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75 years ago everyone wo and, likewise, everyone usee paint, lo-day, when machii is so much better and che; would think of wearing home people are still using handhowever, because they do n< rawili CA1XONS - WURt LONI will save them money and labor. Devoe Lead and Zinc I'aint is simply made of the same ingredients the old-time painter used: Pure White Lead, Lure White Zinc, and Pure Linseed Oil. The only difference is that Devoe is mixed hy machinery, 500 gallons at a time. Therefore, it is always absolutely unifo color and covering capacity. We guarantee Devoe L We kn<)w it contains no > materials. Stop in and ask Stone-Jones Your Money Back Not Benefited | We Guarantee | tor SicK Women I If you ar?? suffering from women's peculiar :11s, we know this medicine will bring YOU relief because it has helped thousands of other women for more than 30 years. Its value has been proven, ar.d thsvt is why the dealer, backed by our own guarantee, will positively refund your money if yoa are not benefited by the very tin: t bottle ; try tt: telat is all we ask. ' Sl? yoiir Dealers See them today. tracker medicine co., Chattanooga. T'onn. WALL STREET AT WORK The Big Morning Rush, the Lull a the Afternoon Spurt. Wall street comes to work late, t mitl is opened and hosts of ptohlei present themselves therein for mljn merit. If Wall street works only II hours It works under pressure, telephone Is the busiest in the wor mid Wall street's chief telephone < change has a most erratic tratlie tno meat. i 0 in tlie morning the nil ml of calls passing through the vnrh branch exchanges in Wall street woi make the telephone of any rural 1 (age ashamed of itself. Yet they hi vsirr w K-ITH illlll llf.ltl Ill I morning tin* greatest number of ? : of ? t?y telephone exchange. ami in l terrua of tin* tr?lll?* engineers the pt of the load la reached. Naturally t is explained by the telephone conv nations incident to the giving of ordi before the opening of the market n the handling of inquiries which ar from the opening prices on the N York Stock Exchange. Between noon and 1 Wall street g hungry, makes engagements and g< to lunch. After that has been ranged the telephone operators gel rest. Mavlng eaten a comfortable Inn talked about the morning's busin and lighted a good cigar over a cup black coffee. Wall street's n#nd ag: concentrates on the market, and I telephone load Immediately begins rise and soar upward, while the tivlty, which usually marks the stt market frwan 2:.'10 until the closing S, la In progress. However, the aft noon peak does not reach the mornl (teak load. After Wall street puts on Its I and goes home, leaving the myrh of clerks, stenographers and bo keepers to straighten out the tang and clean up the mess which the da business has brought. There is ill time for telephone talk. Everylx wants to get home, and in consequei the number of calls declines shar ii(> to <?, then fades away for the r of the night. ?Wall Street Journal. Evidence of Genius. *'11r? started Iif>? with a shoestrl mi'l now lie lias $! ,t XJU.OOO. Seems credible, oh ?" "Nor at. nil. I should consider t a ruan who could get anybody to I orn* shoestring was taevitably hot to succeed."?Judge. Entitled to Charge. "A professional man la paid for w he knows, not for what he does." "Then that young lawyer ought get some tremendous fees." "Why?" ' "Ho know* It alL"?LoularilU C tier-Journal. A re homespun? ,ead and Zinc Paint to be pure. vhiting, silica or other worthless j, for Color Card. o Hardware Co, j e ]HOW NEW YORK HAS GROWN. n I Th? Metropolis Absorbed Villages as ^ Old as Itself In 1898. ^ | A metropolis grows up In two ways ^ i At lirst It expands legitimately, adding J furlong to furlong of growth. Then it n II leajts forwnnl and seizes a large area j overnight by act of legislature or par j liament. sweeping into its net a score j of villages and settlements. Then it ( proceeds to consolidate its position by 0 tilling up the intervening spaces. In ' European cities they have an inner ^ ring, which is the old city, and an 11 | outcf ring, which may he anything i New York. Chicago, boston. Seattle. * have their inner rings, which are the a legitimate city, and the outer ring 11 which came by the get-big-quiek meth n od. New York succumbed to the pro h motor's fever in 181)8. In that year the n city absorbed large areas of virgin soil and a chain of independent villages, n some of them nearly as old as Man i! hattan itself. From the sound to the c Atlantic they stretch across the hack p bone of Long Island and the lower ii harbor to Staten Island, where the lo i cal tradition in spite of municipal fer n i ries and promised tunnels has remained at its trongest. j. Such frenzied expansion is the reason ^ why the traveler in the nearer suburbs f, of a great city will often come across a nd city line which Is no longer the city line. As you pear the old city Tine I from the heart of population the solid 'v ^ blocks of apurtmeuts and flats thin out. Tliere follow stretches of waste ? ' land, market gardens, cemeteries, it . | \ P i is across this zone between tlie old and the new city lines that the transit rail ' ' ' ways throw their surface lines and clex vated "extensions," and close behind ^ ve them are the builders crisscrossing tlie 0 raw acres with their lines of "frame" * >et and brick.?Simeon Strunsky in Har * ,Us ner's. J A Bottle Barometer. 111 Fill a bottle or tube with alcohol in c 'which you have dissolved a piece of I '"s camphor. About one cubic inch of 1 !l,<' camphor to half n glass of alcohol is 'a,i the right proportion. Cork the bottle s tightly and the barometer is ready for J cr use. If the weather is to be fair the V l>r:s alcohol will remain clear. If the alco 1 l,u' hoi Is cloudy the weather will be rainy i 's0 The higher the cloudiness rises in the 1 eW bottle tiie rainier the weather will be Be careful to keep the bottle tightly ('fs corked, so that the alcohol and the camphor will not evaporate.?Youth's ar Companion. t a Juvenile Wonders. rh America has produced three wonderes8 ful boy calculators. "Marvelous Grif- ' ?' tith," as he was called, could raise a * a'n number to the sixth power in eleven 1 "u* seconds. Truman SafiTord at the age of i ,f> ten could multiply one row of fifteen 3 ,l(" figures by another of eighteen in a i ,<>k minute or lees. The third was William at James Sidle, who at fourteen went to * cr~ Harvard and astounded all of his inhiR structors by his profound grasp of mathematical principles.?Boys' Life, tun i m - I ids ??t - Good Health < ys a ,le TlmiKInn Ikn ITnltm J UUUUICA IIIC IfllUG I 2 of Your Services A naif sick man Is not worth hulf pay- A man or a woman In poor health ^ ng, makes a poor leader, a u in- poor sort of a parent. 1 The value of Peruna In 'iaf the home can scarcely be >u? estimated. It prevents v t?d many of the common all- v incuts. It is an excellent remedy for coughs, colds, catarrh, grip, spring fever, hat tlred-out feeling. Sit down and think it to over. See whether you can afford to go on half sick So?- Some people prefer Peruna Tablets to the fluid J'eruna. g I, J u TLANTA SHERIFF COMES . 1 OUT WITH STR0N6 BOOST " leventy-Year-Old Official is Ri Filled With Gratitude. RECOMMENDS TANLAC A1 declares He Feels It His Duty ti to Praise Medicine Which Gave Him So Much i Relief. les "Tanlac has certainly helped me tin nd I recommend it to others for what tin t has done in my case," said Hon. C. w| V. Manjrum, Sheriff of Fulton Coun- rj-j y, of Atlanta, C?a. j Sheriff Manprum needs no introduc- ^ ion to the people of this section, as ?? is tinniiPstionJiHl.r nnf nnlv ono r?* ^ he best known but one of the most opular officials in the State of Geor- n" ia. He is also known to he, by every- s:t ne, a kind, genial gentleman of the tin Id school and has a reputation of iss eing the biggest hearted man in pub- ek ic life today. His friends are legion tin -and his extreme popularity as a man tin nd as a public official is further at- tri ested by the fact that he is now ea erving his third term as sheriff of 'ulton county. ni! For some years he was a railroad co fficial, but has been in public life bli ince 1907. He served in the Conederate Army from 1802 to 1865 in rc< he First Georgia Regiment, and lat- Be r in the Fifth Georgia. no "Yes," continued the sheriff, "your va ledicine has done me lots of good and P'1 have personally recommended it to "I1 great many people. I know of at 1,1 east 15 or 20 families who have w' ought it on my say so. a" "I am seventy years old and have ,rlost always been pretty strong and ealthy until here lately. I have been ii a nervous, worn out, run down con- n< ition. My stomach was upset most f the time and I digested my food j/' ioorly. Most always after eating I go irould have a full, uncomfortable feel- ^ ng that would last for several hours. ca "After takintr the second bottle of "anlac the fullness and all the disgreeable symptoms disappeared and ^ ny condition is now that of a well nan. I now eat heartily without any ad after effects and I sleep well at ipht. "Tanlac seems to be just what T eeded to put my system in shape and ^ t has toned me right up. Under the ^ ircumstances I think it perfectly te atural for me to say a pood word for t and recommend it to my friends." ^ Commenting on the above state- .. nent. T. W. Galyon. State Agent for . iouth Carolina, said: "It is rarely, ? ndeed, that men of prominence, es- "j lecially men holding high public ofice such as that held hy Sheriff Man- ^ :um, voluntarily express their appreiation of the benefits received from j medicine. Thousands of such conincing endorsements, however, have . ome to Tanlac. ^ , "Among the large number of men n public life in the South who have " ecently given Tanlac their unquali- a ied endorsement for the specific aid to He hem are Hon. McKenzie Moss .Judge jY f the Eighth Kentucky Judicial Disrict; Hon. Moses R. Glenn, Kenutcky ar State Superintendent of Printing: * fohn B. Gaines, Editor and Publisher 1 ?f the Bowling Green Daily News; m leorge W. Hinton, Former Secretary >f the Warren County Equity League; 1 T, - ?r -- _ . I m -res. regg, 01 iNewport Business Colege and others." ? fir Tanlac, the master medicine, is , iold by Palmetto Drug Co., Union; Fonesville Drug Co., Jonesville; Lock>art Mills Store, Lockhart; Buffalo Irug Co., Buffalo; R. J. Fowler, Mon- *? irch; B. G. Wilburn & Son, Cross i <eys, S. C. ! ? I JI%3BE3EE3^ i? WHITE LINIMENT ^ s a dependable and satisfactory rem- gc ;dy for use where a good famiiV In infment is required. Very penetrat- ui ng. Sold only by us, 25c, 50c and St ' 1.00. Glymph's Pharmacy, Union, of >. C. dl NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF COPARTNERSHIP. of T tr Notice is hereby given that the co- f0 mrtnership of Sumner and Hall, in aj he conducting of the Unique Bakery, las been dissolved. The undersigned je vill continue to carry on the business jn it the nlrl atnnfl A '.c our patronape will be appreciated. .M G-3-pd M. H. Hall. T NOTICE OF CLUB 2 MEETING. [J tr The members of Club 2 are hereby lotified to meet Saturday, April 22, |K t 2 o'clock p. m. in the office of J. w Greer, Union, S. C. All members irged to attend. p< 6-1 P. E. Wilburn, Secy. m PEOPLE ASK US 'Jj - rP' yhat is the best hair tonic. We alvays recommend i TNAOf MARH HAIR TONIC We know the formula and it is a w" ood one. Sold only by us, 50c and <?' 1.00. ; ffiE, JU. ..aw.:''. J? (ASKED TUARE6S ithless Buccaneers of the Middle Sahara Desert. r WAR WITH ALL MANKIND. io?? Nomads of ths Trackless Sands jf Northern Africa Levy Tribute Upon All Caravans They Meet and Live In Mystery and Exclusiveness. 'In northern Africa there lies a truceis country, inhabited by a people. s masked Tunregs. fascinating for e mystery and exclusiveness with ilch they have surrounded their life, lese people, natives and rulers of the ddle desert, are the allies of no one. t wage a furtive guerrilla warfare tl? all who invade the inhospitable hara sands of their domain. They b the buccaneers of the trackless nd, forever at war with all civilianm and its testraints." says an article mod by the National Geographic so>ty at Washington, which describes e people always willing to light for e maintenance of their power to levy bute upon the ancient transsaharan ravan routes. 'Masked Tuaregs are Berber nouls, a white desert people, whose untry is probably the most inaecessi!? on earth. Even before Egyptian rilization began to leave coherent ?ords of Its history the Tuaregs. or >rbers, were long established along rtheru Africa. The great Arab insion of the eleventh century disiced them from their possessions on the seaeoast and drove them into e savage aren of the Interior desert, liere, with their hands raised against I who came into their pathless counv, they have maintained themselves rough the intervening centuries deite lack of water, sandstorms and ?k of farming land, requisitioning by ree of arms from the Arabs and ryptians, to the north and east, aud am the blacks of the Sudan, in the nth, such necessities and luxuries as eir cheerless portion of Mother Earth nnot supply them. "There are five main tribes in the lareg confederation, aud they inhabit e desert from Tuat to Timbuktu id from Fezzan to Zlnder. Their unes are reared in the heart of arid astes, where vast solitudes, unnatal heats and unmarked distances roud everything in uncanny mysry. They ure masters of an area ilf that of the United States in exlit. Of this 1.500.000 square miles of rritory scarcely 5,000 ncres. or less nil the area of New York city. Is cult'nted land. This scanty farm land 9nlj' maintained by an enduring higgle with the drifting sands, ieso fierce adventurers who have reed the great desolation to yield em a support number 300,000 or ore, according to estimate, and they ive made themselves feared by the itives from the Mediterranean to the ngles of central Africa. "The Tuaregs wear the end of their rban cloth drawn around the face. J lowing nothing but the eyes to be en. It is worn for the purpose of otecting the throat and lungs from e cutting blasts of fine desert sand id also probably as an element enincing the mystery of their life, for ey seldom or never remove these asks, whether roving over the desert visiting in the cities on the coast ue to these cloths they are called asked Tuaregs. while the Arabs call em 'people of the veil." The masks c dark blue and white, the former ilng worn by Tuareg nobles and the tter by the serfs and slaves. "Some centers for trade. Tuareg was. are situated in the middle dest These are Wargla. Timbuktu, hat, Gliadames, Mur7.uk and Insalah. owever. the Tuareg has little care r trade and industry. He is a fearss, enduring, hard fighting adventuralong the merchandise trails that oss the desert. Two important trails ave Tripoli, on the coast, and travse 3.000 miles of sands and barren nates to the Sudan, where rich caries of skins, gold, ivory and other terlor African products are loaded >on camels and brought northward. >metimes a single caravan consists thousands of camels and merchanse to the value of hundreds of thounds of dollars. When passing rough the Tuareg country the leaders such caravans have had to pay a Ibute to the chieftains by the way >r safe escort or run the risk of losing 1 their goods. "From Morocco to Tripoli the relent ss ferocity, the cunning and the dnr g of the Tuareg are mingled In all the aditlons unpleasant .to the more neeful natives along the coast. The uaregs meanwhile openly spy upon ie caravans In course of outfitting in le coast cities and thrive upon the ibute they are able to exact. "The Tuaregs are of the purest Ber >r stock, the noble families unmixed ith other blood, mid in their own lan nige they call themselves 'the noble Miple.' Nominally they are Moham odans. and some of their number impose the most intolerant and war ke sect in Islam, the Senussite sect, heir hatred for tlie foreigner is great > even than that hred by their region. and so they are more exclusive inn ever were the Chinese or Japa ese. Their social organization di ides them Into five classes? the notes. the priests, the serfs, the cross reeds and the slaves. All of these asses have this that Is democratic? ley form together the Tuareg family, hich holds itself superior to all the her peoples of the earth." Tells Her Experii T Mrs. Dunlap Sends a Letter Addressed to the Readers of the Paper. A sense of duty to others who might suffer as she had impelled Mrs. R. C. Dunlap, of Dekalb, Mo., to send the following signed statement to the St. Joseph, Mo., News Press: '"Hie readers of the News-Press, especially those suffering from gallstones, stomach trouble and appendicitis, will find in Fruitola and Traxo a permanent cure. After suffering for three years the most excruciating pain from gall-stones I found this wonderful remedy and am now in perfect health and have been for almost four years. Never have any symptoms of the old trouble. I have been told by mree doctors mat nothing but an operation would save me. I know several who have undergone an operation but still have gall-stones. This medicine is an oil which softens the stones and cures the liver. It can bp bought at any drug store." Fruitola is an intestinal lubricant that softens the congested masses, disintegrates the hardened particles that cause so much suffering ,and expells the accumulation to the patient's great relief. Traxo is a tonic-alterative that The Amazing t New Grant Si: ?it's the quali Of course, being dealers you are ments regarding the cars w But honestly, the new Grant is ! It has six-inch longer wheel base ier body. The Grant Company took advant largest and hondsomest body thousand. This body has nifty lines?it is boat-line type?not extreme, looking with real style. tu. l: j ---* Ii ue cusmuns are ueeper ana soi so that knees don't peep out And Grant Six has many bigger it gives both front and rear, plain of being cramped in a But it's the motor that gives yoi Press your foot on the acceleral that you realize you've touch 50 miles in a few blocks is r Then when you throttle down to pull there?no gasping and cl you realize that you have bee And when you know Grant Six ov ?often as high as 28 miles will gain some conception of ied in this remarkable SIX. Don't forget we are talking abou^ best of the SIX virtues plus cost and cost of operating. Will you let Grant Six go throu] Better phone us for a demonstrat delivery dates. A. J. HO * WHITMI | Eafter ] T ? A X Again the glory of E X Nature puts forth h< *f* make home and cl Y Easter Greetings of Y exquisite corsages X rant Spring Blossom loved ones, the lonel X We cordially invite yoi X Carnations and Plants i X Y X Carnations Y Assorted Colors X Salvia Plants J t % WHY PA Mail Orders Filled Pr | McGlure Ten I snce o Benefit Others x<Q(>_^^iijX7J^PHOTO by. GIST- SNULTZ acts on the liver and kidneys, stimulates the flow of gastric juices to aid digestion, and removes bile from the general circulation. Fruitola and Traxo are prepared in the Pinus laboratories at Monticello, 111., and arrangements have been made to supply them through representative druggists. In Union they can be obtained at Milhous Drug Co. L-n 1 (?I hing about the x isn't the price Lty i prepared to discount our state- ! e sell. dmply a wonder. and that permits a bigger, room- 1 age of the situation and got the ! ever put on a car priced below a j what the trade call modified and but quiet, dignified and modest iter?and the side lines are high over the edge. j cars beaten in the ample legroom Even a six-footer couldn't cornGrant Six. i the real thrill. :or and she moves off so swiftly ed something extremely sensitive, lothing for Grant Six. 1 1-2 miles on hour?and all the hoking and dying?but real pull? n driving a wonder motor, mers rarely get less than 20 miles out of a gallon of gasoline?you the mechanical excellence embod t a SIX?a car that gives you the i amazing economy?both in first gh the paces for you? .ion now?while we can still name LT, Dealer RE, S. C. A^A A^A <$> 171 AAITA#*C jts Livnuox x laster fills the world. X er fairest flowers to > hurch radiant. And % majestic Lillies and T or baskets of frag- % is bring happiness to A y or the sicfc. 11 to enjoy our beautiful ? it McClure's little prices A & each 50c per doz. Special 5c each!:! *. Y MORE? ? T omptly and Carefully ^ Cent Company| }> <{ ^ J