University of South Carolina Libraries
m w: i Twwrr wrvKrszzT7"* f a @r / \ \ ,v"? : ?J?"S\ f$j& ! 0^^-: !;|y - -v.? i i ^ 'kj * * f: j f' Merchants & P! 'The 0?d The Oldest and Large Is Your Money Supp At this critical period in J * crs are offerir.fr their mills t their services to the United :? Would you like to do yo your money whore it will su 1'ankinj.r System, which the stand back of our commerc t? You can do this by openii of every dollar ;o deposited icin where it will always be | J LOOK FOR THE HANK j? * And deposit your money \t !" ' < ?* lupn f i . i'l ? "> j' j President II ft *V\\WAA\\N\\NV\\V\\VV\V^ I MR. F/ / Why not reduce your Ferll / prove to you that it can b y soil at the same time. A i f would be glad to demonstrs L. M. J C UNION, V\ VWWWN v\%v\xvwvw\vv> One Pair o ...Lifei | Are you abusing and i y u will pay the price lat< - ? of all headaches arise froi : aching, burning eyes that and many other ills are < strain. In rupVi tlm ! that is an unfailing one? SCHOOL CHILDREN carefully examined before if necessary, fitted with gl An examination will cos! is no need for glasses I w .or glasses are very reaso every pair with an absoln tion. F. C. DUKE, 13 iMain Street M For Electric Lights, Wate i Farmer has at last been so I We have the Agency foi trie Lighting and Pumping You can burn Electric Trnn<a Spwinrr M a/iViin/ic i I-* ATXUV/IIUlV/Oj > with the same outfit Pump Path Room. When in the City drop ii outfit in actual operation. Union Plumbing Main Street L >-*rxmK>r vvz-m.x?rtKirji?.i3we-\:'4b:r* , DR. R. R. POPE DENTIST Office Over Tlnsley's New ! Jewelry Store PHONE 13 ? -c^fwwihmni !W. UNDER \GOVERN MEN! ^SUPERVISION ^^p-V?, MEMBER BAiSTK UMDtR aC FL'DERAL RESERVE ACT *?i. **' 1 p-^-sJ ^ j Saniers 3Jas'i Dank b KeiiaDie" : bt Ka:tk in Union Comity j orting the Government i our history our manufacturnul our young men arc offering States Government, uir share and help by putting J pport the new Federal Reserve Government has established to e industry and agriculture? 1 ng an account with us, as part \ goes directly into the new sys- ; ready for you when wanted. j WITH THE CHIME CLOCK j here it will he absolutely sale I J. I). ARTHUR. Cashier ... J i ttUL2&jr ?? I SSSSSSSSSSSSXSX%SXSSXSXX%Sl tRME R ) 4 izer bill $5.00 a ton? 1 can \ e done and improve your ! emarkable discovery that I \ lie to you. Lcl me tell you of it j )RD AM S. C. 3--tf j V\\VV\V\VvV\N\XV\VKVVV\\^ f Ft roc trv o M. JLJ y V/kJ LW Q time... leglecting yours? If, so, er. More than two-thirds tn eye-strain. Dim vision, soon tire, granulated lids due to sonVe form of eye re is but one remedy and properly fitted glasses, should have their eyes being taxed by study and asses. t you nothing, and if there ill tell you so. My prices nable and I stand back of ite guarantee of satisfacOptometrist Union, South Carolina *oblem ... ?a ni J> i uiiu x iuiiiuiiig ior ine lved. r the Famous Delco Elecf Outfit. Lights, run Fans, Electric Churns, Wood Saws, and Water for your stock and i and let us show you the ;& Electric Co. t Phone 205-J 4 rggnyjaBix-aiBwaKam MONEY TO LEND on FARM LANDS 1300 to $10,000?Twenty years time See J NO. K. lfAMBLIN Lawyer ] HELPING NATURE 10 r MAKE AfflT BEAUTIFUL J Civic Pride Does Much toward Favu orably Impressing Not Only Resdents But New Comers. Some Simple Things That Will Help 9 (Jas. I J. Carbery.) Good environment has much to do Ifc; with the welfare of a place and pco'i pie. It not only impresses the ^ general public favorably and attracts ? the best people, but likewise affects V the ivrnwini* iinnohilion in :i nmrlroH ? degree. The home. no matter how i humble, that is not adorned with trees, $ shrubbery, mul a lawn is incomplete. S A number of homes forming a town J; or village without these would mean Jj an increase of the cause. There is a certain amount of civic ? pride in all cities and towns but there 5 are few places where some improvei1" ment cannot be made by cooperation of the inhabitants and assisting dame nature. Just at this season, on the small lawns we look for something in the 5^ nature of the dwarf evergreens, the ^ cedars, ornamental pines or nrborviyj tacs which contribute so largely to i any landscape, particularly when the | larger trees and shrubbery are bare 1 of leaves. These evergreens are | not very expensive, consume little S space, use comparatively small J amounts of the soil fertility, require little or no care and contribute gen? crously to the beautification of the t landscape no matter how small. * Another thing in their favor is that t they are (as a class) free from comi mon plant diseases and insect troubles I and set now they would render a ^ beauty and become well established i before the warm weather. Even a i few of these trees would help coni siderably if placed around our front 5 lawns of the churches and homes. i There are many other things which i might be done at this season towardj ? tbe beautification of our city if th? proper interest can be engaged. Thj ? numerous large plants of forcythia, wigelia, and other shrubbery, from which must not be omitted the spineae family, can now be propagated in tbe open ground with little work and nlf f ?-? ? J i ~ nucuuun, Lima aiiuiuiiiK an inexpensively secured stock of plants for beautifying unsightly places about town. Cuttings 10 or 12 inches long, cut just beneath an eye can be rooted if open ground, and a great many qtfv be set in small space. ' Cuttii^H thus made should be immediately set in a slot or opening made with spade, to a depth which will leave from two to three of the buds above ground, after which the earth should be firmly pressed in contact with the lower portions of the cutting to exclude air. The reason deep planting is to avoid temperature changes in irI regularit yof moisture. A northern exposure is best adapted to this work and the cuttings may he placed an inch apart in the soil. No fertilizer or special soil is necessary, simply dep, firm contact with the earth. By midsummer the cuttings 1 should he well rooted and ready to remove to permanent places. The 1 foregoing is one method found very s so' is fact ry, hut where larger plants are wanted in less quantity, a still 1 more satisfactory and certain plan is 1 to lay the runners, or shoots of the i I parent nlant with a forked etirk tn i prevent wind shake. In the case 1 of the rambler or other roses which make sufficient wood for this pur- ) pose, the runner may be passed sever- 1 al times under the earth, known as serpentine layering, and plants sub- ( sequently secured from each poipt or part covered with the earth. This J is an excellent method for propagat- 1 < RECORD OF THE EAST 1 No Stronger Evidence Can He Had in ] Union. Look well to their record. What c they have done many tunes in years gone by it is the best guarantee of future results. Anyone with a bad back; any reader suffering from urinlfry troubles, from kidney ills, should find 8 let in forting words in the following " statement. John 1'etty, 76 W. Main St., Union, ^ j says: "Weak kidneys caused pains , th'ough the small of my back and j tlicy wore so severe at times thai 1 ^ j couldn't sleep. The kidney socre|: lions were unnatural and irregular in I I ": ; i". I used different medicine, ^ P In't get permanent lcnelit un il lr. >k Doan's Kidney Pills.'* OYr,k SIX LEAKS LATER. Mr. IVlty said: "I haven't noticed the jt shj'litost sign of kidney trouble or w hacka i?e since I used Doan's Kid- r) ney Pods." f( Price fiOc at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get w Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that w Mr. Henderson had. Fosler-MUburn E Co., Props, Buffalo, N. Y. hi JH ? ng almost any plant in the opc 1 ground, particularly, roses, grapes i cupernongs and many of the orna nentaj plants. Where the growtl 8 stubby and cannot be passed undo 1 Jie earth a box of soil is sometime i nounted in convenient position fo I he purpose. After the plants ar< veil rooted they are severed from th< >arent plant and placed where wanted {This method admits of securing much larger plants than by cuttings. Oui beautiful Cape Jesnniines, or Gar 'lenias, can be successfully rooted b\ layering with results in nice bir^c plants ready to continue blooming The Gardenia can also be easily perpetuated by air grafting during the I warm months of the year. This process entails the selection of n shapely portion of the parent nlant in easy access. A diagnol cut is then made with sharp knife on the main stem around which is placed a ball of common woods most, or cotton, winding strip"' about the hall as it increases in size and until about 5 or 6 inches in diameter and 7 or 8 incheh in length. The moss,or cotton, should then be kept moist to entourage the roots to start, and when i this has happened the limb with its roots in the moss can be removed and planted else,where. There are many other ways of propagating the various lants, but this is about the easiest for the average layman and if we can get some of the good people of Union interested along this line the effort would soon be noticed in our side and front yards and streets, to say nothing of many unsightly places which could be easily transformed in beauty spots by the addition of a rose or shrubbery. The Union Chamber of Commerce and Agriculture stands ready and willing to cooperate in any way, and will be glad to give further detailed instructions to interested parties upon aDDlication UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU DEATHLY SICK Stop Using Dangerous Drug Before It Salivates You! It's Ilorrib'o! You're bilious, sluggish, constipated .nd believe you need vile, dangerous alomel tc start your liver and clean our bowels. Here's my guarantee! Ask your ifruggist for a 50 cent bottle of Dodon's Liver Tone and take a spoonful onight. If it doesn't start your liver and straighten you right up better han calomel and without griping or making you sick I want you to go bvk to the store and get your money. |L vlake. calomel today and tomorrow Krwiuf eel weak and sick and' naus?d. Don't lose a day's work. Take o Vioonful of harmless, vegetable )dfcon's Liver Tone tonight and wake vpleeling great. It's perfectly harmesfl so give it to your children any inM. It can't salivate, so let them eat nything afterwards. * * ' Receiver's Sale State of South Carolina, County of Fairfield, Court of Common Pleas. J. t>. llichards, Plaint ill", \ against Dawkins Mill & Lumber Company, et nl.,?Defendants. Iltobedience to an order heretofore mada in the above stated case, I will 3ell it puhljc outcry, at Dawkins, Paitmdd County State aforesaid, at the pi?nt of the Dawkins Mills and bumllr Company, on January 15th, 1918,it 1.30 o'clock p. m., the following dmoribed personal property, to ^ svit; I S) Oin 20,000 ft. capacity Sawing Minis plant ocmplete, with engines, )oilell etc., UH|1) Bay mare, about four years 3] >ld. ' 0. Te s of Sale, Cash. This sale is ^ idve sed and being made at the W] isk the former purchaser on I)e- jg_ :emb 29th, 1918. g, G. B. Barron, wj Etece r of Dawkins Mills and Lu >er Company. m, t. T rsday. Vol e of Final Discharge Jtatc T South Carolina, 1 Co y of Union, (Irt of Probate. No*- is hereby given, that on the g th dl of February, 1918, at 11 < ^3 'clocla. m., in the Court of Probate or s| County, the undersigned 1 /ill ike his final settlement as! JuarA of the Estate of Jennings j >tts, I] that thereupon he will ap-! ly talie Judge of said Court, fori is fill discharge as such Guardian. 1 J. M. Gault. 'his 8iday of January. 1918. 'ublisn in The Union Times for HO days! 2-4t. 1 ? ? l?a> Tlie ironi triplane, one of the irgest pe of aeroplanes in the 'orld, ich has given exhibitions ^ icentb 1 the Atlantic coast, is 100 ;et fro ip to tip of its planes. The 1 >rd for continuous daneinc as shared one nifrht recently hen t*ty couples at a hall at luquoirill., danced for one hour id twcJ minutes without stopping. : What Do You Abe r * Your ignorance may stai 2 Few people know of tl , functions of the blood suj just how important it is t! kept absolutely free from al 1 ties. The health of the enl P depends upon the couditioi blood. You are invited to v obtain a booklet that j?ives j r invaluable information on IlinMC pfinnrstic IBUifIL UHKULk'id CUT STORE Bl President Georgia thamber O 1 merce Shows How Millions 1 Saved Last Year Atlanta, Georgia.?(Special.)I money was saved in* 11)17 throi medium of the home garden thi before, the United Statc3 Depr of Agriculture estimating tha were fully one million new * made last year," says II. G. II; President of the Southeastern P tho Georgia Chamber of Con in an interview reviewing th farming operations in the Sou "Thousands upon thousands people in the S<?uth,'' said Mr ings, "for the first time in tliei learned to appreciate the mom ing power of the home garden, ly planned, prepared for, plant kept planted during the entir son." "Up to the present it has bee bard to get our people to consit home garden seriously as a rei stanlial factor in food prodnctio the consequent saving of ruone went for food supplies at the Unless we are much mistakei home garden will from now taken as seriously as any othe of the farm work. "A quarter to a half acre d< to a variety of vegetables liked family can be kept going near whole year in the South and gi owner as much as the product t or three acres of cotton, even al ent prices, will buy at the store, right kind of a garden mean abundance of healthful food < spring, summer and fall and an i ance either canned or dried foi ter use." "Let no one be fooled by th spread abroad that the Goveri Is going to seize home canned on closet shelves in the fart home. These lies are started bj man agents for the express purp< discouraging our people In incr food production and saving. Fei go to the firing line, but all car in and have a part In home pi tion of food. "We have never seen a perms ly prosperous farm section eith the United States or in foreign tries that was not a diversified tion, and in every diversified s? the home garden has an honorec valued place. The home garden store bill cutter of the first ran MOTHER'S JO' CROUP AND C /| I 1/ 1 PNEUMONIA i3ilL V 1 An unfailing remedy for crou] colds, coughs, hoarseness, nei ralgia, soreness in chest. Aj plied externally. Quickly u .lieves congestion and prevent pneumonia. AIR LINE RAILWAY GO. lie Progressive Railway of t South" Steel Equipment Ohse, vat ion-parlor-oaf e oars Thru Coaches and Sleepers o principal points North, Sout ;t and West. 'or rates, schedules or other info tion, call on nearest Seaboard Tic (\gc-nt or write Fred Geissler, Asst. Gen'l Pass'r Agent, S. A. L. Uwy., Atlanta, Ga. C. S. Compton, S. A. \). Rwy., Atlanta, Ga. Traveling Pass'r Agent, I Doctors recommend it; goo druggists .sell it. '25c and 59 jars. Goose Grease Companj Greensboro, N. C. Notice of Final Dischai tate of South Carolina, County of Union, Court of Probate Notide is hereby given, that on 1st day of January, 1918, at llock, a. m., in the Court of I ite for said County, the undersig ill make final settlement as Adi -trator of the Estate of Dr. T. ites, decease, and that thereupon ill apply to the Judge of said Coi r his final discharge as such . inistrator. W. F. Rates lis 1st day of January, 1918.' iblished in The Union Times for days. It. ; e a r n a d i i Know >ut Your Blood Supply? rtle you. portant subject. It tells how to keep the blood strong and free from tho he many many impurities to which it is con>ply, and stantly subjoct. hat it be It gives the history of S. S. S., tho 11 impuri- world's most successful bJ od remedy, tire body which has been sold for more than a of the fifty years bj druggists everywhere, vrite and This book will be sent free to all fou some who write to Swift Specific Co., this im- Dept. A Atlanta ci* Notice of Dissolution _ _ Notice is hereby given that a " I \ meeting of the stockholders of th? J. llakO -P. Alman Company held in the office of the company at Jonesville. S. C. f Com- O" October 1st, 1917 the following Were resolutions were unanimously adopted: Resolved. That the J. P. Alman ~~ h^the Company a corporation doing busiin^ever ncss un('cr charter issued by the secirtment rotary of the State for South Carot there lina is hereby dissolved, gardens Resolved, further that J. P. Alman, air and Pros'(lcnt of said corporation be and liuerce, is hereby authorized to take the legal e 1917 steps necessary for having the charth ter annulled and the eorporrtion dis?lla.st handed. 1? conformity with the r lives foregoing, I hereby give notice* that ?y sav- such application has been made to the ed?and ^ere*ary ?*" State f?r permission to e sea- f*arry out the resolutions is aforesaid. n very 'J. F. ALMAN, ler the President, al sub- i n with t-w. y that . >' \Bi?the Summons For Relief. on be r part (Complaint Served). . State of South Carolina, evoted n Tr_ by the ^"my ui union. ly the Court of Common Pleas. ive its Duncan Sams, as Trustee, etc., Plain>f two tiff> 1 PThe against s an Carolina Hill Hughes, Defendant, luring To the Defendant, Caroline Hill ibund-, Hughes: r win- j you are heretjy summoned and ree lies ! quired to answer the complaint in this iment j action, of which a copy is herewith goods served upon you, and to serve a copy " Ger-! y?ur answer to the said complaint ase of on the subscriber at his office at Uneased ion, South Carolina, within twenty v can days after the service hereof, ex*oduc c^usive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the comment plaint within the time aforesaid, the er ln plaintiff in this action will apply to. .. i n<wv the Court for the relief demanded In sctlon the complaint. I and Dated Union, S. C., Dec. 19, A. D. a 1916. J. Ashby Sawyer, Plaintiff's Attorney. R. C. Williams, Clerk of Court, y i (Seal) By J. W. G., D. C. To the Defendant, Caroline Hill P H Hughes, and to any child or children ^ 8 or the husband of said Caroline Hill p 9 Hughes, if any such living and she be i- 11 now ('ead) Take Notice: That the rrmmlninf | j this action, together with the Sums I rnons, of which the foregoing is a | copy, were duly filed in the office of I I the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas d I i for Union County, South Carolina, at c |Union Court House, South Carolina, on \ 8 the 19th day of December, A. D. 1917, ju and are now on file in said office. J J. Ashhy Sawyer, Plaintiff's Attorney. Tge Union, S. C., Dec. 19, 1917. 51-6 Receiver's Sale. the s j j State of South Carolina, >r0 County of Fairfield. nC(j Court of Common. Pleas. . J. B. Richards, Plaintiff, min ' * B. V8' Dawkins Mill & Lumber Company, and others, Defendants. Pursuant to an order made in the above stated action I will offer for sale at public outcry at Dawkins, Fairfield County, South Carolina, at the 2Q plant of the Dawkins Mill and Lumber Company, at 2:30 o'clock, P. M., on December 29th, 1917, the following described property, to wit: One gasoline motor boat, ^ - i v^ne uay mare, Two mare mules, One 20,000 ft. capacity lumber plant, complete; with steam engine, etc., ^ About 20,000 ft. framing lumber, About 15 cords slab wood, and all other personal property and effects of the Dawkins Mill and Iaimbcr Company, located at Dawkins, S. C. This plant has been in operation for only a few months and is in first class ? condition, well located as to railroad sidings, and large tracts of very fine ,r. timber. k- Terms of Sale?Cash. C. B. Barron, Receiver for Dawkins Mill and Lumber Co. - 61-3 Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System The OW Standard general wtrenpthenln* tonic. r.uni ?f?u ta ? ? nuir.i.naa cniu TUNlc.driTMCHt M Albtia.enriches the blood.and build* ut> the*y*tetn. A true tonic. For adult* and children. 60c t I