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www Merchants & : "The O The Oldest and Lar NO MORE CI ; Ho you remember the ; sion and the lack of emj rency panic of 1907? To prevent another cu Ranking System keeps 01 ' rency to furnish the bai I of which we are one so I the currency requirement ; Doesn't it appeal to y ; cost, by becoming one of Send for Booklet, ' " Member Federal LOOK FOR THF, BAN : And deposit your money F. M. PARK, ; President. I : UUMMWMWAiyUiMW A.^4 4^/, I T t^OIrl HJ I Wj Y | Has Led The | Than FOI T X And St 4 f For L ? X Tho Ponnlo i nu i uupiu A^4. A^A ^4. A^A A^i I MR. F I 5 Why not reduce your Fe * prove to you that it cai ? soil at the same time. A > wnnM hp nliirl In (ipmnnc a "" i L_i. IVf. J $ UNIOP XX *V*VWNNXWNNWWV*XV3? One Pair < ...Lif Are you abusing am you wiil pay the price ] of all headaches arise f aching, burning eyes tl and many other ills ai strain. In such cases 1 that is an unfailing on< c< /"*LInnrr T^m: ovyiiwvyn v^niijwrvn carefulfy examined bef< if necessary, fitted with An examination will < is no need for glasses 1 for glasses are very rej every pair with an abg tion. F. C. DUKI 13 Main Street Dr. Virgil R. Hawkir DENTIST OFHCK UPSTAIRS IN . J j O ( l-OSTF.R Hlll.DINC *J?I1UII? O. , A philosophi r gains renown by during other people's troubles > resignation. y^ffwwffwwfwwfwwfiiniiiiij V UNDER ? r\COVERNMENT U^S U PERVISION member bank under j J *?r*T federal reserve act . -TH.S : Planters Nat'l Bank i Id Reliable" i nest Bank in Union County LJRRENCY PANICS i shut-downs, the business depres- ; iloyment which followed the cur I rrency panic the Federal Reserve J 1 hand an immense supply of cur- ; iks whfch belongs to the system that they may at all times meet ! s or tneir depositors. ; ou to pet its protection, without ? our depositors? ? 'How Does It Benefit Me?" I Reserve System. \ K WITH THE CHIME CLOCK i where il will be absolutely sale \ J. D. ARTHUR, J Cashier. ? Jj A^A A ||^ ' "y Tjr lyTiy fy HE | lickory" | agon | 4 m All For More X *TY YEARS | till Leads f lit sale by | s Supply Co. t . ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA ARMER $ ? rllizer bill $5.00 a toil? 1 can / 1 be done and improve your * l remarkable discovery that 1 / Irale lo you. Lei me tell you of it g D /V 1WT ? w m. 1^1 ^ si, s. c. 3?tf i. V t\\\\\v\\\m\vv\xxmvwvw% of Eyes to a etime... d neglecting yours? If, so, later. More than two-thirds rom eye-strain. Dim vision, lat soon tire, granulated lids e due to some form of eye here is but one remedy and ??properly fitted glasses. IN should have their eyes )re being taxed by study and i glasses. ost you nothing, and if there ' will tell you so. My prices isonable and I stand back of >olute guarantee of satisfac; llntnmfitrkt j V|JIVIIIUII IUI Union, South Carolina NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC. IS We want you to know that the City Barber Shop is now open for business in the old bakery building, next door to the former location. The recent p fire damaged us, but did not burn our furniture and fixtures. We have bad ___ everything worked over and now our furniture is as good as new. Give us on- your patronage. .vith The City Barber Shop, 20-tf J no. It. Mathis, Prop. ONE SURVIVOR LEFT. Las tof General Lee's Bodyguard i? the Rev. Mr. Page. Rev. William Williamson Page, lector of St. John's Episcopal church at Cornwall, N. Y., is the sole survivor of the Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee's personal bodyguard. Captain Page commanded Company D, scouts, guides and couriers. Thirty-ninth Cavalry, Army of Northern Virginia, from the Wilderness to Appomattox; and his memoirs of intimate association with Lee are soon to be forthcoming. Mr. Page is of the old Virginia family, related to Lee and to the present United States ambassadors, Thomas Nelson Page and Walter Ilines Page, at Rome and London. II.. ..44 1_J 41-- 4". - 1 -- ne cutenueu me i^onieaerate veterans' convention held for the first time in Washington June 4-8 of this year. In his rectory at Cornwall are two priceless possessions, the* desk on which Cornwallis is said to have signed the terms of surrender, and the clock beneath which Thomas Jefferson courted Betsy Burrell. This clock was made at Williamsburg, Va., in lG8.r), and belonged to -Gov. John Page at Roosevelt, the seat of " the Pages, where Jefferson, Washington, Monroe and other famous Virginians were visitors. Tradition had it that the joining of the wood at one corner of the clock formed a profile of Jane Bird of Westover, the descendant of Edward III, whose portrait is ift'the Page gallery on Thirty-first Street. Mr. Page found out at Tiffany's that the clock had been covered since with 17 coats of varnish. A workman came to his breakfast table one morning in great excitement and said thai the profile had been revealed. The present writer has seen it?something that would seem to be absolutely unique in woodworking. "History is made up of the radiant lives of men, rather than of the dramatic deeds of legislatures and armies." said Mr. Pnrrp'a iifoir?r?o friend, the late Bishop Potter, and'the venerable rector delights in the following tribute of his to Lee: "The bishop addressed a gathering of both the Blue and the Gray. A previous speaker had made his task difficult by a long discussion of state rights. The bishop told of being a lay reader on the estate of George Washington Parke Curtis, Esquire, while a student at the theological seminary of Virginia. Curtis' daughter was the wife of the then Col. Robert E. Lee, United States Army. 'I looked down,' said the bishop, 'and there was old man Curtis beginning to nod. Beside him. fortunately, was a cleareyed, uniformed young officer whose alertness and interest inspired me. Gentlemen' ?the bishop paused?'^f ^ we "light have with us tonij^jVuT*'lcCUiW 4 oovony- , J and MeadcT and' ti lysSAs virant lm I think they would agree that notAing ever caused Robert E. Lee toi be caught napping."?The Churchmajn. INSIDE AND OUT. In the battle of King's Mountf in a doughty old Irishman from wh^t is now York county fell, apparently mortally wounded. Some of his friends bathed his wounds with whiskey, there being an abundance of the same on hand and# a total absence of water?a circumstances never explained by any of the historians, sacred or profane. After his wounds had been well laved, the old fellow opened his eyes, raised up, and said: "A leetle of that is good for the inside as well as the outside" and, after drinking a few cupfuls, began to mend and lived on to a green old age, a circumstance with which the liquor, of course, had no connection as is proved by the statistics.? Greenville Daily News. Overalls and hickory shirts are being worn in Paris because the coal shortage has closed the laundries. We'll probably be wearing these gar- , merits at the opera next season. A CHILD GETS CROSS, SICK AND FEVERISH WHEN CONSTIPATED I Ix>ok, Mother! If Tongue is Coated Clean Little Liver and Bowels. If your little one's tongue it coated. if iq n euro cinrr* +V*o of a*vio/?U I . .v ... ? wwiv W1511 viiv ovwuiatiif ? VCI aim I I bowels need a gentle, thorougl cleansing at once. When your child is cross, peevish, listless, pale, doesn't lleep, eat or act naturally; if breath is bad, stomach sour, system full of cold, throat sore, or if feverish, g|ve a teaspoonful of "California 3 rup of Figs," and in a few houift all the clogged-up, constipated wafte, sour bile and undigested food Wil gently move out of the bowels, ana/ou have a well, playful child again, i Sick children needn't be joaxed to take this harmless "fruit axative." 1 Millions of mothers keep itbandy be- | cause they know its actUh on the . stomach, liver and bowels fa prompt and sure. They also knol* a little given today saves a sick c?:d tomorrow. Ask your druggist for a flt-eent hottie of "California Syrup of Figs," which contains directions f?r babies, children of all ages and foij -lOwn-ups plainly on the bottle. BewieOf counterfeits sold here. Get tp (genuine T made by "California Fig $mp Company." [ While you are asking ho run h an Ameiiec.n soldier gets letfs ay that 1 hose French privates nrelgl >'>g like hornets for their country l>r ju t s^O a year and findings. I I MORE DISASTROUS RESULTS FROM PROHIBITION (From The Manufacturers' Record) The Manufacturers Record has repeatedly called attention of late to the serious destruction that has come upon ] a number of business interests by reason of prohibition. It so happens, however, that these particular business interests that have been ruined by prohibition are the jails and penitentiaries and convict camps. They | are practically being run out of bus- i iness by prohibition. As we have previously stated, any community that desires to keep its j jails and penitentiaries full should never encourage prohibition, for wherever prohibition is introduced and the < law rigidly enforced there is such a decrease in the number of convicts that jails and penitentiaries become almost vacant. The American Highway association of Washington has just issued a brief statement under the heading, "The ] Unique Quarters of a County Engi- ! neer." in wVlinVl a annnifin ' t inuavianull is given of the decrease in the demand , for jail room by reason of prohibition. 1 Indeed, so great has been the lessen- J ing of the convicts mentioned in this 1 particular case that road building by j convicts labor must almost cease, be- i cause there are not enough convicts to j do the work. 1 The liquor interests may well hold ' this up as a shining example of the 5 effect of prohibition, since it would be : as good an argument as much of the , stuff they put out. They may hold up 1 their hands in horror and say, "Here is a case where the number of convicts has been so lessened that the construction of roads by convict labor cannot proceed," and on this base an argument for the limitless use of whiskey in order to increase the number of convicts. In its statement, the American Highway association says: "Early in the year the State Highway Commissioner of Washington, James Allen, made a report concern j t ing convict-labor conditions for road work, which forms an interesting paragraph in the 1917 Good Roads Year Book. It reads as follows: " 'While the law for prison labor remains unchanged, the number of convicts available for road work has decreased since the prohibition law went into force, to such an extent that there is no likelihood of any road work by prison labor during the ensuing two years.' "This comment on the effect of aridity on road conditions in the Rhododendron State, startling though it is, is confirmed by the announcement not long ago that the engineer of Chelan county was in the jail at Wenatchee, not because of misdemeanor, but because as a result of prohibition, there were no longer any guests there and the sheriff considered the county might as well use the vacant room as ~ - -^c>' Bn'ju?^ixuLJ??ce." | IF YOU are troubled with dandruff, itching scalp, and your hair coming out, we ask you to try Me, JI ViEmjr TRAOK MARK HAIR TONIC on our guarantee that it will give you relief and satisfaction or money refunded. Sold only by us, 50c and ?1.00. Glymph's Pharmacy, Union, S. C. MEETING OF u7l>. C. CHAPTER. The U. D. C. chapter will meet at four o'clock Monday, Sept. 24th, at the Chamber of Commerce. Hostesses, misses rsianche Garner, Edna Tinsley, Mesdames M. L. Garner, J .A. Brown and Mrs. T. E. Bailey. The members are requested to come. Mrs. T. C. Duncan, Cor. Sec. Never Mind AN ACHE OR PAIN i l i JUST RUB OR TAKE DR. HUIET'S All-Healing Liniment And Tell the Pain to Drive on. FOR SALE AT THE PALMETTO DRUG CO. A. G. KENNEDY Attorney at Law Office Over Citizens National Bank Union, S. C. I OR. R. R. POPE DENTIST Office Over Tinsley's New Jewelry Store kL I'llONE 43 (ft Like a Boy at 50 Bi With Vitality? Doctor says Nuxated Iron is gr< Often increases the strength i nervous folks 100 per cer New York. N. Y.?Not long ago a lr man came to nto who was nearly half a \v century old and asked inc to give htm a t^ preliminary examination for life insvir- a tncc. J was astonished to find him with n the blood pressure of a hoy of 20 and as si full of Vigor, vim and vitality as a ti young man; In fact, a young man he d< really was notwithstanding his ape. The w secret he said was taking iron?Nuxated si Iron had tilled him with renewed life, ri At 30 he was In bad health; at 40 he ai was careworn and nearly all In. Now It it 50, after taking Nuxated Iron, a niir- it nclo of vitality and his face beaming hi with the buoyancy of youth. As I have n said a hundred times over. Iron Is the H greatest of all strength builders. If It people would only take Nuxated Iron si when they feel weak or run down, in- t? stead of dosing themselves with habit- al forming drugs, stimulants and alcoholic Ii beverages I am convinced that in this nl way they could ward off disease, pre- lr venting It becoming organic in thou- h 9ands of cases, and thereby the lives of k thousands might be saved who now die ci every year from pneumonia, grippe, b kidney, liver, heart trouble and other rr langerous maladies. The real and true oi :ru wnicn started tneir diseases wns K nothing mnro nor less than a weakened condition brought on by lack of Iron E In the blood. Iron is absolutely noces- Hf tary to enable your blood to change food n, Into living tissue. Without It. no mat- ce ter how much or what you eat. your Jo food merely passes through you without jjr iolng you any good. You don't set the j] strength out of It. and as a consequence t? Kou become weak, pale and sickly look- ?r Ing, Just like a plant trying to grow in fo % soil deficient In Iron. If you are not f." ttrong or well, you owe It to yourself a, to make the following test: See how ci Milhous Drug Co.* Peoples I)ruj; Store. M u ! ' U'f For the DI Our bojys in uevo. The IS its official sea triumph in sc to be sold a I J AS. G. Li I H 3 for thaJ Spe< It isn't a re: to-goodness picnic unles refreshing Reif's SPECIAL And why? Because comes up to expectations?h: flavor of the hops?withou That's taken care of by our s< AND IT ISN'T A COM1 At Soft Drink Places ?In Bi Piedmont Groce SPARTANBURG, Distributor w tBcruj-iij i ' ?ssaMfer tbbling Over Taking Iron Did It ;atest of all strength builders, and endurance of delicate, it. in two weeks' time. >ng you can work or how far you can alk without becoming tired. NVxt take vn five-grain tablets of ordinary Nuxlod Iron tlirco times per day after icals for two weeks. Then test your irength a Rain and see for yourself how tuch you have gained. I have seen uzens of nervous, run-down people who ere ailing all the while double their irength and endurance nnd entirely Ret d of all symptoms of dyspepsia, liver ad other troubles in from ten to four'en days' time simply by taking Iron \ the proper form. And this after they ad in some cases been doctoring for tonths without obtaining any benefit, ut don't take the old forms of reduced on, iron acetate or tincture of Iron imply to save a few cents. You must <ke iron in a form that can be easily bsorbed and assimilated like Nuxated ron if you want it to do you any good, tberwlse it may prove worse than use>ss. Many an athlete or prizefighter as won the day simply because he new the secret of great strength and riaurance and tilled his blood with Iron nfore he wont into the affrny, while iany another has pone down to inplorlus defeat simply for the lack of iron.? '. Sauer. M.D. NOTK?Mutated Iron rwommfnilfd abors try nr Hauer. la one of the newer organic Iron comlund*. Cnllke the older Inorganic Iron products. It easily assimilated, does not Injure the teeth, ake them hlack. nnr upset the stomach; on the ntrary. It la a most potent remedy. In nearly all mis of Indigestion, aa well aa for ncrrnus. run>wn condition*. The Manufacturers have such great ntldence In Militated Iron that they offer to forfeit 00.00 to any rharitalile Institution If tlier cannot he any man or woman under 60 who lacks Iron id Increase their strength 100 per cent, or over In ur weeks* time provided they have no aetious oriiitc trouble. They also offer to refund ynur money It does not at least double your strength and enlrance In ten days' time. It ts dlspenaed In thlg ty by all good drugglsta. Palmetto Drug Co., Glymph's Pharmacy, =^==============?^ * ? I A .".-Jackets \ i the Navy enjoy their lavy Department has put 1 of endorsement on this . ift drinks, by allowing it r.d scrvrd on all naval Dat, Sr. 3evo ?ing, :\.."i and nuage. g to take along for sail Jto trip or camD and for t home. ! all-year-'round )ft drink bottles only and is bottled xclusively by :R BUSCH?ST. LOUIS ONG, Dealer ON, S. C. 14L ' ~ =JTj' TJI 31AL J gular honests cooling and Ifm - || is taken along, ffjm ^ H it more than |H - - 0 as all the snappy 1 ? it the alcohol. I ecret process. ittles or Cases