University of South Carolina Libraries
1" We'vi Boys* Heayy V each . . . . / Boys'. Heavy each Boys' Heavy 1 each ' Men's and Yoi the heat r?r*atc ? WMVk where, each . XX t Boys' Blue Serg XX Boys' Heavy W< XX , Boy^' Blue Ovei XX Boyo Union Suii TY Boys' Extra He XX each XX Men's Extra H< XX each ..... Boys Hxtra Hes Y Men's Extra He 2 Ladies' Heavy h | THESE PR1 j j. i . .w ,-.w- . ^ ~ ^ . ' '. Sheriff's Sales For December, 1922 x By virtue of an execution to mej .directed, I will sell before the court "house on the first Monday in December, 1922, within the legs) hours of BnerifTs sales for cash the following 'described property, to wit: One lot of_ land with store house . thereon and bounded as follows: By ? qpui track of Seaboard Air Line Railv. ay Company on the North, by South- , em Railway Company on West, by < -Southern Railway Company and on 'the South by Southern Railway Com- , ? ,4;any. Levied on and to be sold as the property of S. W: Sullivan at the i;uit of .Lylsrly-Lentz .Lumber Co., Plaintiffs, against S. W. Sullivan, Defendant. _ T. J. Vinson, : Sheriff Union County. Union, S. C., Nov. 16, 1922. . 11-17-24; 12-1r ShetttTi Delinquent Land Sales For Taxes , eg ' By virtue of sundry executions diTy .rected to me by J. H. Bartles. County "Treasurer, I will sell before tne court rhouss idoor, Jn Union. Union County, 6. C.#'-during the legal hours of Sheriff's sales, in .December, 1922, it^eing the 4th day of the month, the following described property, to wit: One (tract of hind in Union School District No. 1, belonging to Adams and Floyd, seven hundred acres, more or less, and bounded aa follows: On the North hy lands'of J. B. Betenhuogh. on -the West by Abraham i Humphries, on the East by Mrs. Sallie Davis and on the South by Mrs. Ber nioi Edwapds. - > * v ALSO One lot of land with building there, on in town of Union, S. C., belonging to Lewis Brandon, bonded by lota of Bud Goudelock, McBeth street, Walter < i .a.1 1 unt aua own, x ' - ALSO One lot ff land with building thereon, in town'of Union. S. C., belonging to Lames Williams, bounded by Wallace sUsei, White Worthy, Dock Jeter and others; _ ALSO ABl Ohe tract of land with building thereon in town of Union, S. C., belonging to Jerry Par ham, bounded by Bi??lo road, W. D. Harris, J. E. Fowler and others. ALSO One lot of land in Union County, :S. C,. belonging to EcOlia Jeter, with building thereon, bounded by W. H, Poole, Mansfield Palmer and others. ALSO One lot of land with building thereon belonging to John Turner, in city of Union, 8. C., bounded by lota of Andersbn Booker, Hamlet street and mothers. ALSO t?ne lot or una witn ouuaing tnereon, in city of Union, belonging to Vin. cent Sartor, bounded by lota of Douglaaa Savage. Lum Moore, Buffalo street and othera. t ALSO One lot Of land with building thereon, in city of Union, S. C., belonging to Mrs. Jdsie. C. Brandon, and bounded One lot .of land with building there i Got 'En V - V ?>. % .* vJ Vool Mixed Suits, siz A.11 Wool Suits, size; U1 Wool Suits, sizes / mg Men's All Wool 1 j for the money to be 1 e Pante, pair ool Mixed Pants, pair alls, pair t$, each iavy Fleece Lined Ur eavy Fleece Lined Ui ivy Sweaters, each . . avy Sweaters, each > wwv VJllUClOIVUbS, tJclCIl ICES ARE GOOD A O IWI A. A A .< " T V" V V y y V ALSO - r ?One lot ofland -with building the, en, in city of Union, S. 0.. belongi to Bessie Fant and bounded by 1< of W. W. Johnson, Gage avenue, W ter Farr and others. ALSO One lot of land with building thei on, belonging to Estate of Rebe? Chalk, in city of Union, 8. C., a bounded by North Church street, H< vy Young, Aaron Rice and Side str? ALSO One lot of land with two buildin thereon, in county of Union, S. C., t longing to Estate of Robert Thorn sen, and bounded by Bethlehem Bs list church, Richards street and A. Stutts.* v ALSO One lot of land with two buildin thereon,-in county of Union, S. 1 near Monarch, belonging to John B Worthy and bounded by lots A munda Simpson, Worthy atre louis Smith and others. ALSO Two lots of land with bpildii thereon, in city odf Union, S', *Cw,T| longing to Oadberry Smith a hounded by lots ofJ5. F. Kelly A Bi and O'ShieJds street. ALSO One lot of land with'building thei on, in city of Union, S. C., belongii lo S. A. Wix and bounded as folhv by lots of Con Allen, McBeth stn und South Church street. All of above described propet iovlod on and to bo* sold for taxes. T. J. Vinson, Sheriff Union County. Union, S. C., Nov. 14, 1922. 11*17-24; IS NoOtkor Rhrer Like Jordan in tho Wor (Prom the World's Work) In one matter Palestine enjoys advantage obvious at once to the si dent of her maps. ?The River Jord which Joshua crossed dryshod, which Naaman the Syrian bath tway his leprosy, and where John t Baptist preached, ir unique. Among the rivers of the wor there is no other like it. The soui of the Jordan is '900 feet abe*e a level. From that source to its m flow the distance is only sixty mil* but it is a distance which the river self by the frequent winding, mc than trebels. The outflow is not into any op sea but into a lake surrounded ? tirsly by mountains and exhaust only by evaporation or sorting of t water into its bleak and desola shoers. This lake is so charged wi various salts that to hink in its u tern is impassible, while bathing i verely testa-the cemplexien. Most remarkable of all is the it that the lake, supposed to conti the ruins of Sodom, Gomorrha, a other cities of the plain is situat 1,800 feet or thersahouts below t level of the sea. Nowhere, not in the Qrand Cany itself, is there a phenomenon mysterious and so sensational., - Many experiments here and abro have shown that Mqtitd hydrogen Is far the lightest of all known liquid ii For You I X ? * ' es 3 to 5, Ladies' He; $1,95 ? Ladies' E: s 3 to i/. -each . . . $2.50 Children's 8 to 17, . . $3.95 Children's Overcoats, ^ Infants' Sa< found any- ~ ? . $13.95 Men's Dres . . . .95c Men's Silk as*. Men's Blue ? more tha . . . 50c Men's Hose . . . 49c Ladies' Hos lion Suits, ~ ~ .75c Boys and I lion Suits, Ladies' He* 95c ~j A. , Ladies seal 95c Ladies' He . . .$1.00 pair . . . .... 45c Good weigh S LONG AS THE GOO AS WE i#LbU r< Linotype Operator of Aiken, reng Heir to Browning Million 'j8 (Columbia Record). "Yes, I am still on the jab/' Robot I'isery, of Aiken, linotype operator re- and one of the principal heirs to th J2 1?0 million dollar Browning estate ii aj. Texas, told a Record reporter when et. tie asked if he was still working at hi trade, in spite of great riches whirl J|8 will soon be his. p. The Brownipg estate is ?hut of th< ,p- late Thomas Browning, of Texas, wh< L 4G yogrs ago left this state to seel I n:c fortune. He found it in Texas,til gg oi! fields. There he died several year C.. ago leaving an estate estimated at t5i eu million do\lar% Texas authorities, a et. os t*ic United States government in whose trust the estate is now be ing held, have since been searchfoj <fcn>-kinspeople of the late Browning *MT? Ursery, one of the fe,v who havi ^ thus far proven their claims to tb estate, is a son of Thomas Browning* nephew. ,e* While he has not yet come in pos ^ session of any part of the estate, he i let justified in feeling as he does, h said, since advices from his attorney)! xy Messrs. Brown and Sims, of Barnwell are that the red tape which aur rounds the settling of the estate i rapidly being cleared and that a set tlement will soon be made "Of course I feel different/' Mi -, Ursery said, "who wouldn't when h is expecting to receive more mono; and property than he had been abl to conceive of, so much that he wl an not even he able to spend the in teres ,u" from it. But," he continued "I ma an continue right on working." jj Ina quiet, unaawumtng manner,. a! cd tliough with his eyes piercing into A he far off future, Robert Ursery thu made his summary on how it felt to h id * proapective millionaire. Mr. Urser c3 is married and has one child. M Considerable interest had develope lt* in the case in parte of Georgia an e*? throughout tbia* state, , particularly J it* Ailran o?u) B?<?i ire| there are large family connections 4 (Brownings. None have been fovufc ?rt however, who remember the n Thomas Browning. he The first strike ef women works* U in the history of India took place 4 ith Calcutta recently, when several httt a- dred women employed in a jute ntk ie- walked out in support of their 4* mand for a higher wags. . ' ; ict Hones- work op to their necks ,4 tin the waters of the lower Columbi nd xiver, Oregon, drawing the gidl ed Mines with the catches of tons of s|l he man* Many of the animals have HI tie hair left Immersion in salt wat| on testes to kill it. so Military maneuvers of the Urges army in Europe, conducted on a hug a _ aa i ?? n_ a _ an ? rc?ie, rvcvuuy mciwwa UTM'OI ad sham battle with artillery, atrplar* S. try near Hermes, France. i ' m * $ * * ' - ' vV, ' * ' \ T atltieRij avy Ribbed Vests and Pants xtra Heavy Ribbed Uni Sweaters, aH eolors, each , Knit Caps, all-Coiors, each cks, each s Shirts, each . stripe Dress Shirts, each . Work Shirts, a good one j n our price, each i, all colors, pair se, all colors, pair hisses' Heavy Ribbed Hose, ither Mixed Hose, pair . . tn up back Lisle Hose, pair ather Mixed Silk and W< it Cotton Flannel, yard . . DS LAST. WHEN WE ARE PAYING HIGHER e Dry rvvvvvVvVV'f vwiv v* i World'.Wfch* F?1U * i Have' Thirty-fir* Cataract* j *; J t l From the Detroit News) 5 ' The stupendous fells of Iguassu, \ e divided among three countries?Bra- j D zil, Argentina, and Paraguay?are t n the wildest and widest in the worlds j 9 being made up of thirty-flve great J >) cataracts. i: Nowhere -else is there to be seen \ 9 a rush of water resembling this. An ? 9 American business man, traveling in \f < Brazil, describes a visit to Iguassu j a for ,a Rio magazine. J 9 "Standing1 by the rough hotel at theJ J 3 cliff edge, facing those thundering t s falls, there was not one of us who did not re?i repaid for that long journey ft - through the wilderness," -hi writes,1 i S "though they were seen only through 2 the billowing fog. 'I have seen the J e Himalayas from Darjeeiing and the l s Harbor of Rio by moonlight/ ex- \ s claimed one of the party, 'but this j is the masterpiece of Almighty God!' J "He later insisted that he' could ' s see seven rainbows at once above the J e brown avajuncbee ef water. * i, "Five of the falls ef Ignassn am \ enormous and deliberate, dark brown j f at the brUik from muddu upland tor- j rents and dyed with winter leaf i ;f mould .from ravished ?lageOos, torn j [ by the fall into a creamy white wall j " ef -water, and then with -a sound of \ Cannonading, shot high, into' the air j f by jagged rocks below. J These five are almost -continuous at S 1 high water and measure mnr* ftiam n half a mile across. * "They are much greater and more 8 furious then Niagara, leaving a Wore ? awful impression of unrestrained V forte running wild, but they lack the 8 unhurried emeraW beauty of those i smooth waters." - J Cetbon monoxide, the white <iamp j j which has caused the .death of many < miners, doee net affect animals with! out xed blood. p mtmess=s 1 , _ ,eiiW|S s11 w : .J. , if III. 11 II i ALL KINDS OP 1 * CEMETERY WORK 5 f Union MsrMs A Crsaits Co. | . i Main St. Union, S. C. j 8 II i ,, ! . u.i, , i j. .. ggg?Hsac. -;i* \ mm?m* If i Nimn 4k Bnik Shoes ' " AUSTELL'S SHOE STORE \ jj For Better Shoo* i \ * 111 i" 'j !? H. W. COCAR 11 J Vo4trtoblo0 Forlort | ' Call* ipyiirf Am umI -<?*? r _ Pr*"* ?*l MM m Wnff ; V "** ""** "Ml1* |I1 ' ' j-t| "" N ?4 ?? ?i ?? ><' 'H jht Price \} each 49c 25c quali on Suits. 15c quah . . . .95c - 72-inch 1 , . . .75c ?> ?"" " ? 18x18 iiu 25c * 72x90 H< . . . 50c ? 36x45 H< . . 95c v 2 ] 36-inch C w/ FIVE HUNDRE WF TAN TAK SEASON. WE NOVEMBER 1! FARMERS. i j THE UNION i u s I ii p m iH ? AteUm feet In die meter arift tttf uet deep suddenly appeared in a cheat field of a Mmt living near ?d ' * ?? . " ' , * . is All the ty Dress Gingham, yard . * "" '"" ? ity Apron Gingham, yard 'able Damask, $1.00 value ;h Table Napkins, per doz< >mmed Sheets, each . . . } aimed Pillow Cases, each 'urtain Goods, yard . . . . . .#1.09 36-inch C and worth . . . .90t 36-inch B 5c i 36-inch P _____________ ? .. i i ... .5c Boys' Sol pair . , each 10c Men's Sol . . . 25c Ladies' S . . . 15c Ladies' S sol Hose, . . .$1.00 Infants'S . . .124c Children' HAVE TO BUY AGA1 PRICE. f fiAl iretonne, yard leaching, yard ajama Checks, yard . . . lid Leather School Shoes, lid Leather Work Shoes, pj olid Leather Work Shoes, olid Leather Dress Shoes, >hoes, pair s Shoes, pair " 1 " 9 IN THE PRICES WILL BE ods C a6S6S6XX8eS6XXS06XV%XXXWX%X%XSe%W6 VNTE D ACRES PLANTED TO E CARE OF THAT ACI WILL BE READY ON >TH TO SIGN UP CONT I CANNING & PRO! BWIS M. RICE, President \ ) I Inland, Missouri. Water to a depth of 112 \eet promptly Ailed the hole. 1 i Moiv nctrtitiatit have vfMted the holo. 1 I. * / i mi DJiii'jiJj Time I . ... ..15c it ., 10c || i, yard . .69c YY en . . . $1.50 Ti ??p #OC AA 19c || 10c II 19c 12jc || ?|| sizes 3 to 6, $1.95 T Y air . . $2.50 Y% pair . $2.50 ^ pair . .$2.95 4* 4* V > ? _ ?>A 50c XA $1.00 HIGHER, < *Om < ? r--,? 1"" V * 4 Q O! ^ TOMATOES. EtEAGE NEXT ' j AND AFTER RACTS WITH j DUOS CO. ! ^ V *1 Those who have descended to i level report no apparent Inlet or Wte nv