The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, November 28, 1902, Page 3, Image 3
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Summons for Relief.
(COMPLAINT. SERVED.)
State of South Carolina, 1 Court of
County of Union. J Probate.
,T. G. Going as administrator of al
and singular, the goods, chatties and es
late of J. II. Clark, deceased, J'hiintill
against
William Claik. ltawden Clark, Thoma
D. Clark, Gena C-Dnulware, Lily Lane
W. It. Stokes, W. J. Stoker, Lily 11
Stoke3, Gertrude Cark and Alfred Clark
Defendant.
To the defendants above named, yoi
arc hereby summoned and require lt<
uuoweir me umuprawn, in irns acrioil o
which a copy is herewith served upoi
you, nod to serve a copy of your ans'Ve
to the said complaint on the sulacrilie:
at their cilice at Union, K. C., withii
twenty days after the service hereof; ex
, elusive of the day of such service; and ii
\ you fail to answer the complaint withh
~ the time afoiesaid, the plaintiff in thi
action will apply tc the Court for the re
P lief demanded in the complaint
Munro <& Sanders,
W. W. Dixon,
Plaintiff's Attorneys
To the defend mis above named
Take notice that the summons in thi;
action of which the foregoing is a copy
whb filed in ihe < fiice of the Judge o
Probate for Union county, in the Stat
of South Carolina, on the 7th day o
November, 11)02.
Mi'jjp.o & Sanders,
AV. \V. Dixon,
Attorneys i'wr Plaintiff
' To the defendants, (iertrnJe Clail
and the infant. Alfred Clark, take notice
that uuless you proeuve the appointra^n
of a guardian'ad lit urn to represent yot
said Alfred C ark within twenty day
after the service of the summ >ns am
complaint, in this action \\\*v\ you, tli
plaintiff will, after the expiration o
twenty days from the d.ite of sticu ser
vic? upon you, nppiv u? inn. .1. :>i
Greer, Jud^e of Probate for Unioi
county, at his ofliee at Union, .S. C , fo
an order npjjoiniing some suitable jvorso
guardian ad litmn to appear and detcni
this action on your lydiaif.
Mux no & Saxpkiu,
W. W. Drxox.
40 6fc Plaintiff's Attorneys
* 1' 1 .. .... .I..
Life and Accident insurance.
The Aetna*Life Insurance write
policies not only for JUfo Indemnity
but a! so policies that protect you i
case of accident or sickness. Th
only Old Line Company in tho Unitei
States to do this. Kates- are ver,
reasonable. This company is wei
known and comment is unnecessary
lam representing tho "above Com
pany and will be pleased to call 01
Bny one wishing insurance. Writ
me,at Carlisle, 8. C.
46-tf W. F. Bate?, Agont.
JERSEY BULL standing at m
house. 60c cash in advance for service
Ca'f guarantee 1 or money refunded.
JMy J. C. lii tffjcn.
^ETITH
We ar
Harde
Harde
-^.PEOPl
o*\7*o^ *3733t
-fclxo Xiiixi. ?3. yor
757-0?^t;33L?27 Is IICT
LCfTZ, SO 33L
o don'fc ffisSsL s^'Os
37l^jbL? we woi
and. yon octxn. :
Lin. -as.
money, timoai
Final Discharge.
Notica is hereby given that J. W.
Nauce, Administrator of tlie estate of J.
J. "Vaughan, deceased, hn applied tell
Jason M. Greer, J.udure of Probate, ii
i- and for the County of Union, for.a final
discharge as such Administrator.
It is Orpkukp. That the 22nd day ol
? December, A. D 1902. be fixed for hear!.
ing of Petition, and a final settlement of
. said Estate. Jason M. Gukeb,
Probate Judge Union county
Published in the Union Times X<-v
i 21st, 1902. 47-51.
I Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
r All persons having claims against tie
r nctnto /it* fhu lito UTilliom 1^. I! ?* !??
i hereby notified to present same to tin
- undersigned, propsrly attested, oa oj
f tvifore February 1, 1903; aai hi! person
i indebted to said estate are hereby notiikd
s to make settlement with the undersigned
- immediately. Mrs. Carrie Hay,
or Administratrix..
J. A. Sawyer,
Attorney for said estate. 47-4t.
Uniom Times No/. 21.
? Notice of Sale.
i I wi.l sell to the highest bidder on 11 e
e 1st Monday in D.cembir, next, befoie
f the Court llous?, during the legal hours
tor sale, the lMuiel II. Sheldon home
plies, located in Cross Keys township,
comiyaiid State aforesaid, containing
. iliteen aorea more or les*.
t Terms of sale cash. .Purchaser to pay
. for papers.
i f L. J. Browkino,
Atlornoy in fact for the heirs at i
law of Mrs. F. W. Sheldon, dec.
i Nov. 0th, 19U2. 41-4i
>
Notice to Trespassers,
r All persons are hereby warned not to
i hunt, flsb, ride, drive, walk thvouth or
iu any other ruiuner trespHii upon the
it ands owned and worked bytheundu ii^neci
in Union township. Those dureSardine
tbia notice will be prosecuted to
iLe full extent of the law.
t, * O. C. Grkrii,
p 11. W. f'l'AKK.S,
W. P. IllTCKETT,
W. C. Nix.
?
i Trefzer
^ Has just received a fine
stock of Solid Silver
and Rogers' Silver
Plated Table YV^re.
Also large stock of
Silver Novelties. Don't
fail to see his stock and
y prices at
>.
The Wonder. Store.
?. . ^ .
* . ?.v . .. "
>: :% 5<~ lrif ' 'Ms. . ..
aafsv-k wk , -a\..
e hard to beat on <Q
r to beat cn Styse,
J
st to beat on Price
LE WONDER
00 E"0.1*6.3 SSO oa
057- jia?
1 SiCiTTo lboe:":i
v"
ot oomo to o
0. -?o> totaiy 13T fine
3.?C1 TOO more *?1
L'est ass'Lirccl t:
BUY OF US.
1.C2. tomperj
It;
^ J
wi jy
ling Store.
ESOi rSESEST;: rJlSEEPS! C3E3S3EST
n_ GOES THE W
J IN COME THE ORDI
J (E HI ' ! I g ?? ' fiB
i T???i??Mlr,Si??iMsStt?l
' SELLS THE VERY DEST GRA
] FERTIUZERS
I AT THE VERY LOWEST C(
It ?>oys to fertilize your lands \
I ^ THE VIRGINIA-CAROLIN^
ivni:ciiv.AL eom*'Ai>Y^e>
^ PRODUCTS. f
EB VirHERE]
The Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co..
CHARLESTON. S. C. i
II HIMI ! * II I III Ill? I
IUk Cn?a Not So Rail After All.
"All, It's u sad old world," sighed tlio
mail wlio lind been cheated out of ?*J0.
"Yes," assented his neighbor. "One
of my horses got his head fast in the
hayrack last night and broke his neck. |
I was offered $1200 for him less than a !
month ago."
"Pshaw! That's too bad. Looks as '
though it was going to brighten up, i
doesn't it?" And lie went on his way
wmstilng cheerfully.?Chicago Record- '
Herald.
HI* llevpnsf. 11
M. Colombics, a merchant of Paris. !
had his revenge on n former sweet- ,
heart, a lady of Uouen, when ho left \
her by will a lcgncy of $0,000 for havIng
some twenty years before refused
to marry'him, "through which," states
the will, "I was enabled to live Independently
and happily as a bachelor." '
PfrniiKom Now.
"You ought to seo the lovely letters (
iiy husband writes," said the bride of
n mouth to one of her girl friends.
"Oh, I've seen a few," rejoined tho
dear girl friend. "In fact, I've got nearly
a trunkful of them in the attic."? ;
lCxchunge. . i
Act! In action thero Is wisdom and
glory and happiness. Action rouses
hope, and hope rouses actlou.?Free*
doin- . ...... -j*. i
jf "r
>ualfties,
;s.
WHY *.
Y V A A 11 i .if lf^
3.0S4-2P, 1:^ tlie 7c
ITi/CL^ClO C!t'37lG ,
3~i 3C2.?? O ?*v X3. <
glS' and TP'^^z.
'izr {3t<o:s:*o aic.cl
5 prico 5.?3 not "j
a. .a n s:l cs, c1 ~? ^3> c3L <
3^^3*0.
3 xdo'i; iLT'isslZLti
r A
II Pure
csosSiaKss?i-v:
iUk-i?c^
DES OF \-^m|^
P TIE IIIGII!l-0i!9L!ll
^IIKJUEII C0HFI8! i
??."The Largest
Manufacturer of A
<' Fertilizers on Eafth" LJ
w-i ? ?
Forty odd
\ Manufacturing plants
Wholesale purchasers i
Largest importers
. Concentration of
Management
mewi iiiiMBuc' iiMauyijiiu?Juii^ig
BRICK! BRICKII BRICK!!!
, i
Lor ?ale in any
quantity. j
The Rodger Brick Works. 1
FOR SA UK CHEAF>I
Onr.ir, II. p. Boiler and Engine (de-;
tad led) 0110 Brick Macning, z0,U00l
daily cit. icily.
i
The Rodger Brick Works.
r>-tf
Dr. R. M. Dorsey,
Specialist
:>n diseases of the EYE and EAR
?an?l?*i
OPTIC1 AN,
Successor to J I. R. GoodGl.
Alexander's Music Hall, J>pn tanburg,
S. C. d7-iyr.
Early Risoro
The fams'.' i little pills. "
1 o.'3~Z 1-T,?5,2? ? ll
C5.tolcx "..vear- [??:
sS3.oo ?:or. ^ I
r?:12. "io
L compare |
i*5.E:Ixt? loTj^t; if
3 K3>'UlJE33.KLO?g3
SC'C lionost |
I
ttotlXX ra:a.?t2s.o t
r'*
1
I
jjjl
ell's Stand. |
- i^'gU^jwa g
A
To the wise is sufficient,
and that is th's, Geo. V/.
Going is
Selling Goods Cheaper
Than his competitor?.
Come one, come all and
give iuc n. chance to prove
that the above assert inn i.
true.
Yours respect fully,
GEO. W. GOING.
IJS-JJiuo
"TSr>
Js. "
>=?. j =1ii"
,/X /'
We Make The Spots Fiy
ni '1 rO urn all liren laundered Knnll'ullr,
clean and sweet. Nothing |
si-L-rt i tiyoni our mot nods. Jt is ve ry
simple. Intelligence is used as well
as clo.nslng agents which do not ha^oi
fabric or color. Those through \vh jso
hands the work passes use every
ellort to reach perfection and the
work of the
U-Need-a Steam Laundry
show; that thoy are always siicccs*:ful.
^ Wo pron.pily obtain IT. R. and Foreign ^
^ Send model, sketch or photo ol invention for 1
f frvoroport on patentability. For (roc boo it, c
f How to RccurcTS ? HE 15 j| Dfc'O v, rite (
I at,. >
!^ry(ASHII|
THE NEED OF COURTESY.
It I<i to KtifilncM* mid Socloly WUnC
Oil It to Ilarliiaerjr.
If youuk people, especially lu small
towns, would form "courtesy clubs" or
graft tlds Idea upon existing orgnnizntlons,
It would result in great advantage
not only to tbe young people belonging
to such associations, but also
to the towns themselves.
We 11 nd a great many men and women
side tracked all along the pathways
of life because they were not
taught the value of good maimers and
of a line, gracious courtesy in their ?
youth. The result Is that they have
grown up hard and coarse and repulsive
in manners nnd have not been ablo
to win favor or attract trade or business.
In other words, their bad manners
and repulsive ways have kept
them back and handicapped their careers.
It is astonishing how tine manners
and politeness in children develop Into
....... imiiuinnn'ss in manuooa
and woman hood. Other things being
equal the employee who is selected for
advancement is the one with good manners,
a tine, gracious demeanor, a good
presence. These qualities are the best
kind of capital, even better than #
uionoy.
Everywhere we see young men and
young women drawing big salaries
largely because of their superior politeness.
The tine mannered are wanted
everywhere as superintendents, as
salesmen, as traveling representatives,
as clerks, as private secretaries or ns
credit men. In fuct, agreeable deportment
Is the one Indispensable quality
sought after everywhere.
There is nothing else which will so
quickly open the door to opportunities,
to society, to the hearts of all.
Courtesy Is to business and society
what oil Is to machinery. It makes
things run smoothly, for It eliminates
the jar and friction and the nerve racking
noise.?Success.
J r
THE PIANO TUNER.
Why lie Left lit it llnrry After Flm*
lxlilnv lltn Job.
A lady stepped into a piano war?room
recently to engage a tuner, but
before d.dng so Insisted upon the strongest
assurance that the tuner was responsible.
She was so determined that
the manager became curious to know. "
the reason for her disbelief In the reliability
of tuners. She gave her ex- *
pcrienee with the last tuner she had.
unu m:.> is tne story ns she told It: 1
lie had liuished tuning the piano
when tie looked up and said:
"Your instrument was In awful condition.
You ought to have sent for mo
sooner."
"It was tuned only threo months
ngo."
"Then the man who did it certainly;
didn't know his business."
"No?" " - \
"No, ma'am. He had better be doing
street cleaning than tuning pianos.
Why, my dear madam, a delicate instrument
like a piano needs lingers
equally delicate to handle it, combined
with an oar of unerring accuracy. Tho
individual who attempted to tune this
Instrument last evidently possessed
neither of these. In fact, I am free to
say he did it more harm than good."
"Indeed."
"Indeed ho did. May I ask who It
was who so abused your Instrument?"
"It was yourself."
"Madam, you are wrong. I never
tuned a piano In this house before."
"Probably not, but you tuned that Instrument
nevertheless, or made a botch
of it in attempting to do so. It belongs
to Mrs. Jones, who sent It hero
while she is out of town. She told me
you always had tuned it and to send
for you when"?
But the unhappy man fled with such
haste ns to make his conttalls a good
substitute for a card table.?Philadcl
phia Musician.
When <!ic* Key* lluttlcd.
"ITa, ha!" laughed the whlto key.
"You are fearfully 'sharp* today."
"Well," retorted the accused one,
"I'd rather he 'A sharp' than 'B flat.'"
"Good gracious," shrieked the string,
"keep still! I'm highly strung, and my
pedal extremities are affected. I know
I shall break in 'pieces.' "
"So I note," murmured the bass.
"I'm cleft in twain," moaned the staff.
"My trouble Is trebled since young
hopeful began to play," said the hook
for beginners.
"It's all right while he is only 'A minor,'
hut wait until lie begins to be 'A
major.*"
And they all started to have a good
"time" with tiie metronome. ? New
York Times.
SrnxIMo to tlie Lnnt.
A good story is told of a lute Dublin
doctor famous for his skill and also his
nitui, nu t ui iiiuiicy. no una a constant
anil enriching patient In nil olil
shopkeeper. This olil lady was terribly
rheumatic and unable to leave her
sofa. During the doctor's visits sho
kept a one pound note In her hnnd,
which duly went Into Dr. C.'s pocket.
One morning he found her lying dead
on the sofa. Sighing deeply, the doctor
approached, and, taking her hand in
his, he saw the lingers closed on his
foe.
"Poor thing!" he said as he pocketed
it! "Sensible to the last!"
Pullltm Ont (tip regi.
Susie, aged four, had been out in the
country on a visit. On her return she
urged her mother to let her keep a
cow.
"Put, Susie," said the mother, "there
la 110 one hero to tako care of the cow
and milk it" #
"Oh, yes. I'll do that, mamma."
"Can you milk a cow? How do yoa
do It?"
"Oh, I know how. I'll Juat pull the
pegs out like the man does."?Llpplit*
colt's. . ... . .
s