kodol will let you eat anything.)ou like. Kodol will do exactly what your stomach does, when your stomach is well and strong, and more, when it is tired or out of order. Kodol is corniest d of exactly the same juices as found ia a healthy digest ail food nod do it as com pletely. as a strong, healthy stomach. fb t a )*o?t Je now and have it r« ady to help )our stomach at times when you need an ae-.i-.tant. Kodol is at the nearest drug store. Our Guarnatce Co to yoardniftslet uxUy aiul sri t a dol- l:«r Uittie. '1 t>i u after you have uscU th« • ntire contents of the Dottle, if you ran hoe -tlv s'ty,that it hie;not dono you any (ji.xl return the holtletothe Uruitglst and tie « lit refund your money without tiue*- tionorde! iy. We wi,| Uu 11 p.iy the (lru£- trtsi for the hottie. Don’t hesitate, all pnitytsts know thatour guarantee Is Rntio. TIi!-offer applies to the lurre Is tile eniy ami to hut one in a family. The lar^w liottlc Co a tarns 2^ tiuiea as much as the fifty cet t Uittle. K ' 1 : ; prepared al the laltora* tori -.ol E. E. DeWittdet’o. Chicago^ For sale by \Valterl>oro I Vug Company. Special Offer in Seasonable Dress Goods O c? * % 7* piece Black Broad Cloth. Value £i»oo yard, to £<> 75c piece Black sur^e. Value $1.00 yard, to j;o at 75c. yard. 0 1 piece granite Cloth. Value Soc. yd, to goat 55:. yard. CJ / At Hyrne’s Store Plan New Trade Route. It is understood in Lhasa, the Thibetan capital, says the Indian Trade Journal, that the Amban intends to open a new trade route toward China by way of the Po-yul. This will ■ave 15 days In journeys to Sanga- Chojong and by Pothang to Cyando. IKE WORLDS GREATEST SEWIN6 HACHIK 'LIGHT RUNNING. *u3datoi|UH bo jojj|ui eqi is jap|noq« i»q jeAo dou«(9 o) sanunuoa oqat sjocb •urns if jo uaptvtn eqi jo isvdjq aqj B| i*uj»)d s9u|Jds iiapniao odoH ‘pjaMiu SU109 saAjasaQ aqs Exact Scienca. All Inexactness In science Is the ro- ault of ignorance or of the failure to record events accurately.—London Hospital. - Fair Play. There la In most men that Instinct which la one of the best heritage* from boyhood—this Instinct for fair play and for giving everybody “a chance." Kennedy’s laxative Cough Syrap COVTADTS HOIST AJTD TAR ReHtfee Colds by werktag them eat qf the.s/stem throash s.aoplsm and htajlhy action of the bowels. Relieves. Coughs by cleanshqr tin mucous membranes of the throat? shad wd bronchial tuSaa. ’’ A * dry, cut*** Like ft hr MKMM-HK UKTt Tn MWi ntaf MiTUitf Pli—Sm m ft* John M. Klein, Druggist. Ifynu want either a Vlbrattna Shuttle, lUitarjr nbutlleur aHinjrteThread (CAain&UrJi] Hewtpa Machine write to IRI RE* RMRE IEV1M MACNlRf IMPART • Ormna*. Mmsu Many ««wi»c (aacrnnn arc made to seM reeardkaa a/ quality, but the KeW Hwaae ma.i- lo wear. Out (naranty never uni nut. •eM hjr Mtlrorfaed dealer* aaljr. CASTOR IA For Intuits and Children. Tki KM Ym Hm Ahnp BngH Bears the Signature of RAF HwfdiWL 9ZS& KALB. I 1 r» ft: 1 f i - J