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Relieves Serious of Chrc l)r. Caldwell's Syrup IVpsin Corrects Condition That Seemed Hopeless. After suffering from chronic constipation until she was so run down she was unable to do any kind of work. Miss II. A. Frees, 209 Adams St., Day ton, Ohio, obtained a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and used it with such gratifying results that she continued the treatment and has written to Dr. Caldwell that her condition is again normal, and that she wants to recommend Syrup Pepsin to everyone who suffers with constipation. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin, gentle in its action and free from gripping or other pain or discomfort. It contains no opiate or narcotic drug, and, while acting readily on the most stubborn case of inactive bowels, is absolutely safe for the tiniest babe, so that it is the idea' family laxative and should be kept on hand in every household for use when needed. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin costs only fifty cents a bottle and is sold in drug stores everywhere. To avoid i in - FOR $ I ?? t one i STUDEBAKE < ALL iST i \ Fifteen Head \ MUI | AttrzJive Pri I Fant Br 5: i PaoI D | Vruai i\ $7.001 Every Pound Gus :j| Clean Up or Y011 <; Sartor says "Tha \ PLACE YOUR i I Union Ipp - > %/mRAVU AW ^ / Phone 103 CANT LOSE HAIR. Twenty Years From Today a Raidheaded Man Will Be an Unusual Sight. One of the most prominent druggists of America made a statement a few weeks ago which has caused a great deal of discussion among scientiotu in tKn mn/JiPQ 1 nrnoe He said: "If the new hair grower, Mildredina Hair Remedy, increases its sales as it has during the past year, it will he used by nearly every man, woman and child in America within eight years. "When Mildredina Hair Remedy is used almost universally, dandruff will disappear and with its departure baldness, itching scalp, splitting hair and all scalp diseases will follow and twenty years from now a bald head wll be a rarity." Sample sent for 10c to pay postage. Mail orders filled by Mildred Louise Co., Boston, Mass. Cor sale by Glymph's Pharmacy. 2-4 France last year imported $38,900 worth of American soap. It costs $302,844 daily to run Ne^v York's municipal business. Switzerland in 1915 drank 1,056,442 gallons of alcoholic liquors. If _ 1 ! 1 maiuKU, cspain, mis year noutfnt, ln,978 tons of American wheat. Invisible patches are seldom used in patching family quarrels. Case 1 mic Constipation , | itations and ineffective substitutes be s [sure you get Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep- s | sin. See that a facsimile of Dr. Cald- I well's signature and his portrait ap- ? pear on the yellow carton in which the ! s bottle is packed. A trial bottle, free t of charge, can be obtained by writ- t ing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 455 Wash- J ington St., Monticeilo, Illinois. t _ _ rrr i f l ' SALE! ji CAR % iR WAGONS rvLES | i| Second-Hand l -i E S | | ices for Cash | \ os. Co. I I ji I h \ \ - c educed i V 1 9- | < Jer Ton i i iran Iced lo Burn 1 ! ir Money Back, it's Chattanooga" { J ORDERS WITH | ] fir FiipI fft i i wm ML M%/rn V/V# 8 Union, S. C. | ! ??? l MASTER'S SALE. J 1 State of South Carolina, ? County of Union. Court of Common Pleas. Sallie J. Betenbaugh, et al., Plaintiffs, against Marie Gault, et af., Defendants. In obedience to an order made in > the above stated case, I will sell at ] public auction, at Union, during the i legal hours of sale before the Court- < house door on Salesday, Monday, Feb. ) 5, 1917, the following iand to wit: j. All that certain lot of land situated j about one and one-eighth miles south 1 of Union Courthouse, said County,!; bounded hv the hinds nf P C. WW.:.. I > enant, I. M. Sumner and Hart street, being the lot conveyed to Effie Helen- i baugh and others hy J. L. West by < deed dated November 6, 1906, and re- < corded in office of Clerk of Court in ] Hook X 4, page .'525. , Terms of sale: Cash; purchaser to [ pay for papers. E. C. Howze, 2-3 Master. ^ Hicycles and electrical goods, such ' as toasters and stoves, are needed in i Uruguay. i European Russia is believed to have j 13,000,000 horsepower in undeveloped ; t water-power. J ] New aluminum foil for wrapping | < purposes is only one-sixth of one hun-i/ dredth of an inch. t Philadelphia has 13,000 professional women. France has conferred tf,000 military 1 medals since war began. i BILLS OF INTEREST | IN THE LEGISLATURE NSURANOE MEASURES THE MOST IMPORTANT. r J aquor Legislation Will He I'p Also. Free Houses and Bathtubs for Cotton Mill Operatives. (Columbia Record) ^ Little of interest featured the first veek's session of the house of rep- j csentatives, except the introduction if new bills, some of which were of nore than ordinary importance. There eems to be the best of feeling anion** he members of the lower body and j he predicted clash of partisan forces r o far has failed to materialize, but 0 he pessimistic ones still mantain ^ hat the element of battle is in the .. omposition of the house and will ap>ear when important administrative ^ neasures are up for consideration. The bills of the insurance commision are the most weighty so far preented. They consist of the measure j trepared hy the Manning insurance ommission, providing for regulation f fire rates, for the naming of the in- . urance commissioner as attorney for he companies, for a graduated license ax of insurance companies hy munici- . >al corporations, for the repeal of the valid policy" law, for defining the s lualifieations of insurance agents, for 8 nquiring into the origin of fires and v or a building code for incorporated 8 ities and towns. They were intro- s luced by Representative Moise. a x nember of the commission, following ' he reading of a special message from s he governor urging their passage, * vithout amendments and were r?- c erred by the speaker to the commit- 8 ee of banking and insurance. r Liquor Rills. Xext in nrobable import an -e is a J till by W. R. Richey, Jr., of Laurens, * iroviding for absolute State-wide * trohibition. allowing the -hinment ' nto South Carolina only of intoxi- ? ants for sacramental and modi una! x mrposes. Mr. Richey is a minority ' action leader and his measure has * he approval of Former Governor Cole j. Rlease. Another liouor bill presented to the t louse was that of Representative Yomberg of the Charleston delegaion, submitting to a referendum of he people the question of allowing a ligh license system under eld dispen ary regulations for cities of 40.000 nhabitants or more. This measure is ntended for the city of Charleston ind is similar to the one introduced n the general assembly last year and vhich failed of pnssace. Several bills providing for lower ates of interest were introduced, as vas one by Representative Bradford if York, providing for a system hrough which State banks may make cans on agricultural land in the aid if farming. Non-Payment of Taxes. Representative Liles of Orangeburg ntroduced a bill providing for a 5 >er cent penalty after the first of fanuary of each year for non-paynent of taxes as an amendment to he present law and a concurrent resdution providing for an increase in he traveling expenses of judges to >1.000 per annum. Representative Bqyd of Spartanburg >n Thursday presented a bill providng for the abolition of the State varehouse system which is creating i deal of interest, particularly as jovernor Manning favors the system vith certain amendments to the pres>nt law. He recommended a com- - nission composed of three members, . )f which the warehouse commissioner . ihould l>e ex-officio chairman. Two bills providing; for a State j lighway commission, one by the Chester delegation and the other by . Representative Berry of Orangeburg, ,vere introduced in the house. It is 1 probable that these measures will be consolidated, the best features of each * jeinp: retained in a new bill. Representatives Moore of Abbeville ind Hamblin of Union are the co- . authors of a bill providing for two- . ent passenger rates on all railroads ? e i:? tl-'- i- 1 ' i uuuui vyui oiuiii. i ins is a perennial neasure and has the same characterstics of "Banquo's ghost." New Constitution. A joint resolution placing before the people in a referendum during the general election of 1918 the question >f calling a new constitutional contention was introduced in the house rhursday, by Representative Lesesne )f Marlboro. Other bills introduced on Thursday vere one forbidding probate judges narrying couples to whom they had ssued marriage licenses, another ^lacing license tax on "soft drinks," i third to require examination of drivers of motor-propelled vehicles, a "ourth requiring registration of pharmacists of other States and a fifth providing for a standard system of extbooks in the public schools of the State. A joint resolution providing for a eferendum vote on the question of ;qual suffrage for women was introiuced in the house by Representative 'Iorton of Spartanburg, one of the youngest members of the general as;embly, who is having his first year >f legislative experience. The South Carolina Equal Suffrage oague is maintaining an effective 'lobby," composed of some of the nost prominent women of the State vho attend each day's meeting of the reneral assembly, and they are seeing hat no member is going to be unapiroached. They claim to be making onverts to their cause and are verv >ptimistic over the ultimate fate of , he referendum bill. White Slave Act. < A measure enacting the terms of he Mann national "white slave" law. nakinp its terms applicable to Soutn ; HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS WERE SPENT IN VAIN rclls of "Feeling Better" Than She Ever Remembers "of Feeling Before" VBOUT LOST HOPE Advice Given by Her Pastor's Wife Led to a Wonderful Change in the Life of Mrs. McManus. "The reason I put so much faith n Tanlac is because I had taken so nany medicines and they helped me mly while I was taking them, hut Tanlac not only helped me when I vas taking it, but its benefits have roved lasting," said Mrs. S. A. Mcrtanus, of 207 Second St., Olympia, i suburb of Columbia, in a statement he gave in endorsement of Tanlac. v? nen 1 quit rasing l anlac, I realy felt better than 1 ever remember f feeling before. Tanlac is the only nedicine I ever took that helped my ndi^estion and nervous troubles. "I suffered particularly from nerrous indigestion, and my system was >adly run down. 1 had worried myself almost to death over my troubles, ind that made my condition all the vorse. I suffered a lot with headiches and I could not eat anything. 1 suffered so much with my head that I vas almost crazy at times with the tains. My nerves were in such bad shape that if anyone knocked unextectedly at the door, it would fly all iver me and I would tremble all over md feel like I was freezing, for my lerves were a complete wreck. "My husband lost a lot of time rotn work because he had to stay at tome and work around tin- house when was sick in bed. I never felt well. >ut I just draprtred around the house md did my work the best 1 could vhen I was not in bed. I never was eally able to do my housework. hough. "I never have been healthy and I lave been doctored all my life, but I ontinued to suffer and gradually rrew worse, until I had about lost ?ope of ever feeling well again. "Then one day my pastor's wife ame to visit me, for 1 was on the sick list,' and she urged me to try ranlac. I knew it would bo well to lo so if my pastor's wife told me to, ;o my husband bought me a bottle, ^nd now I can truthfully say that ranlac is the only medicine I have ;ver taken that has helped me, and Tanlac broke up my troubles, even if I lad suffered badly for three years ind had suffered less severely for ive or six more years. Tanlac, too. s the only medicine that ever helped ny indigestion and nervous troubles, ind these troubles, the doctors told me, vere the cause of all my bad health. "The Tanlac gave me a fine appe.ite, increased my strength and made ne able to do my housework. I feel ine now and am not bothered with ny nerves. I do not have headaches iuu my siomacn is in nne snape. lanac is the best medicine I have ever ;aken, and hundreds of dollars have >een spent trying to break up my roubles. , For sale by Palmetto Drug Co., Union; Buffalo Drug Co., Buffalo; K. A Bailey, Carlisle; B. G. Wilburn & Son, Cross Keys; Jonesville Drug Co., Ibnesville; Lockhart Mills Store, LiOckhart; R. J. Fowler, Monarch. (Advertisement) Carolina, was introduced in the house Friday by Representative Neuffer of Vbbeville, at the request of the South Carolina Medical society. It is hought that there will be a spirited ight on the measure when it is placed in the calendar for passage. On Friday the house concurred in a tenate resolution prohibiting the sine lie adjournment of the general assem)ly on or during Saturday night. An interesting bill introduced in the ' louse was that of Representative Uamblin of Union, providing for free Iwellings of all employed textile onjratives and their families in the State, the houses to be supplied by the nill management. A companion bill. :ollaborated by Mr. Hamblin and Representative Moore of Abbeville, requires the mill managers to establish >athtubs in and make sewerage conlection with all dwellings. Representative Cothran of Greenrille introduced a bill in the house I iroviding for a training school for th I "eehle-mndcd of the Stntn Thi? Kill I vas recommended by Governor Manlintf in his message and has the iniorsement of the State board of rharities and corrections. A similar neasure has been presented to the senate. TERRIBLE SORES. Mrs. H. A. Bray, Cunningham, N. U., was bitten by "chijrtrers." Her epj broke out in these terrible sores, she suffered terribly, could only find "elief by lyinpr down with her le>* cropped up. Six bottles of Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy with the wash cured ler. Only one of hundreds of cases ;ured of serious blood diseast Ask your druggist for Mr-. Joe Person's Remedy. Known foi over ;hirty-five years. Safe and reliable for ailments peculiar to women. Ask your Drufctfist ??r write Person 11i?i*dy Company, Charlotte, N. C. Send for free testimonials. Price $1.00 per Dottle, for $2.7."). C> for $">.00. prepaid. People's Drup: Store. Fowler's Pharmacy, H. C. Williams Co., Glyvnph'.Pharmacy, Palmetto Drupr Co., Jones^ille I)ruR Co. Krupp Run works in Germany employs l.'l,000 women. I Work - Lab< ! What good will it do y ?? reach seventy and you I ?? provident while yourea ?*? was at its best? > Start Tot A A Savings A< ?, * and in your old age, wl A unable to earn a living, A dependent on your chil A ity, but the interest of A will keep you and your of care and worry of ho 1 Citizens Natio X R. P. MORGAN A President t State, County and City /V It is free?it tells ho local and long distance vice in your home at vei Send for it today. Writ( phone Manager, or FARMERS' LINE DEI SOUTHERN BELL TELEI ND TELEGRAPH COM U N D E R T A In All Its Bran FINE FUNERAL FURNISH DEPARTME Up-to-date Equipment?Cask( fessional services rendered any1 ?same as in town. Phone or where in the county promptly, < Phone 106. Bailey Undertakin r UNION DRAY ( AUTOMOBILE LET US DO YOUR HEAVY ANl H. W. COX, Manager I 1 ,nnk" Ynn - ?? w AS. M. v. X V4 Ex pens after you have used our meats awhile. I them considerably less than formerly. Y meats than ever before. The reason is s frood that every ounce of them is eaten, waste, and the stoppage of waste is saving I City Market and E. It. GODSH AM., 1 PeonlAft lflnfl#M-t Funeral Directors and Automobile Equipment Furnished Calls Answered Promptl H. W. EDGAR, H Phone 240 >r - Toil? T ou when you V have not been rnin^ capacity lay y V :count V ten physically you won't be % Idren or char yt ur savings helpmate free w to live. nal Bank f V C. C. SANDERS Cashier X X r Depository Postal Brings J. Ills Book vv you can have. telephone serry small cost. i nearest Bell Tele ARTMENT >HONE [PANY 7k I N G I L-hes j ivro i xt iiiiio l.> Ti V Till 1 NT ?t delivered and prowhere in the count\ I ders answered anyday or night. n 9 Compan? 1 :OMPANY DRAYS D LIGHT HAULING Phone 23 -* r Table es t will surprise you to find et you have enjoyed finer imple. Our meats oro so There is, therefore, no The best is the cheapest. Cattle Co. Mer. aking Co. I Embalmers I When 1 )t sir?><l- ? y Day or Night Manager. Old Postofllcc Building