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|THE GRANDl The Little Theatre with the Big Program TO-DAY THE FENCING MASTER A Two Part Feature with Thomas Jefferson? a Drama of intense interest. Also a single reel Thanhouser, featuring the Thanhouser Kidlets in "A Life Worth While." Their sunshine changes silver threads to gold. Did you say laugh? Sure! We've got it always. "Some Cop," featuring Chas. DeForest and Vivian Prescot; you will laugh and you will giggle Tomorrow?Friday METRO PICTURES CORPORATION Pa*Mi1q V T>10 O D1 n XT/\-Mn *\?r\n/\v^4- rtL * vipuuu x iajo aim x lajcio picsciil tile Vlianiiing actress FLORENCE REED In Clyde Fitch's Great Romatic Story "HER OWN WAY" Five parts of captivating sentiment CAST OF CHARACTERS Georgians Carley Miss Florence Reed Mrs. Carley, her step-mother__ Miss Blanche Davenport Mrs. Steven Carley, her sister-in-law __ Miss Clarissa Selwynne Lieutenant Richard Coleman __ Mr. Robert H. Barrat Steven Carley, Georginana's brother __ ..Mr. Fraunie Fraumholz Sam Coast-- Mr. William A. Morse Moles, butler to the Carleys__ ..Mr. John Karney Grand Duke Valdimir. ..Mr. James O'Neill In addition a Keystone Comedy, "Gussie's Wayward Path," featuring Mr. Sid Chaplin. Charles Chaplin's brother, who is a new addition to the Keystone force, having been in this country but a few months. Sid was the leading Comedian in one Vaudeville house in London, Eng., for 8 years. Don't be afraid that Mrs. So and So will see you going to a picture show; they have reserved seats. If you want to know who lives in Union? Visit The Grand gL? ' LESS THAN HALF of the fees collected shall be exSTATE IS AFFECTED pended for the enforcement of the law, and that all such moneys shall Hunter's License Act Becomes Law go into the school fund of the reThursday spective counties where collected." Section 5, besides exempting 27 Thursday becomes effective the counties, as above stated, prescribes hunter's license act adopted by the penalties for violation as follows: general assembly at its last session, "That any person violating the prowhich act applies, however, to but 17 visions of this act shall be guilty of a of the 44 counties in the State, the misdemeanor and upon conviction other 27, Richland among them, being shall be fined not less than $10 nor specifically exempt. more than $25 or be imprisoned one Counties in which the new law day for each dollar fined and not takes effect this week are: Lexing- paid: Provided, however. That the ton, Barnwell, Beafort, Calhoun, provisions of this act shall not be Charleston, Chester, Darlington, Dil- construed as applying to the public Ion, Dorchester, Florence, Greenville, lands and waters of this State, and Hampton, Jasper, Laurens, Marion, no license of any nature whatever Oconee, Orangeburg?17. shall be required of any resident of Counties exempt from its provisions any county of this State to hunt on are: Richland, Berkeley, Clarendon, such lands and w'aters within such Bamberg, Georgetown, Saluda, Aiken, counties. . . ." Abbeville, Pickens, York, Lee, Green- ' ' wood, Newberry, Cherokee. Lancaster Half Ynur I ivincr Marlboro, Union, Edgefield, Spartan- ta# s+u,*. " burg Horry, Colleton, Williamsburg, W linOUT IVlOneyOOSt Anderson. Chesterfield, Sumter, Ker- A right or wrong start in 1915 will shaw, Fairfield?27. make or break most farmers in the *'u> , Cotton States. We are all facing a Following is the text of the act: crisis on cotton. Cotton credit is upSection 1. That every resident of get Tj10 SUppiy merchant cannot adthis Slate must obtain a license in vanc? ,le8 on ]91r> cotlon You order to hunt birds or animals within must d0 b d the borders of this State except land- .. - . , , J lords and tenants and their respective ?wn fcrcs food and grain supplies children on their freeholds and lease- *av? madG/up mo8t of your store holds, respectively, for which license *n Hie past. he shall pay $1.10 each year, said li- * good Piece of Karden 8 und, cense to be known as a county hun- HRbtly planted, lightly tended and ter's license, and it shall entitle the ^ePt planted the year round, can be owner and holder thereof to hunt, in made to pay half your living. It will accordance with the laws of this save you more money than you made State, anywhere in the county in on Hie best five acres of cotton you which he resides: Provided, however, ever grew! But it must be a real That any landlord may give written garden, and not the mere one-plantpermission to any resident of the ing patch in the spring and fall, county in which he lives to hunt on Hastings' 1915 Seed Book tells all his premises which said written per- about the right kind of a money-savmit shall be exhibited on demand of ing garden and the vegetables to put any game warden or officer, and fail- in it. It tells about the field crops ure to do so shall be prima facie evi- as well and shows you the clear road dence of violation of the provisions to real farm prosperity, comfort and of this act. independence. IT'S FREE. Send for "Sec. 2. That any person who has it today to H. G. HASTINGS & CO., been a bona fide resident of this Atlanta, Ga. Advt. State for one year previous to the en actment of this law may procure a license to hunt, to be known as a State hunter's license, for which he shall pa" the sum of $2, and it shall J entitle the owner and holder thereof to hunt, in accordance with the laws of this State, for a period of one year. | C)C|liCnYp/NEi |L| C kj "Sec. 3. That these licenses shall I laCI*! E UI r wrl ITIblii he issued by the clerks of court, frame ^^^TJfOUF^DRUGGIST\^^^^ warden, or any bonded agent of the m chief game warden, and they shall be Some men cUmb u jn the worl(, paid the sum of 10 cents for each and a ,ot more n>main at the bottom license sold by them. because the elevator isn't running. Law Enforcement Fund * * "Sec. . That all sums of money Dreaming that you are worth a collected from the sales of said million dollars doesnT render you licenses shall be transmitted to the eligible for membership in the tax State treasurer and placed to the dodger class, credit of the game protection fund. and that the chief game warden at ^5J>H5?FREEc!^^ the end of each year shall return to I p?,i.;nn pi.,. iu_ j I each county the total amount collect- I ,he Fmmoiu M bay. Tr??n??t and I ed from the sales of said licenses in McKISSICK'S METHOD 9 each COUnty, less the actual COSt of tr#atfn? th? Se*lp,Ha?r and Skin with No. I enforcing the laws in said county: | w.VSJScis'siTkVCO. I Provided, That in Chester and Hamp- ^ P. o. iw 102. Wllminfo. Dd. M ton counties not more than one-half BANKER MORGAN IN PERIL OFJIIS LIFE Attacked by Crank at Conntry Home ASSAILANT"\ GERMAN Financier .nd His Butler Overpowered Crazed Man After Desperate Figh< In Hallway?Morgan Received Two Bullet Wounds. Frank Ilolt, former Cornell university instructor, who attempted to assassinate J. I*. Morgan at East Isle, Mr. Morgan's summer home near (Jlen Cove, N. Y., confessed that he was the man wlto set the bomb which exploded in the Capitol at Washington. Holt, who is undoubtedly insane, went to Mr. Morgan's home where he attacked the banker in the hallway, wounding him twice with a HS-caliher pistol. He was finally overpowered by Mr. Morgan and his butler and lodged in the (Hen Cove jail. In a statement Holt said he had gone to the Morgan home to persuade the banker to stop the shipment of munitions of war from this country to Europe. He stated that at first he had intended no harm to the banker. Two revolvers and several sticks of dynamite were taken from Holt when he was arrested by the police. Fortunately Mr. Morgan's wounds were not of a serious nature and his physicians say he is in no danger. The attempted assassination of the financier created great excitement in Wall stree wlien the news of the attack was flashed over the wires, but soon abated when it was learned that the banker was in no danger. Holt, by his confession and the detailed description of the bomb he used in the Capitol outrage, stamped himself as an expert in the use of explosives, the police assert. Immediately after his confession was obtained, the chief of the Washington police, a squad of secret service operators and New York City detectives and Bertillon and finger print experts were summoned to Glen Cove. Belief prevailed that Holt had been connected with other bornh outrages which have baffled the police, notably the finding recently of a bomb on tie grounds of the Andrew Carnegie's Fifth avenue residence in New York City. SLAIN ON JOY RIDE. Tragedy In Florida?Prominent Man Arretted. J. .T. Mcndenhall, prominent citizen of Clearwater, Fin., is held in the Pinellas county jail on charges connected with the killing of two women, whose family name is said to have been Klliott, Or, the west coast road, near Moccasin branch. The huriicd bodies of the Iwn women were at an undertaker's at Clearwater, they having been burned when the automobile in which they had been riding with Mendcnhall was destroyed by fire. Reports from Clearwater state that the chauffeur of the ear walked from the scene of the killing to Clearwater after midnight and gave the authorities the first news of the tragedy. According to tin* chauffeur's stor) Mciidcnhall and the women got inte trouble while in the automobile. Tin chauffeur said he heard a pistol shot in the ear; that he then ran from tin .cene and that he heard three mort I shots as he fled. The authorities believe the automobile became ignited or was set afire after the women had been killed. Mendcnhall was arrested at his home near Clearwater. The two women killed in the ear werr Mrs. Charles \V. Klliott and her daughter, Miss Susie Klliott, of 'IVimpa. Chauffeur (luy Steinple came back from Clearwater and told his story of the tragedy. lie said Mendcnhall engaged him to drive him and the two women to Clearwater. LIBERTY BELL S TOUR. I Old Relic Carried to San Francisco Exposition. Thousands went to Independence hall at Philadelphia to hid God-speed to the Liberty hell, which has started across the continent to the Panama-Pacific exposition. The journey will he the longest ever made hy the hell, ami elaborate arrangements have been made to guard it from injury. Along the route preparations have been made for patriotic demonstrations that promise to surpass any that have marked the progress of the hell on previous pilgrimages. Goodwin Left $25,000,000. The entire estate of ,lames J. Goodwin, a cousin and former partner of the late .1. Pierpont Morgan, is given to his widow and children under terms of his will filed for probate at New York. Mr. Goodwin died on June 25. The estate is estimated at approximately $25,OOO.OtX). Fatal Railroad Wreck. Three persons were killed and about forty injured when two coaches of a GllicairO- Milwaukee and ?"? senger train fell through a trestle near Rainier, Wash. The passenger train fell upon a freight train passing under the trestle. "Bride Kidnaper" Escape*. Homer MeCord, the so-called Kansas "hride kidnaper," and Frank Williams, convicts in the state prison al Lansing, escaped from the prison coal mine by a perilous 800-foot climb up the perpendicular air shaft. ? MARSHALL THREATENED. Vice President Receives Many Anony1 nous Letters. I Thomas It. Marshall, vice president of the LJnited States, in a statement to newspaper reporters at St. Ixiuis, said r lie had been threatened with death Ln more than a dozen anonymous letters which lie had received during the last six weeks. The. vice president said the threats r came to him while la- was in Washing| ton. He added that as la- was more or less a fatalist he did not notify the | secret service department. He said he t had no fear of death, but that he was , startled when he learned of the explosion at the Capitol. Mr. Marsliall said: "I presume I received more than a . dozen threatening letters while in Washt ington. Some of them were signed, but ( most were anonymous. 1 threw all of them away." i EDITORS ARRESTED. | Charged With Conspiracy to Start Mexican Revolt. .lose Klguero and Uodrigo De IJano, ! connected with El Presente, a Spanish i daily newspaper, were arrested at San Antonio, Texas, charged with conspiracy . to set on foot a new revolution in Mex. ico. Hearing was set for July 15. Both ; men were released on bonds of $2,500 each. I Elguero formerly was editor of El Pais, a daily paper in Mexico City, and ' De I.Iano was head of the editorial de! partment of El Impartial. They arrived in, Sun Antonio about six months ago. ( Both asserted their innocence and declared themselves opposed to the Iluerta faction. BECKER MAY "SQUEAL." Doomed Man Could Make Further Graft Disclosures. On the authority of Charles Becker's . counsel, Martin T. Manton, it was said [ at New York that if Becker fails in 1 his appeal to the United States supreme court lie will, liefore going to the electric I chair for the murder of Herman Rosenthal. make a public disclosure of the names of the men with whom he is alleged to lwive divided $100,000 in graft money collected from gamblers and keepers of illegal resorts during his career as head of the famous strongi arm squad. Six men, some of them police depart , mmi officials, arc understood to Ik- named j in the statement Becker lias prepared. FATALITIES OF 4TH. Eight Killed, 177 Hurt In Gunpowder , Revelry. Belated celebration of Independence day started with a list of eight deaths I ami the injury of 177 persons in the United States in observance of the day. , This was the lowest figure ever recorded t 011 Fourth of duly fatalities, but it was later returns would increase 1 the total of dead. List year the total , killed was nine .iiid lujun-d ?>(>!. The largest number of accidents of I any one city was reported from CinI einnati, Ohio, when* Stli persons were hurt with fireworks and explosives. In Chicago one hoy was killed and none was injured. 1 Bolt Slays Engineer. Walter (lernon, an Illinois Central railroad locomotive engineer, was killed by lightning at llarahan, 7 miles above New Orleans during a heavy electrical and wind storm. In New Orleans property damage was confined to the hreak, I ing of several plateglass window-, in , jtlic business district, which were blown in by the wind. Telephone service in scv1 eral sections of the city was temporarily interrupted because of minor dnm! age to wires. Fire at Carrollton, <ia. At an ral ly hour the Suntlilaiul hotel. whieli was owned by Professor J. II. Mclsoii. president of tlio A. ?V M. school, al ('arrollt on. ami the Pixie boarding house, adjoining the hotel, ami also the reshlenee oectipied by Mr. Ityron were destroyed by lire. The buildings were partially insured. The loss is estimated at $12,(100. Bolt Kills Boy. Testes I'ritcheU, the ear-old son of J. I.. Pritehett, of Wacoochce Valley, Ma., Was killed by li fi'i't ninjr duriity an electrical storm that swept over that section. The hoy was standiiijr at a window when a l>olt struck the house. Kstes was instantly killed, and liis 12 \car-old brother, Paul, whs badly shoekrd, lint was resuscitated by a physician. The lightning killed a lien and eight chickens under the house. Died of Hi* Wounds. Itnlcigh Itonlware, rural policeman, who was one of nine men shot at Winnshoro, S. <\, .lone I t, when Clyde Isenhour and others attempted to take from a a sheriff's |m>ssc a negro prisoner about to Ik* tried for assault upon a white woman, died of his wounds at a Columbia hospital. Iioulware's is the fourth death to result from the affray. Innes and Wife Indicted. Victor Ik Innes and his wife, Mrs. Ida Innes. now in jail in San Antonio fighting extradition to (loorghi, were indicted Monday by the I'nlted States grand Jury in the Federal building on a charge of using the mails to defraud Mrs. IOIoise Nelms Dennis. Warrants were drawn and placed with the marshal's office and will be sent ut once to Texas to be served. With the arrival at Cornish, N. II., of additional seerrt serviee men, extra precautions were taken to guard President Wilson from cranks who might la- stirred up by the aasualt on J. P. Morgan and the expioeion in the Capitol at Washington. \ Followed Friend's Advice After trying Fruitola and Traxo, Mrs. L. C. Clark. 840 Mollia St., Dallas, Texas, wrote to the Pinus laboratories as follows: "I have been a sufferer from gall-stones, and Fruitola and Traxo was recommended and I am glad to say I took advantage of your most wonderful medicine, with wonderful results." Fruitola and Traxo are two remedies that are used in combination. Fruitola acts on the intestinal organs as a powerful lubricant, softening the congested waste and breaking up the hardened particles so that easy elimination follows quickly, to the great relief of the patient. Traxo is a compound of splendid tonic properties. of special value in strengthening and restoring the system i that has been weakened by constant suffering. The Pinus laboratories have many letters on file testifying to 1 the merit of Fruitola and Traxo; letters from people who have used j the remedy and know from actual experience what it has done for them... For the rnnvpnioni<u ?f Ui? 1 " I _ .hi |>uifi>v, <11 uiigi'lllt'lU K. IlilV*' W't'll I mad?- to supply Fruitola and Traxo through loading drug stores. In Union they can be obtained at MILHOUS DRUG' ^COMPANY. ; ? ^ $ A Mr. A. H. Miller, a prominent citizen of Greer, | A is a candidate for congress over in the Ft urth dis- t* A trict. He is not only a successful farmer hut he A A is one of the leading cattle breeders of the State A A as well. He knows the needs of the people and will A A champion their needs and rights in congress if A A elected. A A Personal acquaintance with Mr. Miller justifies A A us in the deliberate opinion that he is the one man A A who will live up to his pledges. He is a bold spirit, A A a thinker and a bundle of energy. His life is a A A record of achievement, not of promises. F'aithful A A in his friendships and in all positions of trust, he A y has shown by these that he can be depended upon A y to live up to his promises for future usefulness. A y Mr. Miller is opposed by Col. Tobe Morgan, lav/- y y yer and bank president of Greenville; Col. Sam y y Nicholls, lawyer of Spartanburg; Judge Johnson, y V probate judge of Union county, and Robert J. y y Gantt, lawyer of Spartanburg. The voters of the y y Fourth district have a good opportunity to show y y their preference for a representative of the lar- y X gest class of citizenship of the district.?Green- y V wood Index. T V ^ aVA, "y l^" nQr # iP^t Great Soap-Maker * Red Devil Lye ^Process or Mi BIG ^m^ll WSm Devil Lye will make twenty \CANS> J/^MSS^M pounds of the best soap. ? solves as soon as it it a ho ih'c v/af r. XOTIC'K DKMOCUATK ^ ? ? mm* * m * ^ g~ (M il SKCKKTAIUKS 2l EL S C \f j V & You will each report to the Clerk p ^ of Court for Union county and take your Democratic Clul> Knrollnient It is our air/! .mi! d. -aii t<> Hook for the purpose of ro-open'mp . the same for the enrollment of Kivo nil (>1 our puirons 1 no young democrats who have h.com. service possible all l imes and of ago since the last general election and those coming of age on or before WG consider i". a la vol", and not September Mth, next. You will open a focM, when 'i> V call our althe club books for said enrollment on ... , July ">th. next, the same to remain tention to an> ? 'ley may open until July loth, when they must find with tilt i. 11 /(>U In- closed and turned over to the . . , County Chairman to l>e nlnccd be- *4 loot .a ui , 11 h? fore the County Exeeutive Committee water is not } : : : < b-ai or for purposes of purging the same, i;,,U4 . . > k. ; .1 and then certified by Chairman and " V<)m 1,^hts ' <M !m ;,t for record in the office <>f the Clerk not bright cr?o..p". all our aloff5.ou,t' , , ,u c 1 tention to the lac:, and we - halt Please take due notice thereof and govern yourselves accordingly. see that the t !'< e i remedied MACHETIl YOUNC, If' any of your .'yht are mil of Chairman Executive Com i,,t ,, . 1., ... ... 11 ,n,r 01 (lei. let 11s ki.o . . and v. e d d June 2;>, 191f>. * .'<-.t. _ have them put a i rtlei wiflu at any cost for yo D. AMBROSE HUGHES Public Auto Service MlUllCipal ElCC'triC Lifjllt Phone 289 Calls Promptly Answered Afld WotCF WOFkS It. A. EASTEK JN(t, Snpt. " Phone 144 IT \Y. Main St. M. C. RAMSEY I I m-t-A .. I nr u r amioi | rd|ier naiigcr A* H* 1V?. U. 1^1 PC ^LF and Decorator ATTORNEY AT LAW Estimates Cheerfully burnished Phone 33 Union, S. C. I OFFICE OPPOSITE COURT ?0i ST UNION, S. C. Dr. Virgil R. Hawkins J- c. i-errin ? UNION, s. c:. DENTIST CIVIL ENGINEER AND LAND SURVEYOR OFFICE OVER MUTUAL I Tnjnn C f DRY GOODS COMPANY CIIIUII, O. YJ, Phone 214-J