The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, November 27, 1903, Image 3
f 4
Oh C?s*s Only 25 cents
moll 26 coata to C. ?
.??. C. JT. MOFFKTT- Dear Doctor:
Mounters) to our little fjrand child ivil
Were almost tnaj/icaf, and certainly *>*
ice overused. Yours reru tr\
iXow Dlshoy Southern JScthodist Cfcat
The I.ontlon Hum Drlrcr,
Catch a driver when a chinisy drayman
lias I'oulcd his wheels or blocked
his way or wlton n rival bus has stolen
a march on lilin. Then you will understand
the Loudonor'8 boast that the
cockney is the readiest, tlie?wlttiest, of
all his majesty's subjects. The tongue
Is not his only weapon. I remember
once starting from the Mansion House
f on a bus the driver of wliicb had been
maddened by some remark of the con-'
ductor 011 the bus Just in front of blm.
The two belonged to rival companies
and were .traveling the same route.
They talked it over with pungency and
Best from the Mansion House to St.
Paul's. At the top of Ludgate hill, one
of the regular stopping places, the driver
made up his mind he could stand it
v no longer. Ho got down from his sent
and pommeled the conductor heartily
for two minutes. It refreshed him so
much that at the next stopping plado
he did It ngaln. By the time Charing
Cross was reached it had become n
habit witli him. Whenever the buses
stopped there would be a brisk setto,
the Intervals between the halts being
filled with an exchange of prophecies
as to what would happen at the next.
?Sydnoy Brooks in Harper's Mnga'
sine.
Which Wmm HIn Wire?
A certain Turk, according to rumor.
ifrns onc?~jnnrricd to a veiled lady In
wblte In t*e presence of the sultan. As
soon as the ceremony was concluded
the bride mysteriously disappeared.
The groom was led into an adjoining
room, where stood twelve ladles all
dressed In white, but without veils.
"Choose from the twelve," exclaimed
the sovereign, "her that is your bride."
As the man had never seen her face the
commonp bewildered him. "If you
tnnlce a mistake," ndded his majesty,
"your life shall pay the forfeit." The
poor man walked up and down the row
of beauties, but saw nothing whatever
to aid his choice. "You have only a
minute left," yelled the sultan in anger;
"choose at once." Ten of the Indies, he
noticed, gave him nothing else than a
stony stare. One of them .frowned, the
other smiled. "The frowning one," he
j thought, "Is my bride, for she express4
es hejL displeasure and lmputience at
my ignorance. "No," he said to hlm-JB
self, "It .must be the smiling one, for
Bp she desires to invite me to her." After
debating the subject in lifc miml until
his time was up he boldly made a selectloBc&om
the.two.'" He. was successful.
lie bad regained his bride. Which
was'sh'el the one who frownfed or the
one who smiled?
L nu.il Handicraft)!.
George 111., when not engaged In performing
the operations which had so
muclvjo do in gaining for him the
popular nickname of "Farmer George,"
amused himself at one period of his
long life with the making of buttons
nnd nttnlnmi n' vorv w?nnt>l?lilo ilnnran
of skill iu tlic manufacture of the different
varieties then most In fashion.
George IV., his son ami successor,
affected another sort of unklngly distraction
for Idle hours and particularly
prided himself on the perfection with
which he could "cut out" a pair of
breeches. Outside the glorified ranks
of the fashionable outfitters of the day,
the dtultzes, the Meyers, the Schweltsera
and Dandrons, only Beau Brummel
w.ak thought to bo bis rival at the
shears, but for elegance and accuftfey
and" style the king considered himself
the Beau's undoubted superior. The
unfortunate I.ouis XI. was an expert
locksmith, with a general turn for
. mechanics, and spent whole days in his
ferge, as did one of ids predecessors
on the throne of France. Louis XIII.
GO TO THE RESCUE.
Don't Wait Tifl it's Tpo
Late.?Follow the Example
of a Union
Citizen.
Rescue the aching back. If it keej>s
on aching troublo comes. Backache is
kidney ache. If you neglect the kidney's"
warning. Look out for urinary
trouble?diabetes. This Union citizen
will show you how to go to the rescue.
J. H< Lindsey. shoemaker, with business
on Main Street, and residing on
Spring Street, says, "1 have been
troubled with n very lamt; back for
quite a while. The kid net icretione
were dark and full of bricfi jst sediment
and caused me great inconvenience,
especially at night, by causing me
to get out o? bed so often. My back
* pained from my hips to my shoulder
Dledes with a constant pain which at
night would awaken me. I did everything
I knew of, put on plasters and
liniments, used bottle after hottle of
medicine, but nothing helped me so
much until I got Doan's Kidney Tills at
Holmes Pharmacy. They acted like a
charm and after using them the first
. day I went to bed and rested splendidly !
wK all night. Since using Doan's Kidney
7 Pills I have not had the backache. I
also tried Doan's Ointment for itching
hemorrhoids from which I had suffered
for years. It is impossible to express
the suffering I endured, but this wonderful
medicine gave mo instant relief.
I alto used it for a sore which it completely
cured. I would not bo without
^ Doan's Ointment if it cost ten times
what it does."
Ifor sale by all dealers. Price 60c per
b<J*. Fcster-Milburn Co,, Buffalo, N. Y.,
osmnta tf\T fhA YTnito<l ttlolAa' T>/>
r.UJC Ogvaam V..W VMI?VU MVAiVW AVtmember
the name?DOAN'S?and take j
ETT'g JBBB3 Cores Cholara-lnfsnlem,
m Diarrhoea,Dysentery, and
H I m A r Bowel Troubles of
B % Children of Any Age.
" MFffllJ Aids Digestion, Regulalej
0WD?R5)be2j the Bowels, J. trcngihenj
; st Draggisls,
I. MOFFETT. M. D.. ST. LOUI3, MO.
Columbus, Ha., Ana. HI, MH7H.
We pave your Tl'tlTtiTXA (I 'evthtng
?#? the hawlest resultm. The e/j'eetc
ore eatiefacfory than from hiity
uly, JOSrt'II S. KEY,
rcn.) Pastor of St. J'aul Churchy
Origin of tl?? I'eacli.
Notbing is now more universally accepted
than the fact (hat the peach is
an improved variety of the almond.
The almond has a thin shell around
the stone, which splits open and shows
tltb stone when mature. This outer
skin has simply become fleshy in the
pencil, so that it is all that gives It its
specific character. It seems now clear
from Investigation In the h.'story of
ancient Babylon that in their gardens,
nearly 4,000 years ago. the peach was
cultivated then as it Is now.
It must have been many years before
this that the peach was improved from
the almond, and this fact goes to show
the great antiquity of the fruit. Possibly
gardening in some respects, at
least so far as it relates to many of
our cultivated fruits, was as far advanced
0.000 or 8,000 or perhaps 10,000
years back as it is today.
^Phoenicians, many thousands of years
ago, as Is proved by the records, had in
their gardens almonds, apricots, bananas,
citrons, ligs, grapes, olives,
peaches, pomegranates, and even sugar
cane was in extensive cultivation. Certainly
tliis shows how far advanced
these nations were in garden culture
many years ago.
Speoohen of Men.
You may search through the annals
of all time, and tho speeches of men
will tell tho passions of the periods
during which they nourished. The
speeches of the ancients that have
been preserved through the ages present
to us our strongest and most important
history of the past. They constitute
the living sentiment of tl)c literature
of fame. In all the mighty
tumults of war, the tranquil periods of
peace and tho convulsive shocks of revolution
the orator stands in clear relief
as impressive and enduring as the soldier.
Tho great speeches of the great
men of antiquity are in the mouth of
the schoolboy. lie cannot know Greece
without Demosthenes. lie cannot know
Rome without Cicero. Still the stenographers
of those centuries were unlike
the stenographers of this, and so it will
always remain a lasting regret that
many of the most brilliant utterances
of ancient oratory and wit have never
been recorded.?Schoolmaster.
A Cat anil a Monne.
Many, says a contributor, are distressed
by the way in which a eat
"plays" with a mocsjcbcforc killing It.
That tho mouse does not suffer so much
as might he expected is proved by cerfffln
facts told me by a fHcnd a short
time ago. Her cat after catching a
mouse and "playing" with it for some
time left it to go and eat some meat in
a plate on the floor. To my friend's
surprise, the mouse followed in spite
of a broken leg and fed for awhile out
of tlie? same dish, tho eat occasionally
pushing tho mouse aside when it came
too close. When both had finished, the
cat ate up his companion, who evidently
feared death as little as the condemned
fnurderors who, we are often
told, "ate a hearty breakfast1 on the
morning of their execution."
- leal Ion.
The primary object of mastication Is
to break up the food so as to facilitate
the swallowing of it and. still more Im
portnnt, to insure Us intimate admixture
with the digestive juices, not only
within the mouth, hut throughout the
entire digestive tract. Mastication has.
however, other important and far
reaching effects. Thus it promotes the
flow of saliva and. when properly performed.
secures a duo insalivation of
the food; it increases the quantity of
alkaline saliva passing into the stomach;
It stimulates the heart and circulation,
and it finally influences the nutrition
of the jaws and their appendages
by stimulating tlie local blood and
lymph circulation.
WnnhlnKtoii mitl the Twin*.
The Hartford Courant demolishes
one of the numerous Washington traditions.
George Washington, Father
of His Country, stopped overnight
once at the home of Oliver Ellsworth.
Tradition lias it that on that auspicious
occasion ho took tlit? twin Ellsworth
boys in his lap nml was found in the
nursery dandling them on his knees
and sinking to theni the "well known
hymn called "The Darby Ram." But
the visit of General Washington was in
1780, and the twins were born In 1701.
Flnli Floor For Food,
The fisheries represent one of Norway's
chief industries, and quantities
of fish are sold at very low rates, particularly
during summer. One way in
which these are utilized Is by means
of an Invention which quickly dries
and pulverizes the flesh of fresh flsh.
The resulting product, called flsh flour,
Is easy to transport from one place to
another and has great nutritive vdlue.
Those Dear Girl Friend*.
Miss Utaplace? I had my pictures
taken last week, and today 1 got some
of them. They are Just as natural as
life.
Mlu ?
ivdiuu?nrTunrmrc wi/, uui juu ut-ui
up cheerfully under misfortune! Aren't
you going to even bring suit or anything??Bnltlmore
American.
Pauled.
Miss Sarah reads: " 'Rev. Mr. Marlgold
taken to the hospital, a victim of
locomotor ataxia.' How dreadful! I
wonder whether the poor man was run
over or whether the thing bleW tip with
him?"?Harper's Monthly.. *. / .
SitV- * *
?i *e - txai?a??
Roughs J
"My wife had a deep-seated cough |
for thtee years. I purchased two E
bottles of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, I
large size, and it cured her coni'
pletely."?J.H.Burgc,Macon,Col.
Probably you know of
cough medicines that relieve
little coughs, all
coughs, except deep ones I
The medicine that has
cured the worst of deep
I coughs for 60 years is
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. |
Three sires: 25c., 50c., $1.00. jjj
Consult your doctor. I f he says take it, I
then do an he nays. If he tells you not to I
take it, then don't tako it. liokiiowt*. |
An inactive liver prevents any I
cough medicine from doing its best E
work. Ayer's Pills are liver pills. I
J. C. AVER CO., Lowell, Mass. |
Jnut Laugh.
As the pen is sometimes mightier
than the sword, so tlie laugh is on occasion
as powerful as in eloquence the
spoken word.
"There are many different kinds of
conversational accomplishments," remarked
a man well up in the ways of
the world, "and I have paid due attention
to the cultivation of such as lie
within iny range. Great is language?
great, Indeed?and beautiful withal.
Next to my limited ability with words,
however, I rnnk my faculty of using
the smile or the laugh, as the case may
be.
"I don't mean pleasantry and mirth,
as domestic social graces, hut as defensive
btislness artillery. Of course a
man's first impulse when another misguided
man makes a palpable move to
'do him up* or asks some unreasonable
and preposterous business favor is to
' enter on wordy opposition, strenuous
naturally and perhaps violent. This, 1
have learned, is waste of nervous force
and allows argument 011 the part of the
unfriendly man who is trying to make
the touch. The stronger, weapon Is to
laugh?just laugh. Utter not a word,
110 matter how much the other may
say, hut just keep on laughing. I've
routed many deep laid, dishonest
schemes with a good, hearty laugh. Try
It."?Detroit Free Press.
Smelling Oat Dunk Illll.i. m
If a bill must be sent In a le'^r the
safest plan Is to roll It tightly into the
shape of a lamp lighter and lay it in
the fold of'the sheet inclosed. Arranged
In that fashion, the fnct that
It is money cannot well be distinguished
by the "feel." A thread with a knot
' at the end will not be so likely to fetch
n telltale fragment of the fiber paper
when drawn by means of a needle
through the envelope, and the smell of
It will be less perceptible. So peculiar
Is the effluvium belonging to bank or
treasury notes that experts at the bureau
of enfrlflvlntr snv flint tlinw fmi
distinguish theni when sealed in envelopes
by the nose every time. A thief
oneo showed to government detectives
who had caught him that lie could pick
out wliile blindfolded from a pile of
400 Setters every one of seven which
contained paper cash merely by scent.
An Enflrlixh Blection Experience.
An Englishman relates the following
election experience: "I was taking part
in canvassing a constituency without
a representative. I was announced
as a speaker at a mass meeting held
in a large field within shadow distance
of a fuinous cathedral. One of the
other orators delivered the most impressive
speech I have ever hoard. lie
sjiokc of the struggle of the poor, how
they had to bear their burden, lie
made me almost cry by his eloquence.
He talked about ids own little home,
which lie only Just managed to keep
together by 'the sweat of ids brow.'
'Who is he?' I asked. 'Well,' replied
my friend, the candidate, 'lie is known
In his own town as "Popshop Dick"
because he is a prosperous pawnbroker.'"
Sweetheart Al>hc*y.
There Is in Galloway, Scotland, an
ancient ruin known as Sweetheart abbey.
Within its ivy covered, storm
battered walls lies buried the affectionate
and devoted Dorvorgill, with
the heart of her husband, John Ualiol,
embalmed upon her breast. Lovely in
their lives, in death til^y are not divided.
The crumbling masonry is still
and must ever be a romance in its
symbols of dentil and decay, telling every
day, as it lins for OUO years, the
thrilling story of a woman's tender
love and devotion.
Be fit for more than the tiling you
are ntew doing.
Oures Blood Poison, Cancer, Ulcers
If you have offensive pimples or
eruptions, ulcers on any part of the
body, aching hones or joints, falling
Vinir mupony natnli au uuollpn 1/1:111(154.
skin itches an<^ burns, sore lips or gums,
eating, fostering sores, sharp, gnawing
pains, then you suffer from serious blood
poison or the beginnings of deadly cancer.
You may be permanently cured
by taking Botanic Blood Balm (B. B.
B.) made especially to euro the worst
blood and sain diseases. Henls every
sore or ulcer, even deadly cancer, stoj*
all aches and pains and reduces all
swellings. Botanic Blood Balm oures
all maligant blood troubles, such as
eczema, scabs and scales, pimples, running
sores, carbuncles, scrofula. Druggists,
$1. To prove it cures, sample of
Blood Balm sent freo and prepaid by
Writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Describe trouble and freo medical advioe
sent in sealed letter, F. C. Duke.
Disastrous Wrecks.
Carelessness is responsible for many j
a railway wreck' ami the same causes
are making human wrecks of sufferers
from Throat anil Lung troubles, Hut
since the advent of 1 ?r. King's New
Discovery fsr Consumption, Coughs
and Colds, even the worst eases can be
eured, and hopeless resignaticn is no
longer necessary. Mrs. Lois < rngg, of
Dorchester, Mass., is one of many
whose life was saved by Dr. King's
New Discovery. This great remedy is
guaranteed for all Throat and Lung
diseases by F, C, Duke, Druggist,
l'rice 50c, and $1.00. Trial bottles free.
* The Gardener In Old Home.
He literally grew colon navies; lie fas'a
loued obelisks of box, cypress or ilex.
He not only flattered his lord and u as
tor by inscribing bis nam in odorii.r
ons herbs or gorgeous flowers Unit ru >.rtled
the garden with ocea ional lours
de force, but lie actually trimmed trees
Into family portraits or oven tN> : of
historical characters, lie transformed
bushes and thick foraged shrubs into
the fantastic likeness of ships, lions,
bears and birds. And those rather dogenerate
"conceits" and extravagances
met with profound appreciation and
were rewarded with increase of wages
by the same individual who, having
tired of mere gladiatorial lights with
wild beasts In the Coliseum, only dorived
real thrills from such uncanny
performances as fights between women
and dwarfs or women with each other.
Pliny says the gardeners were tlie best
paid of all workers.?Ct. Clair Baddeley
in Nineteenth Century.
Not a Sick Day Since,
"I was taken severely sick with kidney
trouble. I tried all sorts of medicines,
none of which relieved me. One
day I saw an ad. of your Fleotrio Putters
and determined to try that.
After taking a few doses I felt relieved
and have not seen a sick day
since. Neighbors of mine have been
cured of .Rheumatism. Liver and Kidney
troubles ami General Debility.
This is what B. F. Bass, of Fremont,
N. C-, writes. Only 5t?e, at F. C. Duke,
Druggist.
Quickly Solved.
"Yes, for n year and a half she was
In doubt as to whether she loved him
enough to marry hint or not."
"And how did she succeed in finding
out?"
"There was another girl who got to
acting as if she wanted him."?Chicago
Record-Herald.
The Menus.
Old Lawyer?Why do you feel that
your client will lose his ease? Have
you exhausted every means at your disposal
toYoung
Lawyer?No. but I have exhausted
all the means at his disposal.
Keep In the sunshine and go where
men and women are honeful. if it
rniu? keep enough sunlight in your
heart to hist till tho sun beams again.?
Schoolmaster.
J _
A Runaway Bicycle.
Terminated with an ugly cut on the
leg of J. B. Orner, Franklin (irove, III.
It developed a stubborn ulcer, unyielding
to Doctors and remedies for four
years. Then Bucklen's Arnica Salve
cured. It's just as good for burns,
scalds, skin erruptions and Files. 25c,
at F. (J. Duke's Drug Store.
The SutlnnvNe Unity.
A Sudanese baby when dressed up lu
Its best clothes Is probably the most
uncomfortable infant in the world. The
cont or outer garment which fashion
dictates should be worn reaches to its
very heels. It is of heavy velvet, hanging
in many folds. This in turn is
adorned with countless buttons and
bangles of brass, considerably adding
to its weight. Its cap in turn is of the
same material, similarly decorated and
doubtless equally uncomfortable.
Tliv Cradle.
l'eter Cooper luul llfty-flvo years of
domestic happiness and morning fire
building- Mr. Cooper -was an ingenious
man. When a cradle became necessary
in Ids home, as was sometimes
the ease years ago, l'eter rigged a self
rocking cradle, with a fan attachment.
Afterward he patented tlie device and
sold the patent. There were many opportunities
"In those days."
Doesn't Respect Old Age.
It's shameful when youth fails to
show proper - respect for old age, but
just the contrary in the case of king's
.New bife l'ills. They cut oil' maladies
no matter how severe and irrespective
of ohl age. Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Fever,
Constipation all yield to this peil'cfct
pill, -'oc, at T. C. Duke's Drug Store.
The Vault of St. .Mteiiuii"h.
The most interesting place of pilgrimage
in Dublin is St. Mk-han'a church,
where the organ is still to he seen upon
which Ilandel is said to have composed
his "Messiah." In the graveyard is tiie
last resting plaee < !' flehert Kmniet.
and the vault of St. Mh-han's provides
a more gnwsonie thriil than the
morgue. The sexton lifts an Iron d >or
and descends a few rude steps, carry
iijk 11 ngui. wiuioui wi.irii tit" piiiec
wovld In* pilch dark. Yon follow nnil
find yourself in n narrow pa: sago, from
which Cell-like reerssaa belonging to
different fnmiiii's branch oil'. Whether
li \< owing lo the extreme dryness of
lii.' surrouh.'iny.s cr to wine ibjvterioiri
property of the pine". li:.' j>" iei s.; of.decay
has h.vn arrested, and the features
of persons dead for two centuries may
he rooogni/. d from antlcntic portraits,
i'crhaps llie strangest thing about the
vault is the fact licit, apart from the
weird sensation, there is nothing offensive
In the surroundings.?London Tatler.
Stops Cough and Works off the Cold
Laxative Bromo-Quhdne Tablets cure
a cold in one day. No cure, no pay,
pi toe 25 cents. u-ly.
? > <
a. ,-w ' Vl
-*"<$* ? .
m.
^OENT
Crown and Bridge
Work a Specialty.
Master's Sale. I
State of South ('arolina, ) Couit of ComCounty
of Union. J mon Pleas. J
Medora Garner, as Executrix of last
will of .J. T. Garner, deceased, plaintiff,
vs. E
Bailey, et nl.
It) ttlh'tlir-ce to au onler made in
above stated case, I will sell at Union,
l*'foio t:?? Court House door, during the
l?-ual li mr of sale, on s.iKsday, Dec. 7th,
UK>3, the following lands, viz:
AH that lot, piece and parcel of land, j
lying, being and situate in Union Coun- _
ty, State of South Carolina, containing ^
one hundred and twenty-live acres, *
more or less, in Pincknoy township,
bounded on the East by lands of W. N.
Garner, on South by lands of estate of
T. T. Garner, on West, by lands of Dan- q
iel Inman, and on the North by lands of
Smith Wood and known as the B. B.
Bailey home place.
Terms of s.rle:
One third cash, balance in two equal
annual installments, at one and two
years, with interest from day of sale, secured
by Imnd of purchaser, and mortgage
of the premises.
47 31. C. II. Pkakk, M ister.
Master's Sale. R
Suite of South Carolina. ) CnnrtnfOom
Countv of Union. i nron Pleas.
.]. J. Wilbum, Plaintiff,
vs tj
Mary Myrtlo Wilburn, ot al. _
I !i obedience to an order made in the
above staled ease, I will sell at Union,
befo:e the court house door. (luiing the
1? pa1 hours of sale, on salexlay, December
7th, ltitKi, the following lands viz: v
AM that ceitain piece, parcel or plantation
ol Ia:ul lying, being ai d situate
in Cross Keys township, in the county of
Union, and St ate aforesaid, and bounded
ly lands of J. A Wilburn, James Bet- .
sdt, Wiley Mmphy (state aid others,
a- it containing two hundred and three al
ae:cs, ir.ore or less, and being the same ?
tra'rt of land of which II. Wilburn, deceased,
tezed and possessed.
TERMS OK SALE:
One-third cash, balance on a credit of
one and t\ o years vith interest from ?j
day of sale, secured hy bond of putchaser ^
and mortgage of premises sold. Pur- u
(ilaser has privilege of pay iug all cash.
Purchaser to pay for papeis and record
ing. C. II. Peake,
48-3t Master.
Muster* s Sale. n
State of South Carolina, ) Coutt r.f Com- o<
County of Union. } noon Pleas. Cl
Vivian A. Giaham and Lillian J. Bet- aj
sill, Plaintiff,
vs. ?, ~
G. Thomas Hollis, ami Oliu Hollis, a
Defendants I
In ol> dience to an order made in I
above vluted case, 1 will s?ll at Union. \
before t?ie Court. House door, during the
legal hour of sale, on Sales-1 iy, December
7th, lblKl, the following I rials, viz: *
All ill it certain tr.-et, of land lying. ,
being and situate in ''ros< K-y.s Town- *
.-hip. I' nil n County, af-d St a'?? aforesaid. V
ci litaiiiiiig tv\o huialr< <1 and t hree (18-100 R
acres, nroie or less, bounded i>y land* of
Thomas Rasters, lauds late of the estate
of J. () Bet sill, deceased, acd others,
VI id liief. t'linaiii Irmi >.? A i?. i?>~
- ...WW ...w '? * . ? IUV>W II'/. -T All ilio
division of lands of .Jason Norman, deceased.
Terms of sale:
Ore third cast), bal u.ce on a credit of x1
one and two \ears with into:est from day
( i -ale. m euu d by bond of puichaser, and w
wrb na.i!s?;ige of piemisen sold. Purch
.ser e, m p iy all cash, and must piy
lor pnpeis ard recording.
C. H. Pkakk, Master.
Master's Sale.
S ale of Sou1 h Carolina, 1 Court of Coro('ouidy
i! Union. ) mon Pieas.
.Iuha il. Lipscomb, tl al, Plaintiff,
vs
Leila B. Brown, et id.
In obedience to an order in?le in
almve stated eace, I will so'l at Union,
b foie ilie ' onrl House door, dming ibe
i* iral liour i I sale, on s.i:e.-day, Dec. 7tb,
IDO.'J, the following kinds, v /.:
All those lands, parcels and tra Is of
land situate and being in the county of ?
Union and said Sla e, and said land
known as lots Nos. 1 and 7 in the division
of the estate of G. T. Meng, deceased.
Said lands will be sold in two tracts, j *\
plats of which can l?e seen at the AI;is- 1'i
tei 'at lllcc
1 bums of sai.k:
One-half cash, the balance payable in
one year from date of sale, secured by
bond of purchaser and loortoaira of
premise. C. II. I'kake,
47-.'b Master.
Notice to Trespassers.
All persons arc hereby forbidden to j
trespass on any r.f the lands of the '
undersigned, either by walking, rid- |
ing, hunting, fishing, cutting timber,
or otherwise, and for each ofTense
will be prosecuted to the full extent
of the luw. \V. T. Jones,.
45-41 L. J). Jeter.
Final Discharge.
police is hereby given that Addio
B. Games, Guardiau cf the Estate of |
Charles W. Haines, minor, has ap- J
plied to Jason M. Greer, Judge of
Probate, in and for the County of
Union, for a final discharge as such
Guardian. 0
It Is Ordered, That the 8th day of
December, A. D. J9011, he fixed for
hearing Of Petition, and a final settlement
of said Estote.
Jason M. Greer,
1- rv ^ -
rrouiite .) uage U- U., ti. U.
Pub!lih?d in Union Timbs Novem- ^
ber (>, 190U. 15 ttOd ^
/ r , . " ,< ^ ..
x'- ;g
r-. ' viii.JLkJ HBBII UH mam
ii-in? ' v mm
11 A. I
Office Bank Building
Union, S. O
)r. Alexander S. Foster,
Surgeon Dentist,
ONESVILLE, SOUTH CAROUNA.
Rooms over J. J^KiVlman's Store.
CROWN TORHENCE. M. 0.
Office Hours:
Special attention to diseases of
lye, Ear, Nose and Throat. 25-8m
>EASE & HAMBLIN,
-VLAWYERS.^
)ffice Opposite Court House
J. CLOUGH WALLACE.
ATOKNEY AT LAW.
Rooin 12 up stairs Foster Bulding.
ALPII K. CARSON. H. L. SCAIFB.
CARSON & SCA1FE,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
Special attention given to real eatte
and collections.
S MEANS BEATY,
ATTORNEY- AT-LAW.
To. 3, Law Range.
Money to Loan*
I have money to loan in amounts of
300 and upwuuls on improved farms
t> 7 per cent interest. No oomlission
except a reasonable attorney fee
>r preparing necessary papers.
39-1 y. V. E. DkPass.
To Cure a Cold In One Day
'ake Laxative Btomo (Quinine Tablets.
.11 druggisN refund the money if it fails
)cure.- E. W. Grove's signature on
ich b >x. 23o. 6-ly
RTP'A'N'S Tablets doctors
nd a ?ood prescription for
tankind.
The 5-cent packet is enough for usual
tensions. The family bottle (00 cents)
Mitalns a supply for a year. Alldrugist
seli them. tf
D0RTRACT0R3'
^BUILDERS'^
WILL SUPPLIES.
as??Mt Clf
1 k7p?. *o4i,WfttU Tiau twill, K
c??l Wlra ?>"?i M??ib ?< ?, BiWIh
ud .'Mta, BoriiU Ottk, Aula Ml
?f/?? ? - - - -
ombiroikon ranimu cat
19'nawv njL.
bis signature is on every box of the genuine
Laxative Brcn<o=Qiiiaioe Tablets
us Teipeiiv that rzirea n cold in dim (lav
to write l"i nr in i 1< nti il !i tier before applying
for i ntent; it tnay lie worth money.
We promptly obtain U. S. and Foreign
PATENTS
and TRADE MARKS or return EN" I
TIRE attorney's fee. Send model, sketch I
or photo and wo send an IMMEDIATE
FREE report on patentability. We gWe
the nest legal service and advice, and on*
charges are moderate. Try us.
SWIFT & CO.,
Patent lawyers,
Opp. U.S. Patent Office,Washington, D.C.
MM? IMMJMM????????P?I
horse nnd poor
ins bit r ii 1'i.n is ttio
worst klii t of ;v com- p?
Eureka v *sp|k
Harness Oil
not only makes tlio harness unit th? |J1?
honw l<? i; lietter, lint makes tl>. Ijj^k
leather soft ami ('liable, puts itin con- |i\%
Hi i j/ . ilili.in l > lost- twicn as lone Ml
iJtlMwi " >l "r,""?riiy would. /BA
jffljjffLfl'ii(i ' in ? ? ??n
Horse a
Chance t jmrn/S/
)r. R. M. Dorsey,
Specialist
n diseases of the EYE and EAR
V
?and? V
OPTICIAN.
Successor to II. R. GoodelT. \
ilexandor's Music Hall, Spartan
urg, S. C. 47-ljr.