The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, February 14, 1918, WEEKLY EDITION, Page 2, Image 2

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? Merchants & Pl< "The OUJ | The Oldest and Larges | Is Your Money Suppo ; At this critical period in I ers are otFerint* their mills ai their services to the United J J Would you like to do yot your money where it will sup Hankinir System, which the ( ' stand back of our commerce I You can do this by openin I of every dollar so deposited | ! tern where it will always be LOOK FOR THE BANK \ : And deposit your money wl F. M. FARR. ; President l B B ? L. tMMUWAUlMlilllllAAMIUli 1 MR. ft : .... . - ~ * wny noi reauce your hcrili > prove to you that it can b soil at the same time. A r > would be glad to demonstra L. IVf. J C ? UNION, One Pair o: ...Life! Are you abusing and r you will pay the price lat< of all headaches arise froi afching, burning eyes that and many other ills are i strain. In such cases the that is an unfailing one? SCHOOL CHILDREN carefully examined before ' if necessary, fitted with gl An examination will cos1 is no need for glasses I w for glasses are very reaso every pair with an absolr tion. f n niiifF I . U. UUI\L, 13 Main Street Multi] Man 1 DELCO-LIGIIT increases the mar It dots the chores?milks the cm I the cream. It pumps the water and grinds th< It provide light for the barns and ing day. It pays for itself quickly in time And in addition to all this it bri to the farm. There are over 50,000 l)eloo-L power to farms, country homes I DELCO-LIGIIT is self-erankinghas a thick plate long-lived bi or kerosene. on kerosene. Union Plumbin Main Street 1 OR. R. R. POPE DENTIST Office Over TInsley's New Jewelry Store PHONE 43 UNDER i \COVERNMENT ^SUPERVISION MEMBER. BANK UNDER j FEDERAL RESERVE ACT ? anters Nat'l Bank ? Reliable" i I Bank in Union County i a irting the Government our history our manufactur- r* id our young men are offering J States Government. 'i ir share and help by putting j iport the new Federal Reserve j, Government has established to ' industry and agriculture? 1 g an account with us, as part ' ?oes directly into the new sys- J ready for you when wanted. I ? I WITH THE CHIME CLOCK ! a tie re it will be absolutely sale : J. L). ARTHUR, : Cashier. - i *&xxxxxsx\xxxxxx%%xxxx%xx* LRMER ; - 1 izer bill $5.00 a Ion? I can | e done and imnrnve vniir / emarkable discovery that I g te to you. l et inc tell you ol it < )RDAN * S. C. 3?tf ? f Eyes to a time... leglecting yours? If, so, sr. More than two-thirds m eye-straui. Dim vision, soon tire, granulated lids due to some 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 plying Power i power on the farm. ws?churns the butter?separates I tools. outbuildings, lengthening the workand labor saved. ngs city comforts and conveniences .ights supplying electric light and and business throughout the world. ?air-cooled?stops automatically? ittcry?ball-bearings-no belts?runs _ o n_ -a .- _ n _ g <si ciectriG iio. Phone 205-J MONEY TO LEND on FARM LANDS $300 to $10,000?Twenty years time. See JNO. K. IIAMRLIN Lawyer Notice of Sale. I P South Carolina, Union County, Court of Common Pleas. Fant Bros. Co., Plaintiffs ?vs? t< J. E. Hancock, et al, Defendants. p Pusuant to an order of said Court. ? heretofore made in above stated case, I will, on the 4th day of March, (1 1018, during legal hours of sale, be- J' fore the Court House door in Union, , S. C., sell, at Public Auction, all the right, title and interest of J. E. Han- v cock in and to the following lands li and premises, to wit: All that certain lot of land in the " city of Union, said county and State. 11 situated on east side of South Church street, with improvements thereon, ^ containing one acre, more or less, and hounded on the north by the Episco- u pal church rectory; east by part of a the old Whitlock land; south by Ira V S. Harris lot, and west by South s Church street. ? Terms of Sale: One-half cash, I' balance on a credit of one year, c credit portion to he secured by mort- J gage of the premises and bond of v the purchaser, with interest at 8 per v cent from date of sale, bond to pro- 0 vide for ton per cent attorney's fee. ii The purchaser to have the option of " paying all cash. ' r W.W. Johnson, Probate Judge and Ex-Officio Master. F February 8, 1918. ' u i State of South Carolina, 0 County of Union. r By virtue of a Power of Attorney, v duly executed and recorded, given me t by Miss Amzona E. Hancock of the ^ County and State aforesaid, I will sell S t to the highest bidder, before ^he ^ Court House door at Union, South ^ Carolina, during the legal hours of sales, all of the right, title and inter- r est of said Miss A. E. Hancock in and to "All that certain lot of land with c the buildings thereon, lying and sit- ^ uate on the East side of Church J1 street in the Town of Union, State ( and County aforesaid, containing one j acre, more or less, bounded on the north by Episcopal parsonage, on the ?' south by lot formerly of Ira S, Har- t ris, on the east by lands formerly be- 1 longing to F. G. Whitlock, and on the west by the Church street, being the same lot of land conveyed to J. E. Hancock and others by children of H. D. Whitlock and Sarah Whitlock by deed bearing date of February 26th, 1895." Such sale will be made in j connection with the sale of the in- t terest of J. E. Hancock in the case 1 of Fant Bros. Co. vs. J. E. Hancegl^ t et al. as one sale of tins' whole 1M0VI deeds to be executed to the highest bidder by the Master and myself, as one sale. This sale to be made to satisfy mortgage held by Mrs. Ira B. Fant covering the entire lot. Terms of sale as announced by the Master in the above stated case. The purchase money of such sales to he paid to the Master and myself in equal proportions. J. A. Sawyer, Attorney in fact for Miss A. E. Hancock. February 9th, 1918. 7-3t. Notice of Final Discharge State of South Carolina, County of Union, Court of Probate Notice is hereby given, that on the 23rd day of February, 1918, at 11 o'clock, a. m., in the Court of Probate for said County, the undersigned will make his final setlement as Guardian of the Estates of Virginia Lee Poole . and Iiussell Poole, and that thereupon ( he will apply to the Judge of said Court, for his final discharge as such j guardian. I S. M. Rice. i This 10th day of January, 1918. Published in The Union Times for 30 ' days. 4-4t. _ 1 Notice of Final Discharge ! State of South Carolina, County of Union, Court of Probate Notice is hereby given, that on the 18th day of February, 1918, at 11 j'clock, a. m., in the Court of Probate for said County, the undersigned will make his final settlement as Administrator of the Estate of Mis. Pearl I. Sartor, deceased, and that thereupon j he wil lapply to the Judge of said 1 Court, for his final discharge as such ' Administrator. 1 Claude C. Sartor. 1 This 18th day of January, 1018. Published in The Union Times for 30 , days. , 4-4t. 1 GIRL WANTED! Who can loop or sew toes in 1 hosiery mill, and prefer one who knows something about 1 knitting mill work. State wages expected and when you can come. Box 220. Cherryville, N. C. HILOSOPHY OF MAIN CHANCE ' onely Bachelor Realizes Mistake In Not Welcoming Both Joy and Sorrow Into His Life. I read a story In a current niagnzine Dday. And after I reud a certain j art of it I laid the magazine down, ' nd I too, looked far away. But ' . Yoked past the printed page Into a amp, dimly lighted trolley cur?and j ito the heart of my friend who feared j o grusp n vision, Margaret E. Sang- 1 ter writes In the Christian Herald. 1 In the story a wealthy old bnchelor as telling his reason for never hav- ?: jg married. "I begun to wonder," he said, whether there was any advantage in inrrying at all. I saw u lot of peole who were wretchedly unhappy toether, and even more wretched after liey had dissolved their matrimonial les. I discovered that marriuge usully meant children, anxiety, sickness na ueutn. l took counsel of my fears. Vhy fall In love and marry If by doing o I was going to expose myself to the rrows of outrageous fortune? My nrente were both dead. Sorrow ouldn't touch me. Why Invite unhapIness? If I had no family I should nve only myself to look out for?to ?orry about?and when I died nobody rould suffer agonies of bereavement n rfiy account. So I shut myself up a ray shell and built un Iron wnll rouiid my uffectlons to keep out sorow. "I was a fool! What wouldn't I ive now to have hnd sorrow 1 Mauy's he time I've envied my friend with . dead child. Pain and Joy go hand n hand. Deaden your capacity for me and you lose the other. Today I'd atlier have hnd a year or so with a roman I had loved and have lost her han to be what I am?a lonely, childess, wifeless, friendless old man." I read the paragraph over. And hen I took It to a man I know?I call ilm sometimes, to myself, the phllosoher. "I think," he told me, "that the easonlng Is quite right! "There's an old proverb that covrs the whole thing. I think. "Tls tetter to have loved and lost than tever to have loved at all!' The word love' isn't the only one that will tit nto that proverb. You can put 'live' n place of love, or 'known' or 'felt!' "I think," I said, "that you're right. | 118 Deuer," 1 mused, "to have lived, o have known, to have loved?and 1 ost?" J "You know," said the philosopher, ^ 'that every chance isn't a losing 'hnnce. Some people live and know ind feel and lovo without losing 1" 1 ,, High Individual Morale. The reason why morale is necessary ~ n times of peace as well as in war Is hat the morale of no army can be ilgher than the individual morale of he men, declares Sun Antonio Light. Mwtora the very best soldiers are ] hose recruited from civil life who t lave every day morale?the men who , id things, who stand fearlessly for j vhat they believe to be right, who , ire undismayed by opposition and aplarent defeat, and who accept life's rlbulatlons calmly, patiently and with 5 'ortitude. ? Men of that stripe cannot be stam- i )eded or confused In military affairs, ] >nce they have been trained as sol- j llers, just as In every-day life they t :annot be kept down by circumstances, rhey are Individually Invincible and lence when organized into un army, ' :hey are militarily invincible. ^ Therefore when you read of an army i )r a military unit with a high morale rou know that the men in the ranks < ind the officers over them are men of | strong, dominant courage who meet , leath calmly In the discharge of their , military duty and who cannot be rout- ; sd nor overawed by the enemy, but must be vanquished, If at all, by lightIne. Communication by Flags. j Those who have read Cooper's novel, "The Pilot," will remember how the American oflicer instructed his lady love to communicate with him by little flags of varied colors. Cooper, with a novelist's freedom, made his chnrac- 1 ter apply a system which had alreudy been extensively experimented with In the British and French navies. For after much experimenting combinations of Hags of various shapes and colors were gradually developed Into what we? call n "code" today. Probably the most famous flag signal ever flown was Nelson's at Trafalgar, but It required a great number of combina- { tlons of flags (hoists, they are tech- : nlcally called) to spell out: "England expects that every man will do his duty." i Women in India Need Education. At a meeting of the Woman's Indian Study association, Miss Boyd, secretary In England for the Woman's University settlement, Bombay, said that only one per cent of Indian women could rend. She declared the great need was for the Indian girls to take up the profession of medicine. It had been stated by an authority that an Indian woman In child birth had less chance than a soldier on the buttlefield. Contradictory Evidence. "There Is one thins curious about the minutes of u meeting." "What Is that?" "They are genernlly affairs of moment." Training Counts. "Our mathematical expert here is also ? f?r#o?I athlete.*? "I suppose that Is why he finds it o easy to run up a column of figure?.** You Can't Rub It / Rheumati Liniments Will Never Cure. If you are afflicted with Rheumatism, why waste time with liniments, lotions and other local applications that never did cure Rheumatism, and never will? Do not try to rub the pain away, For you will never succeed. Try the sensible plan of finding the cause of the pain, and go after that. Remove the cause, and there can be no pain. : You will never be rid of Rheuma- : PRINCESS JEANNE ... '^\,' ' ' l^' y JhK^^H J||:;i: Jy F^ ?w nember of the Italian royal family, photographed while on a visit to wounded soldiers recently, returned From the Italian battlefront. The princess Is one of the most popular Tiembers of the king's family, espeilally with the Italian public. She It Idolized by the soldiery. Unshaken Testimony Time is the test of truth. And Doan's Kidney Pills have st^ood the ;est in Union. No Union resident vho suffers backache, or annoying: cidney ills can remain unconvinced >y this twice-told testimony. Mrs. F. B. Scott, 5 Hix St., Union, ;ays: "My kidneys were in bad shape and I suffered from dizzy and lervous spells. My head ached, too. Finally I got Doan's Kidney Pills From the Palmetto Drug Co., and ;hey relieved me." OVER THREE YEARS LATER Mrs. Scott said: "I haven't had the east sign of kidney trouble since I ised Doan's Kidney Pills." Price GOc, at all dealers. Don't 3imply ask for a kidney remedy? Bret Doan's Kidney Pills?the same Lhat Mrs. Scott has twice publicly recommended. t oster-Muburn Cow, Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Legal Notice. State of South Carolina, County of Union. ?ORDEB? I. B. jRichards, Plaintiff, ?Vs? Southern Pine Lumber Co., Dawkins Mill & Lumber Co. A copartnership composed of J. B. Richards and Southren Pine Lumber Co., C. K. Callahan and Geo. W. Wall, Defendants. It appearing that legal advertising for Notice to all Creditors against Defendant Dawkir.o Mill & Dumber Co., to appear at a reference or present their claims properly proven was omitted. It is ordered that such notice aforesaid be duly published and that Creditors be duly Notified to present their claims properly proven to G. B. Barron, Receiver, or appear at reference to be held at Union Court House before R. C. Williams,. acting Master on the 21st day of February 1018. We Consent:? ? Carson, Boyd Finley, Macbeth Young. R. C. Williams, Clerk of Court. U-.JC-W. 666 Gives Quick Relief for COLDS and LAGRIPPE Price 25c and 50c Per Bottle Lway; ism is in the Blood tism until you cleanse your blood of the germs that cause the disease. S. S. S. has never had an equal as a blood purifier and scores of sufferers say that it has cleansed their blood of Rheumatism, and removed all traco of the disease from their system. Get a bottle of S. S. S. at your drug store, and get on the right treatment to-day. If you want special medical advice, you can obtain it free by addressing Medical Director, 23 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. Sheriff's Sales For March, 1918 By virtue of Sundry Executions directed to me. I will sell before the Court House door on first Monday in March, it beinc th*> fnnvfVi n-e the month within the legal hours of Sheriff's Sales, for Cash the following described lands to wit: One tract of land in Pinckney Township, Union County, S. C., containing one hundred and sixty acres more or less, and bounded on the North by Pacolct river; on the East by Sam Littlejohn; on the West by E. L. Littlejohn; and on the South by E. L. Littlejohn, levied on and to be sold as the property of A. McGowan, the suit of Merchants & Planters National Bank of Union, S. C. Plaintiff against E. L. Purdy and A. McGowan, defendants. Also One lot of land with House thereon, containing one acre, more or less in Union, School District, Union County, S. C., and bounded as follows: on the North by Santuc Dirt Road; East by Monarch Mill Company land; on the West by Southern Railway Co.; and on the South by Southern Railway Co. line and to be sold as the property of Gus. Feaster, Sr., et al, for improvement of Homestead as the suit of T. K. Foster, plaintiff against Gus. Feastei, et al, defendant. Also One tract of land in Pinckney Township. Union County. S. C,. containing fifty acres more or less, and * bounded as follows: On the North by J. N. Gallman; East by Skull Shoals Road; West by J. G. Faucett, Sr.; South by E. V. Going,. Levied on and to be sold as the property of Anna Harris Sims for improvement of the Homestead at the suit of Bailey Furniture & Lumber Co., plaintiffs against Anna Harris Sims, defendant. Terms of fnln PooVi J. Hay Fant, Sheriff of Union County. Union, S. b. Feb. 12th, 1918. 7*-3t. Card of Thanks We desire to express our sincere appreciation to the friends who were so kind in their ministry to our husband and father, H. Cole Lawson, during his last illness and death. May each one of you be privileged to have friends in the day of trouble. May a kind Heavenly Father deal gently with each one of you. Wife and Children. Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System The Old Standard general strengthening tonic, GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TO .NIC, drives out Malaria,enriches the blood,and builds upthesystem. A true tonic. For adults and children. 60c SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY GO. "The Progressive Railway of tha South" Steel Equipment Observation-parlor-cafe cars Thru Coaches and Sleepers To principal points North, South, East and West. For rates, schedules or other information, call on nearest Seaboard Tick- ? et Agent or write Fred Geissler, Asst. Ger.'l Pass'r Agent, S. A. L. Rwy., Atlanta, Ga. C. S. Compton, S. A. Li. Rwy., Atlanta, Ga. Traveling Pass'r Agent, For Indigestion, Constipation of ? Biliousness Just try one 50-cent bottle of LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN. A Liquid Digestive Laxative pleasant to tnke. Made and recommended to the public by Paris Medicine Co., manufacturers of Laxative Bromo Quinine and Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic. I