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THE UNION TIMES Published Daily Except Sunday By THE UNION TIMES COMPANY .ewis M. Rice * Editor: tegistered at the Postoffice in Union, S. C., as second class matter. l'.mes Building Main Street Bell Phone No. 1 SUBSCRIPTION KATES )ne Year $4.00 i Six Months . 2.00 * three Months 1.00 Advertisements >ne square, first insertion $1.00 Every subsequent insertion 60 Obituary notices, Church and Lodge aotices and notices of public meetings, ntertainmenta and Cards of Thanks * will be charged for at the rate of one cent a word, cash accompanying the order. Count the words and you wiH Know what the cost will be. Member off Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively ntitled to the use for republication of news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published therein. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1921. Union County has never failed to go go "over the top" in every worthy drive. It now appears that cotton stalk destruction is going to be no exception. Many farmers are destroying stalks, and many others are preparing to destroy stalks. Some few are not using the best method. If the instructions be followed we must run a disk harrow o\cr the cotton rows and then plow under the stalks and litter. A friend of the writer, and living in the lower section of the state, gives some personal experience with growing velvet beans. He says the people in the lower section of South Carolina are planting velvet beans as a chief crop. He says that one of his brothers, in experimenting with velvet beans as a soil builder, a means ior xernuzmg, nas iouna some very astonishing results therefrom. Three hundred pounds of commercial fertilizer used where velvet beans had been grown showed up better than a thousand pounds of commercial fertilizer jpon land on which no soil builder md been grown. The experiment in :rowing peas proved to be not half so Oood as velvet beans. Of course this is just what Clemson College has been telling us all the while. But it is helpful fo ge^ the ruth from those who have had actual < xperience, also. it *H \hiii TT TT tt TT ?Y oA II IX IT AA IT || IN ORDER 1 ? GOODS, HA M WE ARI If THAT DAY, ??????? ft xx H yy Men's Hose, pair XX Children's Hose, pa VV Huck Towels, each . XT yy 38-inch Sheeting, yi VV Curtain Scrim, yart XX Pajama Checks, yai f f VV Bleaching, yard __ YY - YY XX XX yy a\ if xx i* II ? | L fc&G&t I 3tag?*S?i^ ^ ' Our cat says the path of politics , leads but to the grave. j * * * Our cat says you may evade an is- ' sue, but cannot escape its conse- 5 quences. ( * * * . 1 Our cat says when every witness tel'.s the same tale somebody is lying. ? * Our cat says victory easily won ; brings little satisfaction. < 1 Our cat says fools will not learn, j even in the school of experience. * * 1 Our cat says a just cause i* half 1 won before the battle. * * ( Our cat says greed has a habit of f overstepping itself. 1 : Our cat says lust for power has; , bred many knaves. , j * * * ? Our cat says it will soon be too late'' t.i ilost.rnu rOftnn ! . %T ? ( ; I Our cat says many a blunder has j; turned into a tragedy. NOTICE OF SALE The State of South Carolina, Union County. Court jff Common Pleas. E. P. Norman, et al., Plaintiffs, against Kasor's Garage, et al.. Defendants. In pursuance of an order made in ; the above entitled cause of E. P. Nor-1 i man, et al.. Plaintiffs against Rasor's j Garage, Incorporated, et al., Defendants. dated October 15th, 1921, the undersigned us the Receivers of the Defendant lie ov's Garage, (Incorporated), will, on Salesday, December! 5, 1921. during the legal hours of! sale, before the Court Ilouse door at' Union. South Carolina, sell to the! highest bidder therefor the following described property, to wit: "All that certain piece, parcel orj lot of land, with a three-story brick! building thereon, situaton, lying and; OUR 1 fO GIVE YOU AN OPPOE IS AND CAPS, LADIES' i GOING TO GIVE AWAY WITH THE PRIVILEGE ir ird ... 1 rd 4 / ? ming on the southeast corner ol i'incknev and Academy Streets of the 3ity cf Union, said Countv and State md being known as lots Nos. 10 anc 11 of the property of John L. Young deceased, as appears by a plat of the same made by J. L. McPhearson, C Iv, in November and December, 1903 fronting on Academy Street a dis, tance of seventy-three (73) feet, mort less, and running back therefron to negro church lot, and along Pinck ney Street a distance of one hundre< : rd twenty-nine (129) feet, more oi less, and being bounded on the nortl by Academy Street, on the ensc b\ lot now or formerly belonging to Mrs F. O. Willard, on the south by loi icnown as Negro Church lot and on 1 he west by said Pinckney Street; the above described lot being composed o1 two lct3 known as Tots Nos. \0 rnt 11 of the John L. Young Virgin am Academy Street property, and con veyed to the 9aid Rasor's Garage Inc., by deeds dated the 16th day ol Dctober, 1919, recorded in the office oi he Clerk of Court for said Countj ind State in Deed Book No. 61 at page 104 and on the 1st day of November 1919. and recorded in the above men noned Clerk's office in Deed Book No 51 at page 10G; said lot being com monly known as the property of Ra eor's Garage, Inc. Terms of sale to be cash, the pur huser to pay for revenue stamps am tapers. The sale of the said lot oi and and the building thereon is nol ;o include the elevator thereon nor the asoline tank and oil pumps, but ih< <ame will be sold separately innnedi ately after the sale of the said lot ;ach separately and apart from the luileling and each separately anc apart from each other; terms of sale o be cash. Each bidder before being allowed tc lid, shull be required to deposit wit! he said receivers a certified check ir he sum of three hundred dollars oi ts equivalent in cash, same to be :omc forfeited upon the failure of the successful bidder to comply; that upor omplianee by such successful biddei >r bidders credit shall be given oi :ueh bid for such sum so depositee vith the? said receivers and such sun ;o deposited by unsuccessful bidder! diall be returned to them at the eon fusion of the sale; terms of sale, cash rhat the purchaser or purchasers ol lie said elevator gasoline tank ane lumps, etc., shall have thirty days it vhich to disconnect and remove sam< 'rom the building. In the event sucl purchaser shall fail to comply wit! .heir bids any or all of such propertj .vill be resold on a subsequent day a lis or their risk. W. S. Nicholson, VV. S. McLure, " R. P. Morgan, 11-10-17-24 Receivers. For Bcs* Results Uco LIVE STOCK REMEDIES Sold by Dmggttts and Dealer* E GOI OP 0 DA' ITUNITY TO BUY YOU AND GENTS' FURNIS ONE DINNER SET FR1 OF ADDING THE TICK I I I I iw??www>??www ???? WILL SPRE; 5c 54-inch Serge i 10c per yard.. 10c Red Star sani in,. per piece __ ? ? _ M VV 10c Ladies' and Mi 10c Ladies' Coat S 10c Ladies' Kid G1 FOURTH f S. I MR. NIM TfeAMlV rTti ; / I \ paBWWWWBIIWe^lHI.1 ???il i I .TAILORED AT EASH ? ! THE PA IN YO i 1 \ OUR TAILOR SHOPS A:. f THE PAR-KERRY OVE1 THE STYLE ylSSORTME ! MAKE. PERFECT Ch i 1 STORM-PROOF LABEL. ? $35 J. C 0 H - ' The I 1G l >NGI IR FALL SUPPLIES AT THESE LOW PR1< iHINGS, LADIES' MISSES' AND CHILDRl [DAY, NOVEMBER 18TH, TO THE ONE V m YOU ALREADY HAVE ON HAND. \D A FEW BARGAINS FOR YOU: n blue and cream, sponged and shrunk, M ..98c tary Diaper Cloth, 10-yards to piece, ^ $1.59 B( Isses' Dresses, all wool $7.98 and up L* uits, all wool $14.50 and up CI oves, pair $2.48 Lc ~PJQU i U/iJIi DOOR FROM U. S. POSTOFFICE (assler, Manager, Union, S. C. IELL GOT DINNER SET LAST FRIDAY. a A A A A A A A A - * > . A A ? * A A A ? ? A I V . .. I , \ W fi*, ; ' . - ~ ( WHJT^'W>rry"t'>'-*T'' ~<w" - "*:? oh-'- ax ' JidP?BP lion PARK . I I "* R-KERRY custom service without the anno yancp. of a tr y-cn ready- to- 'put - 0 2.' tailored at fas if 10 a par ? '' 9 a 9 I ?> .R-KERRY LABEL UR OVERCOAT r FASHION PARK HAVE COPYRIGHTED iC OA TINGS, TO INSURE DISTINCTION. NT IS VARIED IN PRICE SO YOU CAN fOICE ? LOOK EOR THE PAR-KERRY ; .00 AND MORE ] EN COMPANY I House of Satisfaction. I - 'm r. V 4^4 A 4^4 A^A A a4A A^A A^A A^a A4A A4A ""y T|T !, taAA^AAAAAAAAAAAAA a^A a4> ^ ^ A A4a Af>. A#A ^ A4A AA^AA. 3NTENUE I! If IR | CES: SUCH AS SHOES, CLOTHING. DRY ft :NS' MILLINERY. ?? IfHO MAKES THE BIGGEST PURCHASE ON || en's Underwear, heavy fleeced Shirts and Drawers, each 45c isses' light weight Union Suits, each 45c 3ys' Caps, each 25c idies' Coats "1 __$5.98 and up V lildren's Coats $1.98 and up idies' Sweaters, all wool, angora trimmed $4.98 TT " rn hf I* I l>Ui IIVI) || ' > f ? I <1 h <