University of South Carolina Libraries
I ! Merchants & Pla (?Thm AM n JL 1IC VIU I' The Oldest and Largest > : Is Your Money Suppor ; At this critical period in o ; era are offering their mills and I their, services to the United St | Would you like to do your ; your money where it will supp Banking System, which the Go - stand back of our commerce i ! You can do this by opening of every dollar so deposited go ; tem where it will always be rc > I LOOK FOR THE BANK W And deposit your money whe F. M. FAKE, President. R I I I I R j I?? MMMARMUIUAAAMMUMftAAliM || MR. FA t Why not reduce your Fertile | prove to you that it can be $ soil at the same time. A rei ? urnnlfl ha ?l?i< * ~~ ? * * y. VVVU1U DL JJIOU 1U UtlllUllSITillt \ L. fcf. J O ( UNION, 5 -I One Pair of ...Lifet: : /\re you abusing and ne >ou will pay the price latei of all headaches arise from aching, burning eyes that s and many other ills are di strain. In such cases there that La an unfailing one?pi SCHOOL CHILDREN 5 carefully examined before V if necessary, fitted with gla An examination will cost; is no need for glasses I wil for glasses are very reason; every pair with an absolut tion. F. C. DUKE, 13 Main Street -? ThePr For Electric Lights, Watei Farmer has at last been sol " ttfi ' * I we nave tne Agency for trie Lighting and Pumping You can burn Electric 1 Irons, Sewing Machines, C with the same outfit Pump 1 Hath Room. 1 When in the City drop in outfit in actual operation. Union Plumbing Main Street p DR. R. R. POPE DENTIST Office Over TtMley'i New I ? J?w?lry Store I 1 I I I UNDER 1 .GOVERNMENT ^SUPERVISION member bank under j FEDERA L RESER VE ACT ! f, ? ! niers Nat'l Bank it i tellable" i Bank in Union County i i ting the Government ! ? ur history our manufactur- n . our young men are offering ates Government. * share and help by putting J ort the new Federal Reserve ; ivernment has established to ' industry and agriculture? an account with us, as part es directly into the new sys- J iady for you when wanted. ITH THE CHIME CLOCK re it will be absolutely sale J. D. ARTHUR, j Cashle? t a a a a a i a a a a RMER | Br bill $5.00 a ton? I can | done and improve your | narkable discovery that 1 | : to you. Let me tell you el it is I? n a twt > 5. C. 3-tf | Eyes to a ime... glecting yours? If, so, More than two-thirds eye-strain. Dim vision, oon tire, granulated lids ae to some form of eye i is but one remedy and roperly iitted glasses, should have their eyes >eing taxed by study and sses. you nothing, and if there 1 tell you so. My prices able and I stand back of e guarantee of satisfacOptometrist Union, South Carolina oblem I r and Plumbing for the ved. the Famous Delco Elec- ; Outfit. eights, run Fans, Electric Ihurns, Wood Saws, and Water for your stock and i and let us show you the & Electric Co. Phone 205-j" | MONEY TO LEND on FARM LANDS 800 to $10,000?Twenty years time See JNO. K. HAMRLIN Lawyer Invisible Armor. Jan. 31st.?Extracts from an address delivered by Newton D. Baker, Secretary of War, at a National Conference on War-Camp Community Recreation, Washington, D. C. No army ever before assembled in the history of the world has had so much thought given and so much labor performed in the interest of it?* social organization. It is no reflection on anybody to say that the ancient method of assembling an army wah first to have some sort of inspiring music marched through th* street, to have a local oratorical outburst on the subject of the particular cause for which the army was desi" cd, to have young men follow the music and then be taken off to make their own conditions, and then to bn sent to the battlefront with that much training. But the United States is a civilized country. Nobody realized how rivilijoH ? ?">" ?..si - v. ?r?.-> uutu we assemn'p-" this army, for instantly there came from all parts of the country a demand that this army should not be raised as armies hitherto had bee"* that should not be environed as armies hitherto had been, but that ch arrangements should be mad' as would insure that these soldiers when actually organized into an armv. would represent and carry out t.h? very highest deals of our civilization For a great many years in Americ< we have been struggling almost do* pondently with the problem of tho large cities. We knew that the large city was economically and industrially more efficient. We knew that by getting people close to the place where they were to work, knittin" them in large groups w,e multiplied the industrial output of the individual We knew that by getting people into large cities we were able to extend over a wider surface the so-called conveniences of modern civilization: that people could live in better houses: that they could have better sanitation; that they could have befter medical care; that they could have freer access to public libraries and opportunities for culture; that, thev could have better schools. But we realized that we paid a price for the city, and that price consisted in the tempestuous and heated temptations of city life, and every man who has had any opportunity to studv city life has had his mind more or less he'd in a state of balance between its advantages and its disadvantages. It used to be said that a fnmilw ran out in three generations living in a city, and that it was necessirv to replenish the vitality of citydwellinp people by consant draft? upon the unspoiled people of the countrtyside; and that was. wlearned, because of the vices whict> prew up in cities, and because a" of those restrains of neighborhood opinion were pone. A bov in th'> country was known to everybody of his neighborhood. Tlis misconduct was marked. The boy in the city could be a saint in the first ward, where he lived, and a scapeprace in the tenth ward, without anybody in the first ward diseoverinp it. Thar-was an absence of that pressure of neiphborhood opinion, that oppnrt.ur ity to cultivate the pood opinion of old neiphbors, which was evident ithe countryside where conduct wa more obvious. Now, for a lonp time we tried a perfectly wronpheaded process about the city; we tried to pass laws and to enforce them by policemen wbV? would cure all these il's T do t mean that we oupht not to have so>vr. policemen, but we imapined that our sole salvation lay in the nassa re <> laws and in the employment of po!:,< men. And I can remember when ' was mayor of a middle-western cit". that every now and then some me ment would tret its start to have a curfew law passed in that city, to make everybody po to bed at. a ner ticular time. Some laws of that kirl were passed, and some sunreme coir's held they were unconstitutional a ' some held they were constitional but no court had any ripht to pass on the real fact involved, which was that they were ineffective. And then all of a sudden the discovery was made that the way 'o overcome the temptations ??nd vices of a errent city was to offer adequate opportunity for wholesome recreni i->r. and eniovment: that if you wanted to pet a firebrand out of the hand of a child the way to do it was neither to club the child nor to prab *be flrubrand, but to offer in exchanpe for it a stick of candy! And so there has prown up in America this new attitude, which Si ..hum its expression in public playgrounds ,in the organization of community amusements ,in the inculcation throughout the entire body of younp people in the community of substantially the same form of social inducement which the American college, in modem times ,has substituted for the earlier system of social straints. And now that we hare these rreat bodies of young mea te consider, we N i JB. v' KING OF THE BELGIANS ! This unusual photo is probably tho most characteristic ever made of the hard-working king of the Belgians. He 1 Is busily engaged on some Important t piece of business in the sinoplo little room that is his headquarters net far from the fron* lines _ ? t ha o "lso the analogies which are ne- u cr -tv to annlv to the task. These ? boys are Roine to France: they are j o- to fare conditions that we do " ' ''ke to talk ahout, that we do not T" *o think about. They are roi?~ into a bero?c enterprise, and ' enternricp involve sacrifice. I ^ them armed- but I want them r '-ave invisible armor to take with j t' om T want them to have an armor m-de of a set of social habits rcplac- ' lr - those of their homes and com- ( rrvmih'es, a set of social habits and a ' ? of social habits renlacincr those { r,r ?Trris n new ooldier state of mind, 1 sr that when thev cret over-seas and 1 -ornoved from the reach of our ^ pTtinor nnd restraining and help- 1 r '">r>d thev will have rotten such ^ a **ate of hahits as wil constitute a i and intellectual armor for their n - ret-jon overseas. "a,i tp tVp makers of that armor. C moral Crosier is {?oin<r to make the p ->?! Oenernl ^harpe is rroinpr to p, Vo the clothes: but the invisible 1 * which vou are mnkincr this at- 1 *' dp of mind, that state of con- 1 sc'opsness b?s esprited corns which ( til no' tolpr-nte anvthn" unwhole n?n*>. +hi<s brand of righteousness, if T ivfiv r~epk of it as such, which you ?-oin" fp put on them here by , 'hem. as a mass, acouire an attitude toward themselves and towards communities in which they happen to he. and toward their own country, this nride that they ouerht o have in beiner American soldiers, and representing the hierhest ethical j ime of a modern civilization?all ( hat ' ou are manufacturing in your ( avmorles, in the basements of churches, the lodgre rooms of societies, it the dinner tables of private homes ( in the rooms of Younc Men's and j ^ Vountr Women's Christian Associa- , tion. There are all kinds of places ( where the sound mind of a commuu- ^ itv can be broucht into contact, in a wholesome and inspirine wav. with ] 'he n' ,;or omoun in its process of! ^ 1 j ..'ni""- ^ And ",wen the war is over, and j our ! "ome back, and our citie3 have - ( t^ened themselves by their co-ou' >r>f?r,n and we have through- ] " ' vv the common faeiinsr that v'"< 0,1 honed and share the pride _ of ' v!. ? participated in this "rent unil* ' ' ? " nnd this grent aehievemp''' "o find that for the afterwi - "ofmotion, for this crreac rernod'a1 orocess as to which none 5 ' of lir ,,rfw much, and of wh'ch most. | of ,v- nrp almost afraid to think, our peor'^ am <?ound and virile and in- J toll'* ert fVinf American public opin, ion ha? been strengthened nnd made 5 : more wholesome and comprehending, i and fho? America is truly a more unj it? ! "oonle and understands itself bet'rr ttiap it evev did in its history. , m What is LAX-FOS . JM-FOS IS AN IMPROVED CASCARA 1 A 1 ive Liquid Laxative, Cathartic ( an : -Tonic. ContainsCascaraBark, ig Root, Rhubarb Root, Black R< Apple Root, Senna Leaves and * IV v.' "tbines strength with palatal 'ic taste. Does not gripe. 50c a i Comprcsaod-AIr 8ervlce In Paris. c Few visitors to Paris realize that 1 the French capital has an extensive e v'MniuTOawi-iur service analogous to t the ordinary gas or municipal water ? service. There are several hundred j miles of compresaed-alr piping under- ^ lying the Paris streets. The air Is supplied to stores and cafes and Is need In cooling rooms and as a means f furnishing power to fans, sewing asaehtaeo and even a few elsreaSera. *be ttt k metered Ifia gas. B The Itching and Stii of Blazii Seems Like the Skin Is on Fire. bl> There is a harrassing discomfort in caused by Eczema that almost bo- th comes a torture. The itching is al- fa most unbearable, and the skin seems sk on fire with the burning irritation, ed A cure from local applications of th salves and ointments is impossible, bo because such treatment can only al- yc lay the pain temporarily. The disease tr< can only bo reached by going deep ad down to its source. co The source of Eczema is in the 21 Hop Into the Birtish Army S London, January 31.?If you can !iop twenty times on each foot without showing signs of undue distress, si .he British army sonsiders your o lealth good enough for general ser- ei -~~f uvvuiuiu^ vu n 1ICIY uuuiv UI in- U tructions issued to the examining n nedical boards. The test recom- rr nended is as follows: "The rate of the pulse is taken, and hen the recruit is directed to hop .wenty times on each foot, raising he other foot nine inches. At the e ;nd of this performance, in health, here should be no noteworthy brea- 8 hiessness and no pallor or anxiety ? )f expression. Two minutes later t he pulse should be not more than ^ ive beats more frequent than it was ? :rfore the exercise. Which Are You? n As soon as you do a thing better n han you have ever done It before, you |j ire becoming great; as soon as you do ? i thing better than it has ever been f] lone before, you have become great.? j| udge. b n JUST GOT OVER A COLD? ^ Look out for kidney troubles and oackache. Colds overtax the kidneys ind often leave them weak. For weak cidneys?well, read what a Union man g rnys: J. W. Nance, farmer, 130 W. Main St., Union, says: "A cold has geneerally been the means of bringing g on an attack of kidney trouble. I had w such mad pains in the small of my ni back that I could hardly stoop. Then D the kidney secretions were scanty and burned like fire. I noticed sediment in b< them, too Sometimes, I had such d awful dizzy spells I nearly fell. I di have used Doan's Kidney Pills for hi these troubles and they have never T failed to relieve me." o Price COc at all dealers. Don't sim- ^ }ly ask for a kidney remedy?get a Ooan's Kidney Pills?the same that Vlr. Henderson had. Foster-Milburn ^ 1o., Props, Buffalo. N. Y. m is o Receiver's Sale e c> State of South Carolina, a County of Fairfield. v F. B. Richards, Plaintiff, y ?Vs? Dawkins Mill & Lumber Company, e1 et al, Defendants. d Pursuant to an Order of Court a heretofore made in above entitled ac- ? tion, I will offer for sale at public y outcry on Thursday, February 7th, " 1918, at 1.30 o'clock P. M. at Dawkins, Fairfield County, South Carolina, I on the grounds of the plant, the following described personal property; S One Saw Mill outfit, complete, with sngine, boilers etc., capacity 20,000 ft., daily. Terms of Sale,?CASH, all bidders 8 required to deoosit with Receiver cer- o ;ified check for $250.00, before Sale f begins. This property being sold at v the risk of the former purchaser on G lanuary 15th, 1918. n G. B. Barron, p Receiver for Hawkins Mill & Dumber h Company. It. T ? ? F Legal Notice. State of fSouth Carolina, ^ County of Hnion. * ?ORDER.? f. B. Richards, Plaintiff, ?Vs? Southern Pine Dumber Co., Hawkins Mill & Dumber Co. A copartnership composed of J. B. Richards and Southren Pine Dumber Co., C. K. Callahan and Geo. W. Wall, Defendants. It appearing that legal advertisng for Notice to all Creditors against defendant Hawkins Mill & Dumber ^ 3o., to appear at a reference or pre:ent their claims properly proven m vas omitted. et It is ordered that such notice aforeoirl J?1? .... ? ...w uo uuiy puuusnea ana tnat uredtors be duly Notified to present tbeir laims properly proven to G. B. larron, Receiver, or appear at refernce to be held at Union Court House >efore R. C. Williams, acting Maser on the 21st day of February ~ 918. F? Ve Consent:? T Carson, Boyd Finley, **1 Macbeth Young. j R. C. William#, ^ Clark of Court. ci Q, *fir tig, Fiery Eczema ood, the disease being caused by an fection which breaks out through, e skin. That is why the most satisctory treatment for all so-called in diseases is S. S. S., for this remy so thoroughly cleanses the blood at no impurities can remain. Get a ttle to-day at any drugstore, and >u will see results from the right eatment. Write for expert medical [vice, which you can ^ get without st, by addressing Medical Director, . Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. >t. Augustine's Sermons Discovered by Monk Amtesrdam, January 31.?A eries of hitherto unknown sermons f St. Augustine have been discoverd, German papers say, at Wolfenllffol 1? ?-*? ? ...vi ^luiiomtiv, uy r ainer lierlain Morin, a Belgian Benedictine lonk. New Army Office Created London, January 31.?Major Genral C. G. Donald has been appointed 5 a new army office known as "Inpector of War Trophies." rives Out Malaria, Builds Up System he Old Standard teneral atrenarthenlna tonic. ROVH'8 TASTEEESS chill TONIC, drives out [alarin.enrichea the blood.and but Ida uptheayam. A true tonic. For adulta and children. 60c Aid In Threading Needle. If you are troubled to thread a eedle take a white envelope, stick the eedie through, draw It down until eye t visible and you will thread the eedle like magic; the white surface of tie paper sets the eye Into relief as If t were magnified. An envelope Is etter than paper, as it holds the eedle Aiore securely. lirls! Have Wavy, Thick, Glossy Hair Free From Dandruff av Your Hair! Double Its Beauty In a few Moments?Try This! If you care for heavy hair, that listens with beauty and is radiant ith life; has an incomparable softess and is fluffy and lustrous, try anderine. Just one application doubles the eauty of your hair, besides it immeiately dissolves every particle of anrduff; you cannot have nice, heavy ealthy hair if you have danuruff. his destructive scurf robs the hair f its lustre, its strength and its very fe, and if not overcome it produces feverishness and itching of the scalp, ie hair roots famish, loosen and ie; then the hair falls out fast. If you hair has been neglected and i thin, faded, dry, scraggy or too ily, get a small bottle of Knowlton's anderine at any drug store or toilet ounter for a few cents; apply a little s directed and ten minutes after you rill say this was the best investment ou ever made. We sincerely believe, regardless of verything else advertised, that if you esire soft, lustrous, beautiful hair nd lots of it?no dandruff?no itchlg scalp and no more falling hair? ou must use Knowlton's Danderle. If eventually?why not now? Notice of Final Discharge tnto Cr> 1 VMVO \jm. kjuuvu Vv cW U I Ilia, County of Union, Court of Probate. Notice is hereby Riven, that on the th day of February, 1918, at 11 'clock, a. m., in the Court of Probate or said County, the undersigned rill make his final settlement as ruardian of the Estate of Jennings ?tts, and that thereupon he will aply to the Judge of said Court, for is final discharge as such Guardian. J. M. Gault. his 8th day of January. 1918. ublishcd in The Union Times for 30 days. 2-4t. 9E ABOAR D AIR LINE RAILWAY GO. The Progressive Railway of the South" Steel Equipment OhsPTVatinn.nnrlnf-oofn ?? ? ? . ??|/M%>vi-vaic tain Thru Coaches and Sleepers To principal points North, South, ast and West. For rates, schedules or other inforation, call on nearest Seaboard Tick; Agent or write Fred Geissler, Asst. Gen'l Pass'r Agent, S. A. L. Rwy., Atlanta, Ga. C. S. Compton, S. A. Ll Rwy., Atlanta, Ga. Traveling Pass'r Agent, or Indigestion, Constipation of Biliousness ist try one 50-cent bottle of LAX-FOS flTH PEPSIN. A Liquid Digestive ixative pleasant to take. Made and commended to the public by Paris Mediae Co., manufacturers of Laxative Bromo ninine and Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic.