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Special ON SI At Mel All kinds for the family at Rea Give us a look am before you buy. money to you. J.F. McLureD THE UNDE] THE I Is Never a Mea It's Not Wha Bu^What^ It's a question of value means Style, Quality of M the things that give service Don't say, "I'll buy the c of nn /I fn v f "' oicau, ha liic uguie ^uu go where I can get the very is the way to make your n We sell the most promine HIGH ART, MICHAELS .S Come in and look over tl and Overcoats in conservati The Celebrated "Queen Q Shoes for Ladies. New shi We wish to impress upoi buying here, as we are posil Goods at the Old Prices. Let "Munsingwear" Unic Edwin Clapp, Florsheim, Underwear in single gar at all prices. Manhattan Shirts, Stets( Hosiery. J. CO ? j uroiuiva tin. PERSONAL MENTION. t Mr. H. B. Murphy of Cross Keys ' was in the city Wednesday on busi- * nest.. Mr. W. B. Terrell spent Sunday in Westminster with the famijy of Mr. ] M. A. Terrell. j Biss Virgia Britt of Little Rock 8 will arrive this week to visit Miss Mary Rice for several weeks." Mr. A. G. Bentley of Kelton visited his daughter, Mrs. Munro Faifcette, on S. Church street this week. Mrs. Julian Welch of Shelton will spend the week-end at the home of Mrs. D. C. Flynn on W. Main street. Mrs. P. M. Hedgpeth of Kelton is visiting at the home of Mrs. Munro Faucette on S. Church street this r ween. ( Dr. and Mrs. Harry Storm of * Georgetown arrived Wednesday to I spend sometime with their parents, 1 Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Storm, on South street. \ t fi JEFFERSON DAVIS CHAPTER. J I Mrs. Louis M. Jordan will be hostess to the Jefferson Davis chapter, Children of the Confederacy, on Friday afternoon, Oct. 27th, at 4 o'clock. I Sale I HOES Lure's all wear for all 1 Bargain Prices. 1 get our prices It will mean Irv finnrls fin. J """ RSELLER >RICE sure of Value t YouT Pay? ^You^Get ;?and value in Clothes [aterials, Tailoring, Fit; b and satisfaction. heapest I can find." In.. ? ? 3 A-U <<TM1 in auuiu, uieii say, i li best at that price." That loney talk. nt lines in the country? , STERN ITYLEPLUS CLOTHES le fine selection of Suits ive and snappy styles. uality" and "E. P. Reed" pments just in. i you the importance of tively selling most of our )n Suit You. Crossett Shoes for Men. ments and Union Suits, )n Hats and Holeproof HEN ST STORE Misses Mary Jones, Alice McClinock, Will Walker and Dr. Glymph notored from Union Sunday and spent he day with Miss Agnes Walker on Victoria avenue.- Gnffney Ledger. Mrs. Arthur Cottingham is the Jarvest Jubilee guest of Mrs. George <ing and attended the Columbia colege alumnae banquet at the Jeflferlon hotel on Wednesday evening. NOTICE. Pursuant to authority vested in us >y a Commission issued by Hon. R. A. McCown, Secretary of State, Oct. 9th, 1916, as a Board of Corporators, ve will open books of subscription to he capital stock of the Home Buildng and Loan Association of Union, , J. C., for subscribers, with the mininum Capital Stock not less than $20, hhj.uu and the maximum not greater1 han ?1,000,000, with each share of a < >ar value of $200, payable in installnenta of $1.00 per month. The said books of subscription will >e opened on November 1st, 1916, at he office of the Hon. J. M. Greer, No. 1 ? Citizens National Bank Building, ^nckney Street, Union, S. C. J. M. Greer, Macbeth Young, Corporators. i Union, S. C., Oct. 21, 1916. COMING AND GOING I- J Mr. R. Gilliam Gregory was a vis itor to Union Friday. Mr. J. E. Johnson of Jonesville wai a visitor to Union Tuesday. Mr. II. B. Murphy of Route 2 was i visitor to Union Wednesday. Rev. J. D. Croft of Kelton was ii the city on business last week. Mr. Joseph Wilburn of Route 2 was it-: n_i % ? in union ouiuraay on business. Mr. W. T. Betsill of Route 2 wai a visitor to Union Saturday; Mr. J. C. Gregory of Route 2 was a visitor to Union Saturday. Mrs. Butler Estes is spending thii week in Columbia with relatives. Mrs. P. B. Barnes has returned fronr a week's visit to relatives in Lancas ter. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Gilmore of Santuc were shopping in the city on Mon day. Miss Elizabeth Jeter of Santu* spent Monday in the city with rela tives. Mr. and Mr. W. S. Ashe of Spartanburg were visitors in the city las! week. Mrs. S. A. Clement left last weih for Inman to spend two weeks with relatives. Mr. Brian Bell of the Columbia State spent the week-end in the city with friends. Hon. A. C. Mann spent several days this week in Columbia attending the Harvest Jubilee. Rev. D. W. Garvin is assisting Rev. R. C. Campbell in a revival meeting at Clifton this week. Mrs. Macbeth Young is spending this week in Columbia at the Harvest .Tnhiloo foofivifioe Mr. W. A. Martin and Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Liester of Jonesville were visitors to Union Saturday. Mr. Miles Storm went to Columbia this week to see Maude Adams play in "The Little Minister." Miss Helen Linder of West Springs is visiting at the home of Dr. S. S. Linder on E. Main street. Mr. V. E. Crosby of Darlington is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Crosby at Meadoor. Miss Carrie Taylor, of Chattanooga, Tenn., is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Jackson at fche Central hotel. Mr. Henri Going is in Columbia for the Carolina-Clemson football game and other Jubilee festivities. M'ss Mary Perrin is the guest cf Miss Elmira do Graffenreid ?n Columbia for the Harvest Jubilee. Dr. and Mrs. Copeland Blackwell of Greenwood spent the week-end in the city with Mrs. M. C. Mangum. Mrs. Thos. L. Estes and little son, Eugene, have returned from a visit to Mrs. J. R. Dickert in Columbia. Mrs. Fred Coward (Kate Smith) and little son of Darlington are the guests of relatives in Union this week. Miss Ijeize Seeley, of Atlanta, Ga., will come to Union after the Harvest Jubilee to visit friends for a fortnight. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. McNally mo J tuicu tu vjuiumuia iviuuuny uinjniuwri to attend the Harvest Jubilee festivities. Miss Mary Spears of Winthrop college spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Spears, on S. Church street. Mr. and Mrs. Emslie Nicholson anil Miss Frances Nicholson returned Sunday afternoon from a visit to New York city. M iss Ruth Gault of Converse college, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Gault, on South street. Mrs. Harris (Pauline Crawford) oi Atlanta, Ga., spent a day or two this week with her sister, Mrs. Laurence G. Southard. Mrs. Roy Fant has returned to hei home in Lockhart after a fortnight's visit to her grandmother, Mrs. Gibbs in Columbia. Mr. Ottis Going, former cantain of the Carolina football team, is in Columbia this week for the Clemson Carolina game. Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Parham and Mrs. George E. Brown of JonesvilL motored to Columbia this week for tho Harvest Jubilee. Miss Virginia Sperry, who has beei: the guest of Mrs. Dan Smith for several weeks, has returned to her honv in West Virginia. Mr. William Morgan, travelling secretary of the Y. M. C. A., spent a day or two this week with his mother, Mrs. Ida Morgan. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith have returned from Columbia, where they went to be present at the Dickert-McConnell wedding 6n Wednesday. Miss Elizabeth Arthur is spending Fair week with Mrs. Clarence Owens and will be one of the debutantes at the Slave Da'l on Thursday evening. Miss Louisa Duncan, the queen of the Harvest Jubilee, was accompaned to Columbia by her mother, Mrs. T. C. Duncan, and Misses Fannie Duncan and Ludie Jordan. The new silver coinage is sure going to meet with the approval of all.? Macon (Ga.) News. \ I Mrs. G. C. Harris, who lives on Route 5, sent us a few English walnuts which she grew from a seedling. This is the second year the tree has - borne fruit and even the second year had only a few nuts to mature. i Hon. and Mrs. L. C. Wharton spent a few hours here Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Patterson. Mr. Wharton is the progressive mayor of Un}on and was reelected by a splendid i majority in the recent primary.? Woodruff News. 5 Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Wilson, who were married in Corinth, Miss., on the 18th of October, are spending a part of their honejmoon with Mr. ar.d Mrs. E. J. Wilson on E. Main street. i They will be at home to their friends in Bamberg, S. C., after Nov. 1st. } . , Special Advertisements GET YOUR BLOOD RIGHT for the lone cold winter hv takinc "Hniot'e Pink Blood Purifier." For sale by Palmetto Drug Co. : TO MY COUNTRY FRIENDS?Drop in to see me at the City Barber Shop when you are in town. You wjll be made welcome whether you get any " work done or not. Come in and bring your friends and get some ice water and rest yourself. Jno. : It. Mathis, Prop. 7-tf WE CANNOT SEE why those Farms = Flynn is selling are not sold in a J week. Cotton almost 20 cents and r advancing daily. Cotton is King now. 43-1 i ! WANTED?Desirable renters for lands in Union county. Apply to P. D. Barron. ' ALL who are due me colt fees for 1916 will please settle at once by leaving the amount, $15.00, with Ilames Grocery Co., or sending check direct to C. H. Rice, Sedalia, S. C. MONEY TO LOAN on improved real estate for 20 years. See John K. Ilamblin or myself. J. E. Minter. .WILL EXCHANGE Clinton property for Union property. One ten-room 1 house on acre lot, outbuildings, garden, fruit, vineyard, shrubbery, all fenced; a splendid place for boarding house, close in, near graded school. See A. D. Cooper, at Cooper's Furniture Exchange, Union, S. C. 43-1 MONEY on real estate on long and I easy terms. J. E. Minter, Financial Cor. Union County. 1 LOST?Red hound with both ears split; name "Jerry." Notify Perry 1 4 11. Lee, Jonesville, S. C., Route 2, 11 and get reward. 43-1-pd FOR THE BEST SERVICE, for cleanliness and promptness, call upon us. Our shop is in every way up-to-date. White barbers only. TWO SPECIAL BARGAINS- ^coper's Furniture Exchange; one large Golden Oak Buffet, worth $35.00, will sell for $22.50. One Steoi Folding Bed, worth $21.00, will sell for $12.50. We buy, sell and exchange anything in furniture. See us if you have furniture to sell. If you wish to buy furniture see us. If you wish to swap furniture see us. What we don't have today we j may have tomorrow. 43-1 ' MONEY TO LOAN on Farm Lands and Real Estate. Barron & Barron, Union, S. C. 42-tf FOR SALE?My house and lot on , Mountain street. Terms easy. W. Fowler Bobo. 42-4 We are no cut rate, second class I concern. We give you your money's worth. McMillan and Cannon. 39-tf | "HUIET'S GRIP CAPSULES" never fail to bust up a cold. Try them and be convinced. For sale by Palmetto Drug Co. . IF IT FAILS to ease your pain it costs you nothing, but it won't fail, "Huiet's Liniment" never fails. For sale by Palmetto Drug Co. , TWO GOOD FARMS 7 miles out on Cross Keys road; good dwellings; ? will make bale to the acre; pays ? d bales rent; 130 acres; $25 an acre; two crops will pay for farm. See D. C. Flynn, the Farm Seller. 43-1 FOR SALE?Red Rust Proof and Ap- ?)l pier Oats. The Peoples Sunply Co., at D. Fant Gilliam, Treas. 41-4 Si BARGAINS NEAR UNION?More small farms at bargain prices. ar Twenty to sixty acres with good ,. bottoms. One hundred and thirty acres and one hundred and seven- m teen. Will make male, forty bush- ?. els; large bottoms. Thirty farms in all. Eight years to pay. See D. C. Flynn; he'll tell you. 42-1 nc 1 Aa NO PAINS expected! They all fall Qf before that greatest of all pain nl killers, "Huiet's All Healing Lini- L ment." For sale by Palmetto Drug V1 Co. th : M FOR SALE?Leather collars and bri- (.? dies. Great values at the price. . 1 People's Supply Co. tf m ' FOR RENT OR SALE?Several Un- E I ion County Farms. G. B. Barron, w 42-tf M . ? ni ONE BICYCLE left at Mrs. Fair Si Gregory's, Church Avenue No. 8, HOwner can get same by describing is property and paying for this ad. en 43-1-pd of jlBra L fMI [?-?rr,?.web NO ROOM FOl If you pay by check (here ci the payment of a bill as the c | dence of payment. You are acting with business Checking Account with this ba for- vnn. ?-? ? I, J?UI MIUHCJ CIIIU (til MCt-'Ur transactions. Em die Nicholson, J. Ro; President. Vic 1 I^ItxTIT. v.') Daily we are demonst] dreds of satisfied custc in Quality, Service ; everything to eat for m ....THE OLD R New Shipments of New G< Freight and Express. And Our Retail Prices are Less the Prevailing Wholesale 1V1 just means that as Our Best ence has Dictated We have and no matter if Prices Do ! pared to demonstrate that ( are extremely fortunate in tf at Retail All the Staples and for Table Use for Less Mont chants, Can Replace They ir sale in Any Quantity. We urge you to take adv? we offer while we have ther and the Staples that you rur your hands. It will pay yc for the Winter. Oats and Cow Feed and will reach unprecedented p able to take care of a reason; at Old Prices. Good Goods, Fresh Stock ever before. We are servi saving him money; why not THE UNION Gl EVERYTHING TO EAT F( Phone 100 i SAUDIS COMMUNITY FAIR. G Sardis Community Fair will !>e held iturday, Nov. 4. The premium list, ibiioiieu in Vae Times two weeks U! to, pives only ribbons as prizes, nee publishing the list the commile found that they could supplement Ci e riuoon awards with cash pri/.es id other valuable merchandise prizes, ese latter bc\ng contributed by tlie erchants of Union. ne ISS TILLMAN TO BE BARItlED. Senator and Mrs. Tillman have an- th unced the engagement of their R( tughter, Sallie May, to John Shuler se Batesburg, the wedding to take ne ace November 29 at the Church of A1 iir Savior, Trenton. Miss Tillman is Ai e youngest daughter of Senator and Ct rs. Tillman and attended Winthrop F1 liege, later specializing in voice at Lc gnes Scott college in Atlanta and M Washington. N< NTERTAINMENT AT MONARCH $1 There will be an entertainment at T< on-Aetna Baptist church Sunday Tc ght, October 29th, given by the inbeam band, assisted by Mrs. O. P. Jackson and others. F very body St cordially invited to attend. This F1 itertainment is given in the interest G< ' State Missons. Sc & icholsonI SANK AND j: KJST COMPANY || UN ION. S C ? ?? 1 rTi"ggw It DISPUTE H ?n be no dispute regarding |f ancellcd check is legal evi- |jj prudence when you open a j jj nk, both as regards safety III ate record of all financial t||j i 111 y Fant, M.A.Moore, jlji e President. Cashier. Iliilj , JSi rating to our hun>mers, that it pays, and Price to buy Lan or beast from ELIABLE.... oods arriving on Every five times out of six to our Customers than [arket of the Day. It Judgment and ExperiProtected Our Trade Seem High we are pre3ur Home People here lat you are Still Buying Many of the Luxuries iy than We, Your Merl Our Stoek. at WVinlp mtage of the Bargains n. Flour, Sugar, Lard i no risk of spoiling on >u to let us stock you Horse and Mule Feed rices, and we are still ible amount of business s, Better Service than ng your neighbor and you? MCERY CO. )R MAN AND BEAST jnd 80 IN JL291,733~ B AI J5S COTTON UP TO OCT. 18 E!?OR'"' SHOWS HAI.K MM ! ION FOR SOUTH CAROLINA. uisus Bureau Issues Report Showing Increase in Ginnings of Nearly 2,000,000 Over l ast Year. Washington, Oct. 25.?Cotton >rin<1 prior to October 18 was 7,201,78:5 les as compared with 5,780,980 bales st year and 7,<519,747 bales in 1014 e census bureau has announced. >und bales included were 133,(559, a island, 04,931. Georgia has ^ind 1,216,762 bales this year. abama 292.815 rkansas (560,827 difornia 6,862 orida 32,845 uisiana 320,082 ississippi 446,171 irth Carolina 253,523 dahoma 480,782 >uth Carolina 508,589 snnessee 172,216 sxas 2,845,440 All other states?36,829. Distribution of Sea Island cotton by ates: orida 21.000 ;orgia 665 >uth Carolina 357