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mi An Item Worth V in buying. It is wort while to us. Often i I effect economies in 1 make advantageous your name on the list cases please let us kr at this store is Econ i Can Fruit an I Help W \ $ Special Price on the Fa p: We Have Them in All Si Si Be Bought Elsewhere. 4 Also Jelly Glasses, Jar 3 Wrenches. % Get Our Prices. | McCLlIKE TEN WWWVWWWWWVWVWWM FOR THE BEST T( FOR THE BESr FOR THE Biltmore Buttermilk Your Friend is There THE PLACE Mf C Be Sure of 1 The telephone c frequent intervals for benefit of the telephc Every effort is m accurate and up-to-c tVint- tnl iiiui ivi^j/iiwiiv^'uacia v making calls. A c; number causes delay ance to a third party. Avoid inconver. cerned by looking up 1'* in the directory befor IVben you Tel SOUTHERN BELL T1 AND TELEGRAPH MONEY TO LEND on FARM LANDS $300 to $10,000?Twenty years time. See JNO. K. HAMBLIN Lawyer Office 2nd door Eas'? of Postoffice. tf. _ Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System The Old Standard general strengthening tonic, GROVE'S TASTELESS chUI TONIC, drives out Malaria,enriches the idood.and builds up the system. A trite tonic. Eor adults and children. 50c pcni gsH** S MWMMla^.-" inpr of low Vhilc is Economy >? h while to you; worth t is possible for us to r>oo, buying which we can to you. If you want J , ; to be notified in such I ma) iow. Anyway, buying ^ stai it v IOTTIV wor coir << P^ViffBBPP^iTipB nro' r|^ J Bli thir ijMjiiTt] > j ?M*iiT*n^B an for /y2pgM^?SE^Htt|Cu?|3H^HH HMMHHMIHBHMHBBHHIBII tam S ???? yea ?* I, rifle d Vegetables1 ? '2 it in the War! | ?e ;5 w?i ' # Chr imous Mason Fruit Jars, g inp zes. Cheaper Than Can g trai' 2 onlj g won Tops fori Rubbers for 5 run g 000, :2 exp 'n $ { one CENT STORE 1 S3 > hou clue - the aKe ) EAT too r TO DRINK I wor _ wnr BEST TO SMOKE St. unt< this f sum X ? ?_ _ and Hi " the day he 1 the Number j?? hepr Calling cci;; a y< inte lirectory is issued at the information and t;?v )ne-usintf nuhlir. lade to keep this list su^. late. It is expected vill consult it before ['*? all for an incorrect JJ4' and possible annoybe Fra T lience to all con1 1 1 mci] ' IClV^ilUlit 11U111UU9 IMC ... are;! e calling. wor hcfc war rn ephone?Smile a ^ of ELEPHONE The' COMPANY men poli SUFFERING ANI) SURGERY /, can be avoided by using rea< fltoutoe, i J1 VaEEEor ^ TM AOt MAHM nijri PILE REMEDY A Relieve yourself of this ailment at men home. Easy to use and thoroughly to i dependable. Sold only by us COc and war $1.00. Glymph's Pharmacy, Union, S. polii C. but A BIG SUM OF MONEY. ery few people realize what a stu lIous sum of money $7,000,00,000 war budget recently voted by con 58, is. C. D. Hamilton, of St. Louis ting in a St. Louis paper, attempt to give some idea of how mud he interest on the United State; budget at per cent amounts tlmost $500 a minute, according t< C. D. Hamilton, who is vice pres it of the International Shoe com y, who has figured out a numbe omparisons to show just what $7. ,000,000 means. His figures fol There arc almost exactly as man] ar in 7,000,000,000 as there an mcls in 111 years. Since the De ation of Independence, July 4 (?, to date, there are less than 4, ,000,000,000 seconds. Seven billions in gold coin is 13, tons and would load nearly 1,20< 5, each with 2,400 pounds, an< ce a solid train thirteen miles long Seven millions of silver dollar! ked in a pile would go toward th< s to a distance of 1,736 miles. An< /ould take the United States mint king day and night, 224 years t< i the dollars. At 5 an acre, this vast sum woulc for every acre of land in the con ntal United States. Seven billions of dollars in dollai lennacas, cna to ena, win g< unci the earth at the equator nearh ty-four times. And it would tak< express train running forty mile: hour, day and night, continuously two and one-half years, to cove t distance. Let us look at it in time, or in dis :e. even billion minutes is 13,311 rs, 9 hours and 52 minutes! napine seven billions of miles! J : bullet has a speed of about hal ? a second, yet at this great ve ty it would require almost 44rs to cover the distance! Had an express train started a dawn of the Christian era, goinf the rate of a mile a minute, i iid today, nineteen centuries afte' ist was born, figuratively speak hardly have potten out cf th< n sheds, for it would have pom r one-seventh of the distance. Am ild now, 1917 have 11,400 years t< to complete the journey of 7,000, ,000 miles! Count it?ridiculous! Imapine ai ert counter of money countinp thii 1 bills and expert enouph to coun a second. Then suppose he be ?ed to the 'union' and worked dayi luded. Then imapine him eiph rs a day. Sunday and holidays ex led. Then imapine him workinp oi job for fifty years?dying of oli ?the work taken up by anothei i first man would have been daa years when the fifteenth-man task?each of the fifteen havinjf ked for fifty years, and then ild still be uncounted enouph t< i each man, woman and child ii Louis $500, and leave $'120,000,001 >uched. Let us look at $7,000,000,000 ii way: Suppose a man had thii i in bank?not interest bearing? every day of the year he drew hii :k for $1,00,000, he would after 2! rs have $30,000,000 in the bank! Suppose again that it was invest paying G per cent interest, an? man's expenses were $1,00,000 i He would, after seventy year pending a million a day?find tha had 14 billion left', twice as mucl it the beginning, and might wan ;ick himself for pinching down to i gardly million a day! This loan bears interest of 3% pe t and the interest is $245,000,001 ?ar, nearly $500 a minute?just thi rest!" TO INSURE SOLDIERS. ernmcnt Contemplates Issuinj Free Policies for $4,000 on Each Life. Washington, June 2.?Plans for is ig $4,000 free government insur ? on the life of every Americai ier and sailor during the war ii of pension arrangements will b< m up next week by the council o onal defense. A report prepare< Assistant Secretary Sweet of th< imerce department, ready to b< mitted, urges that the insurant provided through legislation be nee. be defer*e council took up th< stion some weeks apo and tuTnei whole subject over to the depart it of commerce for investigation report ready offers a lenp list o: uments showinp the advantage o kiap out a compensation systen >re American lives are lost in th< he plans as prepared provide foi at insurance of $4,000 on the lif< every officer and private in th< tary and naval service to be pai< lis beneficiaries without premius re would be provision for a systen insurance by which officers am i desiring to do so could take ou mnts higher than the 3*4,000 fre< cy by paying premiums at peaci s. isurance companies, it is said, ar< ly to approve the scheme if as d the government will not con e in the insurance business aftei war. War hazards are so grea . few companies are anxious t< re soldiers and sailors except a1 i premiums. t the end of the war the govern t, it is suggested, could turn ovei nsurance companies its premiuir business, dropping the flat $4,00( cies on all who leave the servici continuing on men who remair in the army or navy. One argument advanced for the - insurance plan is that it would im, prove the morale of the troops. The - plan would provide also insurance of , partial or total disability. In case of - death the insurance would be paid i in instalments whose amount would be determined by the government ! board. Government officials are con5 vinced the best way to dispose of the > i pension problem is to meet it bofore.; hand. .J Many officials hold that since many r will be drawn from occupations in . | which government and State laws . 1 compel compensation for injury and death the government can not subf ject a man to more risk than he en5 counters in his usual occupation and . not make compensation if he is wounded or killed. The success of the government war risk insurance bureau, which has . paid out large sums for ship losses, ) is pointed to as argument that the \ government itself can bear the risk. The $4,000 insurance given free 5 would be a direct loss, but pensions, i it is argued, would be much more ] costly in the long run. J GERMANY'S MASSES. j (Asheville Citizen.) It is singular but nevertheless true that no part of President Wilson's p famous war speech before congress ) went deeper into German junkerism f that that section wherein the Ameri? can president drew a sharp distincs tion between the German government ( and the German people. It will be r recalled that President Wilson stated in substance that the United States . had no grievance against the German people; that this country raised its 3 case against the German government, a distinction most cleverly drawn, ^ and certainly founded on fact. C Tf YlOO 1 Ar* lr y AV MWO WWII ivuunu ill cilia . country that the people of Germany 4 had no heart in the war at the very beginning; that the struggle was pret cipitated without their knowledge r and certainly without their sanction, t Now we are told that the people of r Germany as a whole are utterly sick . of a war which so completely shatters 5 all dreams of sweeping and brilliant 3 triumph. There is every reason to 1 believe, too, that the world has only 3 a half knowledge of the real food con. ditions in Germany, and if the people hold out at all it is not because of i the vision of victory, but for the reas son that they hope and pray that the t day of a democratic era will dawn, . and that the sun of autocracy will set s forever. Indeed, did not the German t autocracy have so complete a hold on _ the popular throat, the salvation of a the German people would have been ^ already achieved in a revolution of J even greater moment than that which d has written a new page of history in ^ 'war party at Berlin is still s able to hypnotize, to fool and deceive 3 the German masses. When one illu3 sion fades another quickly takes its 3 place, and they are led to believe that final triumph is only a matter of a few -j months. Visions of victory are fors ever held before the German vision, and ever there is held out the hope s that Russia -will not only make a sep) arate peace, but will be faithless to her compact with the allies and will throw in her lot with kaiserism. More j than that, tbe German people have j been steadily informed that the entry 5 of the United States into the war is a t matter of little consequence; that her 1 participation will have little or no eff. feet on the final outcome, and that as t far as war purposes are concerning, the American republic is a howling r farce. All of which the German peo^ pie implicity believe, but it is reason2 able to assume that the day of enlightenment is not far off; that the fallacy and weakness of autocratic government will he so thoroughly broucht homo thp mnoooc. in ! many that they will rise in their miprht * and forever strike from themselves the shackles of slavery. iS Reasons! k [ Why you should use Cardui, the woman's b J^B tonic* for your troubles, I ^ e kl have been shown in a thousands of letters from f^B '^B actual users of this medi- L ^ kl cine, who speak from BM personal experience. If |^B B J^B the results obtained by I kl other women for so many - BU years fiave been so unf- I^B formly good, why not L ^ f k 1 give Caraui a trial? ' I Take ** car mil ' ^ The Woman's Tonic i ^ ^ Mrs. Mary J. Irvin, of I Cullen, Va., writes: 1 "About 11 years ago, i B ly suffered untold misery B with female trouble, bearing-down pains, headI ache, numbness ... 1 would go for three weeks r almost bent double ... t My husband went to Dr. ^^1 t After taking about two bottles I began going - around and when 1 took Nfc r three bottles 1 could do 1 1 ICE! I IWhy deny yourse life's greatest comfo in hot weather has necessity to civilized We sell ICE as Iot 8 at? oa_x_ ? Ipicuit m tne oxaxe, no ing those cities thi competitive plants, many cases, our p lower than even thos where there are co] plants. It is our aim t %. the best product at tl J price to our people. | J: ? TRY US AND BE CO UNION ICE & F Magnolia Balm' LIQUID FACE POWDER. The beauty secret of WjK?Sk women who know how to ta^e care ?f the com/vO$Y plexion. Cannot be detected. Heals Sunburn, stops Tan. Soothing, cooling, refreshing. ? y " l^A. Pink. Whit*. fto*e-ReJ. " s 75c. at 'DruggUlt or bu mall JtrtcL Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp. Lyon Mfg. Co., 40 South Fifth St.. Brooklyn, N. Y. When Boi Filling wjl]fi Prescriptions Se the b We give our undivided attention to Jtoofir the matter in hand; that is the only ^ safe way and we are nothing if not . . safe. Put 'n We dispense only druRs of known ^ will purity, holding that when human life OVer < is hanging in the balance it is a poor tWO. time to economize by using "cheap" ior 1*0 materials and trusting to luck for re- leak il suits. have 1 This is an important matter and one yg worthy of serious thought. yOUT PALMETTO DRUG S? COMPANY iys?fiuedw Phone No. 7. - , Un II PHYSICAL TRAINING 1 C TEACHERS IN DEMAND Q Young Men and Women about to be graduated from-High School should consider this healthful, useful* dignified and profitable profession. 4 Hy recent legislation Physical traln Ing Is made obligatory In every school In New York and New Jersey. Penn . North and South Carolina have.bills pending. Send for Catalog of the only school of physical education chartered by the University of the State of New York (Under the Nri/enta) THE SAVAGE SCHOOL TOR PHYSICAL EDUCATION 310 *?>/? S're-U Veto York City RUB-MY-TISM Will cure Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic Sprains, Bruises. Cuts, Burns, Old . Sores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Eczema, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, A niphl used internally or externally. 25c opened in r CEll I If one of ? rts? ICE I become a J man. n as any \ ?t except- ? at have 2 and in ? rices are | e centres ? mpetitive o furnish t tie lowest | K I I 1 %* | j: NVINCED | UEL CO. I xsaasxsxxxsxxxsxxxxx t ^X, T" me Builders nd us ready to serve We do the best of Plumbing and est grade of Tin ig. No other kind of appeals to us. Why inferior Plumbing? 1 all have to be done again in a year or Why have an inferof put on? It will n a year or two and to be replaced. Let ?ure with you for Roofing and your )ing. You will eret honest value, and ill, therefore, be sation Plumbing i Electric Co. Phone 205-J d * l school for women has been Vera Cruz, Mexieo.