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Swift & Has i| j The fact that Iization has g forty years pi kept continual business dems It must have 1 not have stood shifting conditioi Swift & Compj in the school of e Every day oi service has solve of value to its cu ' Every year ha learn by experie roil j Knowledge tor i I with whom it de H| Swift & Cor % We Have Rec ; One of the g | in Aim JHUH5 ? Jl n | The County I Service $20. :! Will ! | Aycock & I | Union County Stoc s NOTICE TO PROS * All parties contem city limits are hereby r I secure a builders normit I erecting a new building Prospective builder? permits, as I have been the City of Union. A For the Best Markf J. E. FOW FRESH FISH Fish on Tuesd Courteous and Prompt At Smith Block, Eaa Phi Let Us Vulcanize JULIAN ] Vulcanlz Main Street, Near Southeri Better leave Henry Ford where is; everybody knows he is a crack< jack manufacturer, but he has ne\ tried the senatorial toga, and it m not fit. /by 1 Company I Grown ? : a business organ- I rown steadily for H|ffl roves that it has || lv meeting a vital .Hill tnd " | ?ept "fit" or it could J the strain of ever- || any has been trained i xperience. ' y F its forty years of i d some new problem | II stomers. | n s proved its ability to | H nee, and to use this ||| the benefit of those r < rj a Is. - |{ npany, U. S. A. rrw? ^ wm .... ?'-**. 1 . yf wj. . ~ ^jlj :enuy rurcnasea \ : Handsomest | lyable $5.00 Cash ? it Stand At | leaver's Stable $ k-Growers Association 1 1PECTIVE BUILDERS! j plating building within the jjj lotified that they mus^t firs't h , issued by the city before | or making repairs. 3 will apply to me for such g made builder inspector lor ^ . B. BRANNON |j ;t Necessities, Call on LER & SON COUNTRY PRODUCE ays and Fridays tentlon Given to Your Orders it Southern Railway >ne 41 Your Tires and Tubes EZ. HUGHES lng Company I Express Office Phone 35 he "We kings must stand together," JT- says Charles of Austria. The closer rer together the better it will suit the ay firing squad when the war victors give out their verdict. Shove up a bit. TRAINING LITTLE CHILDREN Give Children Toys Which Answer Their Needs?Teach Them to Care for Their Toys and This Will Tend to Make Them Neat and Orderly Article XVII?By Mrs. Lenore R. Runus. Most children have too many toys; consequently they are not stirred to make toys for themselves and their powers of invention are retarded. There are two classes of toys, useful and useless. Those are suseful which answer the needs of child-life. A ball is a most useful toy because it is about the first a child can play with. All mothers know how a babe, as soon as it is old enough to use its hands, i loves a soft, bright-colored ball. From infancy practically through the whole of life the balls plays an active part, i Tennis, golf, baseball, football?all sports of later life center around a ball. Soon comes the building stage, which blocks. A ten-cent box of dominoes is excellent material for building and for making tables, chairs, beds 'and soldiers in a row. Then comes the imitative stage of I toys. Every child, boy or girl, wants to do as father or mother does. A ,ten cent sweeper and a ten-cent broom are always a joy to a child's heart and i enable the little one to actually help i mother. | The doll also plays an important part in children's lives, for it answers jthe instinct for nurture which is inI i Horn in rhildrpn Hnnrl cnmrinnoKln pure thoughtlessness or curiosity. 1 Happy and contented?these are i the two words which describe the con- < dition of children in the kindergarten ' and should describe the condition in the home, too. You can accomplish so much more through love than you can through force. The busy mother in the home can have just as happy children as the kindergarten has, but she must devote a part of every j day to them conscientiously. Be reasonable with a child and he' will be reasonable also. Remember \ that the desired results from childtraining depend first upon the physical condition of the child and secondly upon the time, thought and intelligent care which you give to them. A dear old lady said to me once, after I had remarked with discouragement that all I seemed to accomplish in a day was to care for my baby's needs, "My dear, you are doing a woman's greatest work right now? the training of your child's mind and morals. The time spent may show no immediate results, hut you are laying the foundation for a character that will stand as a monument to your work and wisdom in years to come." Please pass this artice on to a friend and thus help Uncle Snm reach all the mothers of the country. w. s. s. HOW MUCH SHALL I PLEDGE? Charleston, June 19.?How much shall I pledge? is being asked by many persons who wish to do their full duty in the War Savings campaign, but who are uncertain as to just what is expected of them. The answer to this question is very plain to anyone who knows what his or her country is expected to pledge, and who reads the pledge card over. It is expected that during the year War Savings Stamps to the amount of $20 per capita shall be purchased by every perfcon in America. This 1 dolls, not too many at once, are most useful. Children also need sets of dishes with which to learn to set a table and to pretend to cook, and which they can wash and dry, again imitating mother. Imitating father, | children can play with toys of con| struction, such as sets of stone blocks | and trains, automobiles and other tools of man's world. Toys are useless which are easily [broken, such as inexpensive mechanical toys. These are generally more i? teresting to grown-ups than to children. Huge hobby-horses, large dolls and too many toys are useless also. Every little girl longs for a big doll, which is right and good, but for babies of two years or younger such toys are not only useless but lead to the bored child, which of all things is the most pitiable?a child to whom nothing is new, nothing interesting! Through play the child should be taught the care of toys. A child-who is taught to pick up his toys and put them away in their proper places becomes neat and orderly. Often dren are careless with their toys and, unless carefulness is instilled in them, they become wantonly destructive and have no respect for the property of others. If a little boy has a stuffed dog that barks and he is found investigating the reason for the barking, he is not destructive so much as he is curious, and it must be remembered that through investigation the great discoveries of the world have been 1 made. A child with a mechanical 1 mind will often take his toys apart, "to see how they are made." But curiosity is strong in all children; therefore before punishing a child for destroying a toy, be sure that he has been guilty of something more than OUTLOOK WAS DARK FOR MANY MONTHS Augusta Woman Says Life Was Just Days of Torture WAS DRAGGED DOWN Took Tanlac And Now She Relieves It The Rest Medicine in the World "I've always believed in 'passing a good thing along,' and that is just why I want to tell everybody what Tanlac has done for me," said Mrs. J. M. Mayes, wife of a well known wood and coal dealer, residing at 1711) Twelftth St., Augusta, Ga., some time ago. "For 14 long miserable months I suffered with disordered kidneys, severe headaches and other serious complications, until my life was just one day of torture after another," she continued. "My appetite failed me entirely and my food seemed to poison my system. My extreme nervousness made it impossible for me to sleep and I was dragged down by one trouble af ter another until I thought every day would be my last and I was told that an operation would be the only hope for my life. I refused to allow the operation, however, and, after reading what Tanlac had done for a friend of mine, I tried it as a last resort. "Honestly, I believe Tanlac is the best medicine in the world, for right oner cutting me nrst lew aoses 1 began to improve and I have picked up in weight until I am now 15 pounds heavier than when I started taking the medicine. I have not had a headache since I began using it, and my kidneys have entirely stopped troubling me. I am relieved of all that dreadful suffering and am in better condition than I have been for the "past 14 months." For sale by Palmetto Drug Co., Union; Buffalo Drug Co., Buffalo; K. D. Bailey, Carlisle; B. G. Wilburn & Son, Cross Keys; Jonesville Drug Co., Jonesville;* Lockhart Mills Store, I.ockhart; R. J. Fowler, Monarch. means $20 worth for every man, woman and child. It should be understood that $20 is the average quota, but those who can invest in more than $20 worth are expected to do so, to the limit of their ability and resources. Some persons, no matter how earnestly they try, will not be able to invest in $20 worth of W. S. S. but this discrepancy should be equalized by those who can buy more. The average man or woman should make every effort to purchase at least four War Savings Stamps?the face value of which is $20 and which means an investment of $16.68?for each of his or her dependents. A man with two little children, for instance, should try to purchase at least $60 worth of stamps, and there should be at least a minimum quota purchased for his wife. Rut there is so rmirh mnnev in circulation, and prosperity is so general that thousands of persons can afford to invest considerably morq than $20. The limit of W. S. S. allowed by law is $1,000 worth in the name of one individual or concern. It is expected that men, women and corporations of means should purchase the limit; others should purchase $900 worth and so on down. Every person should conscientiously figure out how much lie or she can save by dispensing with needless luxuries, by doing without non-essential articles. That is the true basis upon which all should decide. After all, the money is being loaned and not given, and by giving up the use of articles or services not necessary to one's health and efficiency, the individual, it is believed, can easily save enough to bring the State across the top. W. s. s. IT'SHOULD MAKE A MILLION FOR HIM Cincinnati man discovers drug that loosens corns so they lift out Good news spreads rapidly and druggists here are kept busy dispensing freezone, the recent discovery of a Cincinnati man, which is said to loosen any corn so it lifts out with the Angers. A quarter of an ounce costs very little at any store which handles drugs, but this is said to be sufficient to rid one's fee of every hard or soft conr or callus. You apply just a few drops on the tender, aching corn or toughened callus and instantly the soreness is relieved, and soon the corn or callus is so shriveled that it lifts out without pain. It is a sticky substance which dries when applied and never inflames or even irritates the surrnnnHincr akin This discovery will prevent thousands of deaths annually from lockjaw and infection heretofore resulting from the sUtbiflat habit of cutting corns. ? w. s. s Piles Cured In 6 to 14 Days Your druggist will refund money if PAZO OJNTMBNT fails to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Pilesin6tol4days. The first application gives Base and Rest. 50c. I HaVe agfo i UT \*' 4 VT rrw\ *? -* r.,--? - ITU n Jl.11 1U lib THIS BIG NC THIS COMMUNITY. THE WAY W "MAKING GOOD." WE WILL GIN THE BEST LINE OF LUMBER THA I & WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS, AN ONCE YOU WILL GO NOWHERE I YOU ARE SATISFIED. Bailey Builders ?Phon 106 ! QT Heatts A POT of steaming, stimi: Luzianne Coffee set befc gentleman and a judge of fine c A finer hot beverage than goo Luzianne never existed. Luzianne tastes all the way and you say "Set 'em up again." Buy a can of Luzianne Coffit you can't honestly say that it best cup of coffee that ever j your lips, tell your grocer you' satisfied and he'll give you bad money on the spot. Please try Luzianne. Youl it, you will. In dean, air-tight t i hjzmwi i ?? Sapolio doing its w for U.S.Marine Cor 1^^^^ Join Nov APPLY AT AN POST OFFIC ENOCH MORGAN'S 1 W ' 2T * SONS COL jor SERVICE UNDE SUPPOSE GERMAN SOLDIERS ! imiim LANDED IN AMERICA? IllII Suppose, through the failure of U w those at home to properly support the Ij nj army, the Germans should shatter the I 111 Allied lines and finally land troops in r America. Picture a German regiment in your town. Suppose the Ilerr ^ General should issue a notice that your community must pay a large indemnity. |! Would you say to the Germans: "I can't afford to pay this indemnity?" n< You would not! You would PAY that si indemnity. "j f un'f *4- fi 11 U/? ? A* ! ? * J ? aou v iv tuvv^cuici UttlCl IU I1MIU your money to the United States than rr o Rive it to Germany? cl Buy all the War Savings Stamps you possibly can! ^ ? c! Dr. Virgil R. Hawkins DENTIST ? OFFIT.K UPSTAIRS IN ITn:nn C C* H FOSTER BUILDINC UHIUII, O. V>. ? Sloa jfao&ne wmefi/f) to ) ' ' -".V i zjjr. ^LUMBER ,W- AND f THINGS >ISE IN OUR BUSINESS IN' E INTEND TO DO IT IS BY E YOU A FAIR PRICE ON T COMES TO THIS COUNTY. D IF YOU BUY FROM US 2LSE. WE WIFE SEE THAT Supply Co. e offce." V' ' d, old ^ ? ??. i? i 's the 1^^^ ! massed ! re not r A 1 i your ^~~'1" 1 like ins. "When It fcaria p?urs>zt fi Reigns" | ? FFEE / ork. Scouring I ps recruits. ^ who wear IY emblem '^ MARINES I R THIS EMBLEM I telieves Stiff Neck When you wnke up with a stiff eck or sore muscles, strains or irains, use Sloan's Liniment. No eed to rub; it quickly penetrates to ic seat of pain and removes it. leaner than mussy plasters or ointlents. I t flnpsnnh Blnin l!i??lin og the pores. Always have a bottle ?ndy for rheumatic aches, neuralgia >reness, bruises and lame back. In ict, all external pain. Generous sized bottles at your ruggist, 25c., 50c., $1.00. n's prices not increased, 25c 50c $1