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7 iF^ =in?? ini ii .I (make union! "Spick and Span" 1 =1 . Clean Up and Paint Up April 5th to 11th 1 i ' We Are With You I I I The Union Hardware Co, 1 r The Hardware People. | l==ir inr im ir=UI | Very Low Rates * * * ACCOUNT j" ; ; Panama-Pacific International Exposition SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA | Panama-California Exposition X Opened February 20. Closes December I. 191.1. ?? > SAN DIEGO. CALIFORNIA. ?* Opened January 1. (.'loses December 31, 1915. > VIA <?> Y SOUTHERN RAILWAY f y " y PREMIER CARRIER OF THE SOUTH. + Tickets on sale daily and limited 90 days for returning- Good ?? going via one route and returning via another. Stop-overs allowed. One Way via From Round Trip Fares Portland, Oregon i. X Columbia, S. C __ __ __$82.45 $104.21 i V Charleston, S. C. __ -- __ ? 85.15 106.85 ?* Orangeburg, S. C. __ __ __ __ 82.15 104.79 ?$ JlL Sumter, S. C. __ -- -- -- . - 84.15 105.55 Jt X Camden, S. _. __ .. .. 84.15 105.04 > Aiken, S. C. 79.15 102.45 > Chester, S. C -- 82.90 102.32 & Z Rock Hill. S. C. 82.90 102.32 X Spartanburg, S. t". .. __ .. 81.50 101.00 Greenville, s. C. 80.00 101.00 Greenwood, S. ('. . ._ __ 79.20.. 101.00 JJL Y Newberry, s. C. 81.10 102.81 t A X Proportionately low rates from other points. Also very low J round trip rates to Seattle, Wash.; Portland, Ore.; Vancouver, R- C? and many other Western points. Full information regarding the various routes, points of interest ++* X schedules, etc., gladly furnished. Also descriptive literature sent X upon request. Let. us help you plan your trip. Why pay Tourist Agencies when our services are free? Address S. H. McLEAN, District Passenger Agent ^ Columbia, S. C. A S. If. Hardwick, P.T.M., H. F. Cary, G.P.A., W. E. McGee, A.G.P.A. A VV'.i alilnirf r?? It C IVochinalnn It I' PnlnmKi. VJ P > ' * ~ ^ IF MEALS HIT BACK POSITIVE PROOF ANI) STOMACH SOURS Should Convince the Greatest Skeptic ? > in I'nion "Pape's Diapepsin" ends Indigestion, Gas, Dyspepsia and Stomach Because it's the evidence of a UnMisery in live minutes. ion citizen. If what vou just ate is souring on Testimony easily investigated, your stomach or lies like a lump of strongest endorsement of merit, lead, refusing to digest, or you belch ,, cw>es , P,0?f* iea(' llgas and eructate sour, undigested . ^ ^ m^\ !? Ml" food, or have a feeling of dizziness, . . ' \f u?n' ^av<' following knarthurn, fullness, nausea, bad taste L'VJ,.'! ? ls l'xp(*nence on ilarch i. mouth and stomach, headache, J."*l- My kidneys were weak and vou can get blessed relief in five . aj' 1 intensely . from backache. finally, I used niiau.ts' , ... . Doan's Kidney Pills, procured from Ask your pharmacist to show you th(> ,,aln i.tto ? c'0 aM(, , the formula, plainly printed on these haye no jn Qr <)ther ai| s SO-cent cases of Pape s Diapepsin, ()ver three s , M then you will understand why dys- sai(,. ..Th<> (.ure ?oan,s Ki(ln ,.il|s peptic troubles of all kinds must go, brouRht ni(. has ,)een p(.rmanJntt , and why they relieve sour, out-of- bave advised many people to try this rder stomachs or indigestion in five medicine, as I know it will relieve minutes. Pape s Diapepsin is or cure anyone> if tak,.n accordi to harmless; tastes like candy, though direction*" each dose will digest and prepare for j.rico r,0Cf at a? (lealors l)on-t assimilation into the blood all the f.imp,v ask fo,. a Rjd remedy-get food you eat; besides, it makes you I)oan's Kidney Fills?the same that v to the table with a healthy ap- Mr. Wood had. Fostcr-Milburn Co petite; but, what will please you Frops., Buffalo, N. Y. most, is that you will feel that your - 9 . stomach and intestines are clean and [t is surprising how many really fresh, and you will not need to resort good people there are in this wicked to laxatives or liver pills for bilious- old world of ours?if we only tak? ness or constipation. their word for it. This city will have many "Papa's Diapepxin" cranks, as some people will call them, but you will be,en- SEND FOR FREE CMalog-CircularjS thusiastic about this splendid stom-iB r?sbion Plate No. 1, copyrighted, n i ? ; .1, I and the ramoui 90 iJayit I rrntmrnt and n ach preparation, gases, heartburn, McKISSICK S METHOD | sourness, dyspepsia, or any stomach Bof treating the Scalp. Hair and Skin with No. 0 misery. 1 I 1. 2 & 3 Pr^parationa vj Got some now, this minute, an I I P ^ uT, wo K *. COr, t ? . , , - , , . , , A *' ?nx '?2. Wilmington. Del. JB l id yourself of stomach trouhh and TwimtwyH Mi'k 'inNt r ilinrilC ITHTflniTn'r^ indigestion in live minutes. ~ , J T '. ~~~ 'f "1(> defendant isn't confident of How To Give Quinine To Children. acquitta,f h(. is ,.?nvin(.(.(l that lh.,|t PKnRlf.lNKisthe trade-mark nntne given to an is no such thing as justice in the improved Quinine. It is a Tasteless Syrup pleas- , . ant to take and does not disturb the stomach, tout is. Children take it and never know it is Quinine. 1 1 A iso especially adapted to adults who cannot Piles Cured in 6 to It Davs take ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate nor ,, , .... . cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try , ?"r ,*T!S' wl" rr'"r"' money if PAZO tt the next time you need Quinine for any pur- I MEN i fails to cure any case of Itching, pose. Ask for 2-ounce original package. The RHnd, Minding or Protruding Piles in 6to 14 days. name FKUKJEINK is blown in bottle. 25 cents. The first application gives Ease and Rest. 50c. SOBRIETY PAYS IN KANSAS State Makes Answer to the Wholesale Liquor Dealers (Kansas City Star, March 17) Kansas, there it stands; first in wealth, first in health and first in education. That is the answer of Kansas to the statement issued recently by the National Wholesale Liquor Dealers' Association, that prohibition had brought the state below the average license state in morals, health and economic standards. Kansas has more wealth per capita; more young men and women in colleges and the university, in proportion 1o population; more children in the Sunday schools; a lower death rate; a lower percentage of illiteracy, fifty-three counties without a jail prisoner last year; forty-eight counties that did not send a prisoner to state prison; eighty-seven that did not have an insane patient last year. All of this credited to thirty years I of prohibition. Blasting Away at Kansas "The liquor interests of the coun-1 try are centering their attacks on j Kansas," declared Arthur Cappe., governor of the state, to a representative of The Weekly Star. "The country is being flooded with literature containing ridiculous and manufactured stories regarding the failure of prohibition in Kansas. With that monument to prohibition out of : the way, they feel they would have, removed their greatest obstacle. "Kansas people are stronger for | prohibition today than ever before.' nor is the reason for this approval far to seek. "As a result of prohibition the annual expenditure for liquor has been } reduced $21 per capita, the average j in the United States, to $1.25 in Kan-j sas. "Illiteracy among Kansas people j has been reduced to 2 per cent?the lowest in the United States. ,,wvUt T.r?...... 4-1 ' i a ui i\cllirt(ir> I'WllllllUA 111 LIIV state did not send a prisoner to the penitentiary, and eighty-seven Kan- I sas counties did not send a patient ! to an asylum last year. Criminal Cases Decreasing "More than a dozen counties have 1 not called a jury in ten years to try a criminal case. "Fifty-three counties were without prisoners in their county jail all last year; twenty-eight counties are without paupers in their almshouses. "The Kansas death rate is the low- , est in "the world?seven and one-half ! for each one thousand persons. "Kansas sends more students to its j colleges and university than any other state in the Union in proportion to population. Wealth Doubled in Ten Years "Kansas hank deposits have increased in ten years from 100 millioh to '200 million dollars. "The per capita wealth of Kansas is greater than any state in the Union?approximately $1,700 for every man, woman and child in the stat?-* "Instead of having one of the high est percentages of insanity, Kansahas about the lowest. Everv insai.e person in the state, practically, is in one of the state hospitals. Only forty-four insane in all the state were reported bv the counties last year as being outside the asylums. In uanv states the incurables are sent back to their home counties for care. Many states have more insane natients in the county asylums than in the state asylums. Kansas does not permit its insane to be returned to the counties. It keeps them in the hospitals where they can be cared for scientifically. Kansas Knows What's Happening "But, anyway, who but a wholesale liquor dealer would ever think to of fer as an argument that temperance induced insanity, or that intemperance made up for a greater degree of sanity?" W. Y. Morgan, lieutenant governor and editor of the Hutchinson News: "The onlv people who criticize prohibition in Kansas are those who live outside the state, know nothing about the subject and are interested in the sale or manufacture of liquor. In every way possible, by constitutional provision, bv statuatorv law. by resolution, be every political party and by the vote of the legislature representing the people of Kansas, the policy of prohibition is declared by the r sidents of our state beneficial, right and resulting in great good to the people and to the state. The men and women of Kansas certainly know what is happening around them better than the partisans of the liquor traffic which is not allowed to cross the state line of Kansas." Has Hotter Manners and Morals Chief Justice W. A. Johnston of the Kansas Supreme Court, while not willing to be interviewed on the subject, recently made this statement in conversation with a friend: "Kansas certainly has had better morals and better manners since we kicked the Wholesale Liquor Dealers' Association out of the state." Sends Children to Sunday School Justice John Marchall of tin upreme court: "The brewers mak tue strange complaint that Kansas i pot a church state. Church statistic are not available, but what will they s iy to this fact which is capable of exact figures: J. II. Engle, secretary of the Kansas State Sunday School A ociation, declares that Kansas has the largest Sunday school attendant-*- of any state in the Union, accordii to population. "Fifty-tW) per cent of the population of the state, in the last cet Ia> are native born Kansans. Of the prisoners sent to the state prison lust year less than 25 per cent were native born. The illiteracy of Kansas is 2.2 per cent, and it is on the <|e crease. 1 en years a>?o ?t was :: :i. "The greatest argument in fa m of prohibition is that Kansas has hail n for thirty years and still has it. This legislature now in session has parsed two measures that will make lav. violation more improbable than ever." Get Ou Why The United States MERS of UNION COl A tax of 2 mills, or 20 c taxable property will s every dollar the farme save $15.00 in hauling the TOWNS and COI SOUTH CAROLINA i LIN A is spending ON ish. What is good eno GOOD R( Better Schools, Be Good Roads save the f; one day what it now t pie by enabling them t< the year at farmers j prosperity of the farn fall." GET POLITICS OUT < This $200,000 Bom sion composed of seve the county, who will r done by contract, undc der, from the Good Ro know no one and have Don't Vote i Must our children Roads, and are having our children will have' old spinning wheel am children a chance. A an 8 or 10 mill MUD r What Will I To the man who owns I rn 1-1- 1 io me man wno pays Will mv Commutation To the man who retur To the man who retur] To the man who retur Why not have the Corporations in Union Good Roads, then, wh^ GOOD ROADS? Don't forget to i Ten to One for Prohibition James A. Troutman, member of the Kansas State Senate: "In thirty years prohibition in Kansas has re. suited in a greater diffusion of general education and a smaller percentage of illiteracy and crime than any other organized community on tht globe. At the last election the Repulican, Democratic and Progressive candidates for governor stood on prohibition platforms and advocated prohibition without evasion or apology The candidate who represented the anti-prohibition sentiment polled only one-tenth of the combined vote giver the other three candidates?one vote in ten against prohibition." Decreases Prison Population Warden J. 1). Botkin of the state prison at Lansing: "We have a smaller number of prisoners in the state prison now than at any time in the last ten years. The prison population is steadily declining. On March 1, 11)15, we had 7t?K, and twenty-sis of this number are federal prisoners Forty per cent of this number were not residents of Kansas, but were 'floaters' who were captured foi crime within the state. "Eiirhtv ner cent of the miml.ei brought to the prison give liquor a> the cause of their downfall. Prohibition Decreases Taxes "Not a higher percentage of prisoners, I think, are sent to the Kansas prison for homicide, as charged b> the liquor dealers. The figures show that there is a constantly decreasing percentage, however, for that crimt in the state. In 1905-06 we received ninety-four for homicide; in 1906-8 we received sixty-six for the sanit crime; eightv-eight in 1909-10; fiftythree in 1911-12; forty-seven in 191U14." Associate .Justice John Dawson former attorney general of Kansas "That prohiition is best for thest cities is shown in the fact that thi Kansas cities that have received revenue whatever from vice have i lower tax rate than the cities whicV stuck to the license-fining system t< the last ditch. Conditions in I.eaven worth at the close of many years o: illicit revenues from fines is a mos striking example in support of this proposition. Leavenworth has no citj building of any kind. Its many year; of fines and saloon domination an just now being overcome. The citj of Leavenworth during the last threi or four years, deprived of its revenui from crime, has made its most re markable growth." [rem|S^RM EN. The villain in the melodrama als< has some difficulty trying to mak his glances as dark as his moustache it of The Ruts! Pay Mud Tax! Department of Agriculture estimates that the FARJNTY are now paying $65,000.00 a year MUD TAX. :ents on the hundred dollars of assessed valuation of >ave the 8 mill MUD TAX we are now paying. For ir will have to pay because of this Bond Issue he will costs. For every dollar the FARMER has to pay IPORATIONS will pay FOUR. For every dollar s now spending on GOOD ROADS, NORTH CAROE HUNDRED. Don't he Cent Wise and Dollar Foolugh for North Carolina is not too good for US. )ADS MEAN PROSPERITY tter Churches, Better Homes, and Greater Wealth, armer in his hauling cost by enabling him to haul in ,akes two to haul. Good Roads will save the Mill peo3 get their cord wood and farm produce any time in >rices. The Business Man will share in the increased ner and mill man. "Together we stand, Divided we OF ROADS, AND WAGONS OUT OF THE MUD! i Issue will be economically expended by a commissn experienced business men from different parts of eceive no pay for their services. The work will be ir the direct supervision of an experienced road builads department at Washington. This engineer will no pets. a Mud Tax on Your Children ! be forced to compete with children who live on Goou the advantages of better churches and schools than ? They have the same chance with bad roads as the 1 loom have with the modern cotton mill. Give the 2 mill Good Roads Tax now will save your children TAX. Bo the Cost of Good Roads? no property Not One Cent. only poll tax Not One Cent. Road Tax be increased? Not One Cent. ns $25 for taxation 5 Cents per year. us $50 for taxation 10 Cents per year. ns $100 for taxation 20 Cents per year. i benefits of Good Roads while we are living? The County will pay more than half of the cost of the r should we not vote for the BOND ISSUE FOR /ote! Next Tuesday, April the 6th. A. G. KENNEDY. I v^| I McFARLAND TOURS Official "Tour Agents" Panama Exposition 5 XTT 11 . 1 ^ ^ * w e sell the Official l ours to the Exposition, and make all arrangements for your trip, whether you go as an individual or in our ! select personally conducted parties. Our special trains, and expense paid features, insures lowest rates and > ' best accommodations. ASK US : I Call or Write lor Folder Address THE UNION TIMES LEWIS M. RICE, Editor.