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A j??P UNDER /njA?\COVERNMEN1 I JtwmA UPERVISIOh wiinnn's* membb* ?an* under \ jl!^^ /? ?"SF>g Vf<AC7* ! THE Merchants & Planters Nat'l Bank "The Old Reliable" B The Oldest and Largest Bank in Union County ^ "SAFETY FIRST" is a fundamental principle with this bank. The safety of your money is the first con; sideration in opening a bank account, and we will be ; pleased to have you call and let us show you the many J safeguards we place around your money. j; You can teach your DOLLARS to have more Cents ; by depositing thorn in our SAVINGS DEPARTMENT, where we pay the highest rate of interest, consistent ! with safe and sound banking methods. ? LOOK FOR THE BANK WITH THE CHIME CLOCK i And deposit your money where it will be absolutely safe > ; F. M. FARR, W. F. GILLIAM, J. D. ARTHUR, ! President. Vice-President. Cashier. I I i I l II J | Christmas Joy j | AT OUR STORE : X If you want to please the Children and make # X them have the best Xmas they have ever had, just i X do your shopping with us. We have the most com- i X plete line of good things to eat that we have ever i X had before. i X Candy, Raisins, Nuts, Oranges, Tangerines, < X Apples, Cocoanuts, Grapes and everything suit- < X able to make the "Kiddies" open wide their eyes < X on Xmas morn. < X Tennessee Sausage, the best that ever came < X South. Kingan's* Reliable Hams and Breakfast Bacon always in stock. it you want a real "Fruit Cake" try one of our 4 famous Stone's Rich Fruit Cakes. , ^ A ] Sanders Bros. : V Phones "237 and 238. "Always on the Job" < n > 1 A^A A^A A^V A^A A^A A^A A^A V^A j^V | THE |"Old Hickory"! { Wagon V | Has Led Them All For More ! V ! Than CADTV VC AB^ i Biuaa ^ I t- TV -+mJ Y 1 X And Still Leads ? V v For sale by * I The Peoples Supply Co.< y V V " * V V * * ?Z* t* ?i SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. Complaint in this action have bi State of South Carolina. ,la>; ;,edIi.n.the office of the Cl< County of Union. of/fJ)l,,1' for Umonr C?Unt,y*D , ' (Seal) I. Frank Peake, Court of Common Pleas. Clerk of Court 15. 15. Men*, Plaintiff. w w johnson> ... ff?a,nst.f . . V, x, ,, Plaintiff's Attorney ? Y\ . L?. Menpr, Herbert Mentc. Mrs. (,ar- .. . .. _ .. ? union, S. C., Nov. 55, 191;>. rie Venters, Mrs. huprenia Hitter , and The Citizens National Bank, of Union, S. C., Defendants. To the Defendants: BAILEY UNDERTAKING CO. ion are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this Funeral Directors and action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy Embalmers of your answer to the said complaint _ ? on the subscriber at his office in Un- ta,ls Answered AnyWhere ion, S. C., within twenty days after In the County the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail Open Day or Night to : nswer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this Phone 106 action will apply to the Court for the | relief demanded in the complaint. , ad Asslslanl wtle? Deslre< To the defendant W. CJ. Men^: Take notice that the Summons and ' I , \ \ \ THE POPULAR BUG SONG. 1 In these days of indigestion p It is oftentimes a question [ As to what to eat and what to leave alone; For each microbe and bacillus Has a different way to kill us, And in time they always claim us I for their own. There are germs of every kind In any food that you can find In the market or upon the bill of fare. Drinking water's just as risky As the socalled deadly whiskey, ! And it's often a mistake to breathy' the air. JV Though a radish seems nutritious | Some little bug is going to find y?? 1 some day, Some little bug will creep behind y<|?| -j wnm uay, 1-?--' Then he'll send for his bug fri'enc^ And all your earthly trouble endJ " Some little bug is going to find yol some day. The inviting green cucumber Gets most everybody's number, While the green corn has a system a of its own; . * Though a radish seem nutritious r Its behavior is quite vicious, I And a doctor will be coming to your home. Eating lobster cooked or plain A Is only flirting with ptomaine, ? While an oyster sometimes has a lot to say, But the clams we eat in chowder Make the angels chant the louder, For they know that we'll be with them right away. ?Roy Atwell. ;\ TBAOE MARK J wiinin * t%rtm?n*Tm 7^ 1* 111 1 C. UlllliHail 1 ?< is a dependable and satisfactory remit edy for use where a good family lini? ment is required. Very penetrating. ^ Sold only by us, 25c, 50c and $1.00. T* Glymph's Pharmacy, Union, S. C. ! NOTICE TO CREDITORS ? BUFFALO LICK SPRINGS CO. > X All parties holding claims agaihst t* Buffalo Lick Springs Company arc hereby required to present the same, \ properly proven for payment, to the t undersigned at Chester, S. C., or to his attorney, Sam'l. E. McFadden, Esq., ^ at Chester, S. C. All parties indebted to said Buffalo Lick Springs Company t are hereby required to make payment ? of their respective debts either to the undersigned or to his said attorney, \ Receiver Buffalo Lick Springs) (J . ? Union, S. C? Dec. 4, 1915. \ ? The average man is miserably . ?= * \ ^ Advice is about the only thing^Ut#^ ^ average man will give freely withou^ r ^ money and without price. $ IT IS TRUE that the unusual sale of a remedy ^ is the best evidence of its merit. [ "ifeafefe TRADE MAHn ^ RHEUMATISM POWDERS are guaranteed to give relief from ^ rheumatism. They are unusually large sellers. Sold only by us, 50c and si nn r.iwmnK'c pk...~? ? f" = . muvj, YJI1IUII, sc- ??? Time improves most things, except women; they, of course, have been ^ perfect from the beginning. t EASY TO TAKE?NO PAIN OR r ACHE. ^ It's no longer necessary to bear the % weakening sickness and terrible nausea that always follows a dose of calf omel. LIV-VER-LAX cleanses the torpid % liver, and livens up the whole system by ridding it of the clogging poisons. J Yet it works so gently and pleasantly that you hardly know you've taken it. % LIV-VER-LAX, being purely vegetable, is absolutely harmless, and does ? not tear up the system like calomel. And it's guaranteed to he satisfactory, % or the druggist will return your money. For sale at 50c and $1 at t Clyniph's Pharmacy.?Adv. 49-4 ; ' J>4 Take the consequences?.f you are J entitled to them. > K HOW'S THIS? *' We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot he cured by Hall's Catarrh ?en Cure. erk F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo n We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE, Toledo, 0. ? Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.?Adv. DR. R. R. POPE DENTIST Office Over Express Office a PHONE PRESIDENT National Preparedness Wain Theme of Head of Nation. Submits Definite Plan to In- j crease Present Standing Force i of Regulars and For Four Hun-1 dred Thousand Citizen Soldiers aised In Inorements of One l-j -undred and Thirty-three L<*housand. ft ^ OLLOWING Is the message of President Wilson delivered at a J joint session or tne senate and house at the begiuning of the ^>ixty-fourth congress: t Gentlemon of the Congress?Since I ast had the privilege of addressing 5'ou on the state of the Union the war * nations on the other side of the sea, mhich had then only begun to disclose its portentous proportions, has extended its threatening and sinister scope : until it has swept within its tiaine ' some portion of every quarter of the globe, not excepting our own heini- | sphere, has altered the whole face of international affairs, and now presents a prospect of reorganization and re- i construction such as statesmen and j peoples have never been called upon i to attempt before. The president tells how this country j practiced neutrality and declares that i he hopes that when the time comes j for readjustment and recuperation this country will be of iutiuitc service. Re- c ferring to Central and South American 1 problems, the president declares that c we should retain unnbnted the spirit ( which has inspired us throughout the r whole life of our government and i which was so frankly put into words i by President Monroe. t We have been put to the test in the i case of Mexico, and we have stood the 1 test Whether we have benefited Mex- < Ico by the course we have pursued re- c mains to be seen. Her fortunes are in t her own hands. But we have at least c proved that we will not take advan- ^ tage of her ip her distress and under- a take to impose upon her an order und ? government of our own choosing. Lib- f ertv la nftnn n llnrcn on/1 InirnniuW/. ( thing, to which no bounds can be set 0 and to which no bounds of a few ? men's choosing ought ever to be set. ' Every American who has drunk at c the true fountains of principle and trn r dition must subscribe without rescrvu c Hon to the high doctrine of the Vlr gttila bill of rights, which In the great * days In whleh.pur government was set ^ ^e atpopg UB m co!,. j e creea of free men. Thar doc 1 n<\? Is, "That goverameut is or ought 1 be instituted for the common la tie flt, protection and security of the poo f pie. nation or community;" that "of E all the vgrlous modes 'and forms of P government, that Is the best which is a capable of producing the greatest de ' greo of happiness and safety and is a most effectually secured against the v danger of maladministration, and thai E when any government shall be found inadequate or contrary to these pur < poses a majority of the community % hath an indubitable, inalienable and indefeasible right to reform, alter or; abolish it in such manner as shall be judged most conducive to the public ' weal." We liuve. unhesitatingly applied that heroic principle to the case of Mexico and now hopefully await t the rebirth of the troubled republic, c lulllnh !????! C.v mnoh /v# ? Itself and so little sympathy from any a outside quarter In the radical but necessary process. We will aid and befriend Mexico, but we will not coerce her, and our course with regard to her ought to be suthcleut proof to all America that we seek no political suzerainty or selfish control. PAN-AMERICANISM HAS NONE OF EMPIRE'S SPIRIT, Economic Adjustments Inevitable Within the Next Generation. The morul is that the states of Aiuer i ku are not hostile rivals, but co-op crating friends, and that their growing sense of community of interest, alike in matters political and in matters economic, is likely to give tbem a new significance as factors In Interna tlonul affairs and In the political history cf *he world. It presents them us in a very deep and true sense a unit in world affairs, spiritual partners, standing together because thinking together, quick with common sympathies and Common ideals. Separated, they arc subject to all the cross currents of the confused polities of a world of hos tile rivalries: united In spirit and purpose. they cannot he disappointed of their i?eaceful destiny. This Is pan-Americanism. It has none of the spirit of empire in it. Tt Is the embodiment, the effectual embodiment, of the spirit of law and Independence and liberty and mutual service. iiic presiuem cans attention to the | * meeting In Washington recently of ' representatives uf the pan-American 1 republics and says that economic ad- 1 justmcnt Is inevitable In the next gen- * oration. 1 No one who really comprehends the * spirit of the great people for whom we 1 are appointed to speak can fall to per- ' oelve that their passion Is for pence. * their genius l>est displayed In the prnc- 1 tlce of the arts of pence. Great demoe * rncles are not lielllgerent. They do not ( seek or desire war Their thonght Is < ^ m WILSON'S ?& ^HH^x . + .v ? P8P^ ^j^^K, ..... SHH|^H^H| ^ SwSglSjBH^|^^EHV^^SHk^\^ ;iBPiipiv Photo by American Press Association. PRESIDENT WILSON'S ?4ATEST PICTURE. (From snapshot taken on Nov. 26.) >f Individual liberty and of the free abor that supports life and the uu:ensored thought that quickens it. Conquest and dominion are not in our eckoning or agreeable to our prlucl)les. But just because we demand tinuolested development and the uudisurbed government of our own lives ipon our owu principles of right and iberty, we resent, from whatever juarter it may come, the aggression we urselves will not practice. We insist ipou security in prosecuting our self boson lines of national development. >Ve do more than that. We demand it ilso for others. We do not confine our enthusiasm for Individual liberty and ree national development to the incilents and movements of affairs which iffect only ourselves. We feel it wherever there is a people that tries to walk n these difficult paths of independence tnd right. From the first we have nade common cause with all partisans >f liberty on this side the sea and have leemed it as important that our neighK>rs should be free from all outside lomtuatlon as that \ye ourselves should >e; have set Amerioa aside as a whole ttfthe uses of Independent nations and political freemen." ^ Out of such thoughts grow all our olicles. We regard war merely adu neans of asserting the rights of a peoile against aggression. And we are a fiercely jealous of coercive or dictaorlal power within our own nation s of aggression from without. We vill not maintain a standing army esept for uses which are as necessary n times of peace as in times of war. SUGGESTS BROAD PLAN FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE. ncreaso Standing Regular Force?Four Hundred Thousand Citizen Soldiers. But war lias never been a mere mater of men and guns. It is a thing if disciplined might. If our citizens ire ever to fight effectively ujion a udden summons, tliey must know low modern fighting is done, and what o do when the summons comes to ender themselves immediately availible and immediately effective. And he government must be their servant j a this matter, must supply them with lie training they need to take care of hemselves and of it The military trm of their government, which they vill not allow to direct them, they may iroperly use to serve them and make heir independence secure, and not netr own Independence merely, hut he rights also of those with whom hey have made common cause, should hey also he put In jeopardy. They mist he fitted to play the great role n the world, and particularly In this [ lemisplicrc. for which they are quail | led hy principle and by chastened am dtion to play. It is with these ideals in mind that he plans of the department of war for uore adequate national defense were oncelved which will he laid before ron. and which I urge you to snnctlon md put into effect as soon as they can >e properly scrutinized and discussed They seem to me the essential first steps, and they seem to me for the iresent sufficient. They contemplate an increase of the standing force of the regular army 'rom its present- strength of 5.023 officers and 102.08." enlisted men of all lervices (o a strength of 7.136 officers ind 134.707 enlisted men. or 141.843 ill told, nil services, rank and file, by ihe addition of fifty-two companies of . oast artillery, fifteen companies of engineers. ten replments of Infantry, four regiments of field artillery and fonr lero squadrons. besides 750 officers repaired for a great variety of extra lervlee. especially the all Important luty of training the citizen force of tvhlch I shall presently speak. 702 noncommissioned officers for service In Irlll. recruiting and the like and the necessary quota of enlisted men for the quartermaster corps, the hospital corps, the ordnance department and >ther similar-auxiliary services. These MESSAGE Declares That if Full Navy Program Is Carried Out We Will Have a Fleet For Defense That Will Be "Fitted to Our Needs and Worthy of Our Traditions." Greatest Danger to Country Comes From Within Our Borders. are the additions necessary to render the army adequate for its present duties. duties which Ut has to perform not only upon our own continental coasts nnd borders and at our interior army posts, but also In the Philippines. In the Hawaiian Islands, at the Isthmus nud In Porto Rico. By way of making the country ready to assert some part of its real power promptly and upon a larger scale should occasion arise the plan also contemplates supplementing the army by a force of 400,000 disciplined citizens, raised In increments of 133,000 a year turougnout n period or tnree years. This it Is proposed to do by a process of enlistment under which the serviceable men of the country would be asked to bind themselves to Berve with the colors for purposes of training for short periods throughout three years and to come to the colors at call at any time throughout an addition*! "furlough"'period of three years. This force of 400.000 men would be provided with personal nccouterments as fast ns enlisted and their equipment for the field made ready to be supplied at any time. They would be assembled for training at stated intervals at convenient places In association with suitable units of the regular army. Their period of annual training would not necessarily exceed two months in the year. The president says it is up to the patriotic young men of the country to respond to this call. (Continued next week) To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula 1ft printed on every label, showing it is ?uinine and Iron in a tasteless form. he Qninine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. SO cents "Willie," said the teacher of the / juvenile class, "what is the term, 'etc.' , f used toll" I "It is used to moke people believe < I that we know a lot more than we real t# -I ly do,' replied the bright youngster." ?Chicago News. FOREIGN SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Served) State of South Carolina, County of Fairfield. Rufus H. Williams and Mary Williams, Plaintiffs, against J. M. Roberson, Reuben Boulware, Andrew Boulware and William Shirley, Defendants. To the Defendants, J. M. Robinson, Reuben Boulware, Andrew Boulware and William Shirley: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action of which a copy is herewith served upon you; and to serve a copy \ of your answer to the said complaint on the subscribers at their office at Union, S. C., Foster Building, rooms 12-15 (upstairs) within twenty days after the service hereof; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiffs in this action will apply to the Court for ' the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated Aug. 12th, A. D. 1914. Wallace & Barron, Plaintiffs' Attys. I FflR WORK DR RPQT VII il villi Ull IlkV I visitors will find our furni- '' ture ideal in design and full of comfort promise. Our desks, rockers, chairs, beds, etc., are all built on the plan of comfort, durability and beauty. It is furniture that soon becomes like an old friend. And like nld friondu they wear well. See the exhibit and note the values. For High Grade Furniture W. H. BURRIS UNION, S. C. 1