The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, August 13, 1915, Page 2, Image 2
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A (Zr UNDER 1
AjA ?\COVERNMENT
j jaKnrAi ?J^SUPERVISION
member bank under j
jllBHl 11 II Ijjljfl r>yyA ^ federal reserve act .
; ?the? i
Merchants & Planters Nat'l Bank
"The Old Reliable"
> ?
The Oldest and Largest Bank in Union County
1
; "SAFETY FIRST" is a fundamental principle with j
' this bank. The safety of your money is the first con- ?
Esideration in opening a bank account, and we will he i
s,, Iwxm vaii x.,11 m,I l,,t lie eViom.' vnn tho mnnv "
J safeguards we place around your money. J
; Vou can teach your DOLLARS to have more Cents
by depositing them in our SAVINGS DEPARTMENT,
where we pay the highest rate of interest, consistent
! with -?afe and sound banking methods. |
-t
i LOOK FOR THE BANK WITH THE CHIME CLOCK
: i
I And deposit your money where il will be absolutely sale ?
l
F. M. FARR, W. F. GILLIAM. J. D. ARTHUR, ;
President. Vice-President. Cashier. !
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? TO OUR PATRONS! ?
i T
We are now making our regular ice deliveries
V and the following scale of prices are in effect: ??
V 300-1 b. delivery at 30c per 100 v
100-1 b. delivery at 32 l-2c per 100 V
V 50-lb. delivery at 35c per 100 v
V 25-lb. delivery at 40c ner 100 V
20-1 b delivery at 42 l-2c per 100
10-lb. delivery at 50c per 100 ?
Y Books as low as 25c and 50c may be had so as Y
to convenience the small consumer. J
These prices are as low as Greenville, Spartan- V
^ burg, Columbia or any of the surrounding cities.
X ICE PURCHASED PROM WAGON FOR CASH X
IS AT A HIGHER RATE
jrj This is for our protection and for the protection j
^ of the consumer.
.t ALL COUPON BOOKS TO CONSUMERS X
WILL BE CASH
t Union Ice & Fuel Co. |
V >
A^A A^A
A^4. il^A. A^A
^ ||WT^T f^TT^yT^yT^TT^f
| New Shipment |
|Parry Buggies!
| Made in the heart of Indiana |
Xthe great timber country X
% Medium Price X
| High Quality J
? For sale by %
* *
I The Peoples Supply Co. 1
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II i nilAM V. n AWDAXT .> .....
l>/\IVEW/."* IV insagreeable t alomel is Yielrliii^r (o
Attorneys at Law l'U>asant I.iv-Vcr-Lax
ONION, S. C.
Physicians generally agree that the
_ . . II /-? i n/r ? nau mating, unpleasant effects of calI
I'ftctlCfi It"! till Courts. JVLon- an. (0 undesirably vioev
to loan on City and Farm11'1; action it has on the system. For
J i a loi.t/ while various substitutes have |
Property. been tried, but it was only recently
thai the really wonderful remedy,
a 11_ j MV-\ KU-LAX was prepared successLawrence
(i. Southard . ui v i,y i,. k. (jrigsby.
LIV-VKK-LAX has all the good,
ATTORNEY A/ LAW and none of the had effects of calo)
mel. It is a necessity in every home,
! always being ready to cleanse the
Will Practice in all Courts i sluggish liver and hile clogged system,
with no unpleasant after-effects.
Office Opposite Post Office I IV-V FK-LAX is guaranteed to
give satisfaction, or your money will
_ _ _ he immediately refunded. Insist on
CHICHESTER S PILLS ;hv,!-'i"a,i ,,par.\nK th.e Hkernness ?(
thk ihamonii an a NO. L. K. (. i igsby. I'or sale in 50c and
S1 hottlcs at Olymphs' Pharmacy.
Lir .SjfljPii i'liu In ?n.| onlil m-t>lllcW?/ j . - Iixn.
texic-j with llli? rimx.n. . . f , . , ,
W vvl no oihrr itu; or .our v .Self -made men don t always make
I I ? nc llrnxfUt. A- k f .f I'll 1-4'IIKH.TF.lt S I . ) ..> > .1../, airponohli,
1 C 2J iiranii I'ii.i.k, for ?a ; ^ J P< !? agreeable.
\tp? D y?known is iir.t.siii.t,/:?ay? Keti?i>i? j There is no task too hard for a lazy
^?-r SOlOBYORliGGISP tVFRYWHFRE I m e not t o attempt.
Romance of a
Back Yard
By DWIGHT NORWOOD
One morning, goiug to my window,
which Is Ln the rear of the house ami
looks out on the back windows ui
houses on another street, T saw a liny
white handkerchief pinned to the win
dow sill. The same afternoon, goiuu
to my room, 1 was about to open the
blinds when 1 saw through the slat-1 a
pretty girl kiss her hand to some one
In tlie house adjoining my 'domicile.
She at once disappeared, but it was
evident that a flirtation, perhaps one
that had developed into an affair of
the heart, was in progress.
After this 1 saw tuany a signal in
the window opposite which I would j
probably not have recognized as such j
hud I not seen the throwing of the
kiss. Mi* next door neighbor, of course.
1 could not see, but 1 had noticed a
good looking young man going and coming,
and I presumed that he was the
fortunate possessor of the young lady's
favor. ?
1 was one afternoon sitting at my
I window, with the blinds closed, when
through a crack between the slats I
saw a pantomime l>etweeu the lovers.
The girl looked down into her back
yjird and shook her head. After she
had left her window I looked down
into Ids back yard myself. It was inclosed
In a high brick wall topped
with broken glass. I was not long in
deciphering the pantomime. The cirl
had put a veto on her lover's undertaking
to effect an entrance to her
premises over the wall.
YiM.nil ik wees niier tins i saw a negro
bring u barrel Into the back yard
through a rear basement door. He
set It down very carefully and turned
to go away. lie had taken but a few
steps when he turned, went buck to
the barrel and busied himself examining
the head, which I could see was
not fastened in the usual way. While
he was doing this his lips moved.
Moreover, I saw something passed
from the barrel to his hand. Presently
ho went away again and this time
disappeared through the basement
door.
I was reading u love story without
words, or, rather, was seeing one enacted,
not on the stage, but in real life.
It struck me that something would occur
In the premises on the other side
of the wall. Should 1 be mean enough
to spy with a view to satisfying my
curiosity? Would It lie mean to enjoy
what I could of a drama In real life?
The barrel was deposited shortly before
my dinner hour, whlofaMpag^ G
o'clock. After dinner dnrkneav Itnd
fallen. Without turning on my lights
1 took a sent at the window. The
spnee between my home and the
houses in the rear of It was dimly visible
from the lights of the houses
shining upon it. I could barely discern
the barrel standing where it had been
placed. Not earing to reveal myself by
lighting my room, I concluded to while
llWJlY* file time In the HiirlnotQ I\xr
smoking. I lind consumed half a dozen
cigarettes and was thinking that if
there was any one in the barrel he
must he pretty well cramped when
something rose out of its top end.
There was n pause; then something
larger followed. Curiosity sharpened
my eyes, and I saw a bulk that looked
like a man's figure get out of the barrel,
take It up ami proceed with it to a corner
in the wall, where he was hidden
from me. 1 fancied he was using the
barrel for concealment from the opposite
direction.
"That's the last of him for me," I
remarked, "till the lights are put out."
Nevertheless I was too interested to
leave my post. I smoked till 1 fell
asleep. When I awoke It was 11
o'clock, and there was but one light in
the house visible to me, and that was
In the room of the heroine of my story.
As I looked it was turned off
I was now thoroughly awake and believed
that 1 bad no great time to wait
to see something more. 1 v. s right.
Not long after the last light v.;n turned
off J saw the s|wice occupied by the
basement door of the house I was
watching grow darker, imlieuiug that
the door was being opened. Then
something stood in the opening. A dark
spot flitted from the wall to the door,
entered and the door clo..cd.
1 regretted that the elopement?for
sueli 1 believed It to lie -could not
have been effected over the rear wall,
where 1 could have seen it. They would
go out the front basement door
1 went to bed and had ju-c fallen
asleep when I heard the > rack of a
pistol. IClsing. 1 looked through the
window at the house of my story. The
haseineiit and the two up|H-r Poors were
lighted. 1 saw figures passing before
the windows, but heard nothing. Aft
<t mwiinc ilie tights negan t< l.e turned
off. and in time nil was strain dark.
The next morning 1 saw in my newspaper
an account of an attempted robbery
of premises 73 Kiln street. Tiie
police were called in. but tin* robber
had escaped?nobody hurl, nothintr
lost. K!tn was tiie street back of tny
lioine. After brenkfnst I walked around
the l>loek to note the number of the
house. It. was 73.
A few days later, while scanning the
marriage notices in my morn lug paper,
I saw that Miss Kmmn A. of 73 Elin
street had been married.
I never learned what had occurred
flic night of the "robbery," bur I formed
tills theory: In trying to got out on to
Elm street ttic couple, or, at. |e:urt. the
lovers, had been detected, supposed
to be burglars and shot at. The police
entered, but were told there had
been nn attempted robbery.
A WONDER]
A customer of ours on the i
reports that for Nine Years he
the hundreds and hundreds of ?
time, he paid back the money c
No wonder We can afford t
of Coffee.
Your Money Back If You
standing1 that You are to Use C
coffee.
LUZIANNE IS BL1
Save the Coupons out of
with beautiful gifts.
The Reily-Ta
NEW C
jTA. ATa ATA ATA
| ANNOUN
X
I The Union Rol
X for business I
Y
Y We are prepared to j
Y Flour your wheat wil
Y latest equipment; our i
Y it is the latest develop]
Y C>ne the best feature
Y produced from the ide
our mill. We clean your
ounce that your wheat
REIGN OF THE AUTOMOBILE.
It Will Cost This Country This Ysar
Over a Billion Dollars.
On June 1 the number of automobiles
in the United States passed the 2,000,000
mark for the flrst time, which
leads the Scientific American to make
the following calculation:
"To run 2,000,000 cars for one year
requires at the very least 1,000,000,000
(one billion) gallons of "gas," worth
$130,000,000; 20,000,000 gallons of lubri
eating oil, worth $8,000,000; 12,000,000
tires, worth not less than $10 apiece,
or $102,000,000; accessories and extra
comforts, goggles, gloves and caps at
$50 per car, equal $100,000,000^1 garage
charges on short tours (exclusive of
gas and oil), $100 per car per year,
$200,000,000; repairs made necessary by
wear, tear and accident (exclusive of
tires), $50 per car per year, equal $100,000,000.
"According to these figures the total
running expenses for all the cars in
use amount to $730,000,000. Add thereto
the vnlue of the GOO,000 new cars
purchased during the year at an aver
ngo price of $750, which equals $450,000,000,
and we get the immense total
of $1,180,000,000 spent in a single year
(1915) on the sport of motoring."
Aeroplanes In Warfare.
Without the aeroplane in its numerous
forms the present war would have
been waged on utterly different lines
at almost every point. Either the
trench warfare would have been indefinitely
prolonged or there would
have been an ever recurrent number
of surprise attacks, with alternate success
and defeats, and a ceaseless shifting
of the balance of advantage, and
when so many millions of troops were
eugaged, over fronts of unprecedented
lengths, heaven alone knows how the
commanders In chief would have controlled
their forces or directed their
tactics. In any future war no country
will take the field without regarding
Its "fourth arm" as its most precious
and indispensable factor.?Charles I*
Freeston in Scribner's.
Japanese Bandages.
The triangle bandage first introduced
by the Japanese during the Russo-Japanese
war is now being widely used in
the European war. It has been found
that banduges of this type are suitable
for binding up wounds in any part of
the body and that one can be carried
by each soldier without inconvenience.
The Germans improved it by printing
on the banduge itself, in sterilized ink,
various figures showing how it is to be
applied. The British war office then
adopted the idea, and every British soldier
now carries one of the printed
bandages in a special pocket of his
tunic. This bandage is often applied
without assistance by the wounded soldier.?Popular
Mechanics.
Roumania.
The population of Roumania is about
0,000,000 and is composed of four distinct
divisions or departments?the
Moldavian and Oltenlc, who are tall,
iiiiu moil, many neing exceeaingiy
handsome, and who are principally
mountaineers, and the Valachie and
the Dob ridge, who are mostly of Turkish
origin. The population also Includes
200,000 gypsies. There are believed
to he about 1,000.000 Roumanians
outside the Roumanian kingdom.
Exposition Coins.
The San Francisco mint has struck
25,000 "exposition coins," which, although
offered for sale at double their
value, are rapidly finding their way
into the hands of collectors. They
range from fifty dollar gold pieces
down to half dollars. The fifty dollar
gold piece?the first coin of that denomination
ever authorized by congress?bears
on the obverse side the
head of a laborer and on the reverse
side two dolphins.
Russia's Now Port.
An important railroad is being built
northward front I'etrograd to a point
on the Arctic ocean near the Norwegian
frontier, about W)0 miles west of
Archangel, on a portion of the arctic
coast line reached by the end of the
gulf stream, which makes the climate
at that point much milder than at
Archangel. A port will he created there
that should never become icebound, as
Archangel is in winter.
| PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. ?
? Diet For Diabetics.
l?r. Arnold Ix>rand of Carls- |j
uuu, a i anions specialist in uia- >z
;!j> botes mid author of a hook on !;'!
the subject, says that the followIns
foods may be eaten by per- ;i;
? sous suffering from a tendency
to diabetes: Milk, rice, eggs,
green vegetables in large quanti- ;j>
? ties, especially spinach: wiiito !;!;
s> fleshed flsli, cakes made of buckv
wheat from which the cellulose ;l;j
has been removed, macaroni,
spaghetti, butter, small quantities
of rye and graham bread, !;<;
potatoes (fried or in the form of ;;!
salad),' oyster plant, cauliflower,
;!;! salads, apples cooked or raw, ((
; ? strawberries, cranberries, buckle!;!;
berries, oranges and most fruits. I;!;
![j! The same authority forbids the
3 following: Sugar, meat, meat ;j>
i?!; soups, lentils, peas and beans
!;<! (except the soy beans), most of !;!
the cereals, white bread, candy, <1;!
beer and other alcoholic drinks.
J;!| If some sweetening be desired J|;
In coffee and ten saccharin may Ijj
be used, but It should be remem- |j;>
bored that this Is more than fiOO ;>!;
!;| times as sweet as sugar, so a !;![
very minute quantity of it Ls
;>? enough. ;>;>
wheat and be convinced
finest product. Also re
& ronizing a home enterj;
|4 We Pay Best Cas
I Union R
I J. G. Going. Pres.
V
A^fc A^A A^A .
TABLET PLACES
BLAME ON NOAl
First Sinned by Eating Cassia Tre<
Before Adam and _Eve -Sumeriai
Theology Philadelphin Translatet
Professor of Assyrology From Ox
ford.
Philadelphia, Aug. 8.? Adam ant
Eve did not bring about the fall o]
man, but it was Noah, according to i
translation of a tablet now in th<
University of Pennsylvania museuir
by a representative of the museun
According to a sumerian theologj
(found in the tablet, which is sau
to have been written before the dayi
by Dr. Steven Langdon, professor ol
Assriology in Oxford University
England, Noah was ordered not t'
eat of the Cassia tree in the Carder
of Paradise and when he disobeyet
the curse fell on mm.
The curse was that he should hav<
ill health and a early death insteac
nf living to be 50,000 years old lik<
his ancestors.
According to todays announce
ment Dr. Langdon asserts this tablet
is at least 1,000 years older than th?
Oenesis account and so far as i:
known, as the oldest record of th
sort in existence. The tablet was
written more than 4,000 years ago.
Babylonian and Sumerain account:
place the flood at something lik<
8,5000 B. C., and the lapse of time be
tween the creation and the flood i:
fillied by ten kings who reigned alto
gether 432,000 years, an average oi
43,200 years each. The reason tha
short periods, the tablet says, that h<
Noah sinned in tati'ng of the Cassii
three.
Jl-ftl A Ml I LK IJIM
(Greenwood Index.)
A human interest story that grip
the hardest heart comes from Chieagi
as a result of the Eastland disaster
From all the wreckage of human lues,
from the enormity of the eatas
trophe there is nothing that seeme<
to awaken more interest and pit;
than the case of "No. 390."
As you know it was a gala occas
sion, the day of a big picnic and fo
weeks ahead preparations were 01
foot. Even grown ups were excitet
and as for the children! My! what ;
time they were going to have. Then
would he a ride on a big boat am
ball games and swimming and a din
ner?a whole day given up to hav
ing a good time. The Eastland wa:
to sail at 7:30 and by then she wa!
full of a gay crowd of human beings
eager, happy, and care free. Then i
happened.
For five days "No. 390" lav in th<
morgue unclaimed, unrecognized. Ant
he was such a little specimen of hu
manity this boy of eight. There wai
no one in the crowd who had looke<
forward to the picnic day with mori
excitement or pleasure than this lit
tie mite. For days they came claim
ing their dead hut all passed him b>
Mothers, their own hearts bursting
stopped to shed a tear for the mothei
that did not come?who was probablj
in the bottom of the river. "We'l
keep him as long as we can" sai<
the coroner?but still no one came
Last Thursday this order went ou
to all the Hoy Scouts of ChicagoComrade
'Noi 396' will be buried
with military honors.'' The coffii:
was massed with flowers? the mayoi
went to the funtral?it seemed thai
all Chicago wanted to adopt the lit
tie umiclaimed boy.
Surely the story of "396" goes
to prove that hearts can still be touch
ed and this isn't such a hard, hart
world we're living in after all.
FUL RECORD
nain line of the Southern Railway,
has sold Luzianne Coffee. Out of
cans he has sent out in that long
in just three of these cans,
o Guarantee this Celebrated Brand
Want It, with the distinct under>nly
Half as Much as the ordinary
ENDED JUST RIGHT
Luzianne cans, and redeem them
lylor Company
)RLEANS
^4. A^A A^]|(
y
flFMFNT! !
I V M Ml Bi II
Y
ller Mill opened X
Monday, July 5. y
y'we ycu the best grade of
1 produce. We have the
mill is no experiment; but
ment in flour production. V
is is that you get the flour V
intical wheat you bring to f
' wheat and give you every V
will make. Bring us your
I that we turn out the very j
imember that you are pat- V
>rise. X
;h Prices for Wheat *|>
'oiler IVIill |
J. A. McWbirter, Sec. J
Calomel Dynamites
A Sluggish Liver
i
i Crashes Into Sour Bile, Making You
1 Sick and You Lose a Day's
Work.
Calomel salivates! It's mercury.
Calomel acts like dynamite on a slugp
pish liver. When calomel comes into
contact with sour bile it crashes into
1 it, causing cramping and nausea.
i If you feel bilious, headachy, con1
stipated and all knocked out, just go
1 to your druggist and get a 50 cent
j bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone, which
) is a harmless vegetable substitute for (
P dangerous calomel. Take a spoonful
Jind if it dnpQn't ctnrt itaiii* !?*//?? on/1
' straighten you up better and quicker
* than nasty calomel and without mak}
ing you sick, you just go back and
' get your money.
If you take calomel today you'll be
| sick and nauseated tomorrow; be'
sides, it may salivate you, while if
i you take Dodson's Liver Tone you
will wake up feeling great, full of
ambition and ready for work or play.
L It's harmless, pleasant and safe to
1 give to children; they like it.
3 f
A Cobwebby Tale.
s A gallant named Cobb met a maiden
named Webb.
3 And straightway he sat down bei
side her;
- And quickly proposed in a manner so
3 glib,
That he caught her as soon as he
f spider.
t
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
i That Contain Mercury
as mercury will surely destroy the
sense of smell and completely derange
the whole system when entering
it through the mucous surfaces.
" Such articles should never be used
s except on prescriptions from reputa?
ble physicians, as the damage they
' will do is ten fold to the good you
r- can possible derive from them. Hall's
- Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
' Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no
/ mercury, and is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mu
cou.s surfaces of the system. In buyr
ing Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you
get the genuine. It is taken interJ
nally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by
1 F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
L Sold by druggists. Price 75c per
1 bottle.
Take Hall's Family Pills for con
stipation.
3 |
3 Too True. '
, You may break, you may shatter
A ten dollar bill,
And you'll find that the remmants
3 Won't cling to you still,
j Richmond Times-Dispatch.
J ^^SEN^^Ol^RE^CatJilog-Circula^^
I Fashion Plate No. 1, copyrighted; B
- I and the Famous 90 Days Treatment and I
- McKISSICK'S METHOD H
I of treating the Scalp, Hair and Skin with No. I
R 1, 2 & 3 Preparations 1
- W. T. MrKISSICK A CO
, ^ P. O. Bos 102. Wilmington. Del.
r B??wr
I mown?Tnats tne cuckoo from a
j clock I used to have, i have the highest
respect and admiration for it, bel'
cause it is the only thing that ever
. dared to but in while my wife was
, talking.?Boston Journal.
' To Drive Out Malaria
And Build Up The System
L Take the Old Standard GROVE'S
TASTELESS chill TONIC., Yon know
what you are taking, as the formula 19
i printed on every label, showing it is
- Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form
1 The Quinine drives out malaria, the
Iron builds up the system. SO cents