The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, August 23, 1912, Page PAGE 3, Image 3
Bp- *- /
f EVERY
1 of Cheap and Adultei
into Your Home Em
Doctor's Bills and
Decreases the
No concern ever ha
the same class of Good
* than we sell them and
Every laborer, ever;
ery business of whate*
ing profit and that is a
motto, "Live and let I
practice by selling the
dise known to the tra
less, than the ordinar
where.
Why not have the
more. We gladly give
service, and the most a
Walter Baker's Qua
Til 5 1 ? ir i
r ieiscnmann s I easts
Coffees and Teas are
any price.
We are offering Pur
Pure Country Butter <
and Mountain Produc<
tatoes, Onions, and Ci
The very best selec
Barley, Seed Red Clo1
i i Vetch, Essex Rape, Tt
entine Beans, and Mu
When you want Hi
and choice Side and Bi
guaranteed and fresh
THE UNION
THE PURI
Phone 100
irv - t. %
IPSB
Dm
43 ^
IX IS
Mn mfltfoV Vimxr +ho
lay out that cozy horr
have not got what yoi
we can get it for yoi
such needs as yours h
for your ambitions an
of home come true qui
this section of the cou
Come in and let us t;
* not buy. Just let us 1
you?then go away an
do not fear the results
ALL SUJ
Porch and Lawn Swin
Porch Shades and Ha
Cream Churns, will b
the next ten days.
BAI
FURNITURE <
LEADING H0M1
BU
li
ARTICLE
rated Food that You Take
iangers Health, Increases
I Increases rather than
i Living Expenses.
s, can, or ever will sell you
Things to Eat any Cheaper
stay in business.
y professional man and evver
class is entitled to a livII
we ask. We believe in the
jive." We put our belief in
; highest class of Merchantde
for the same, often for
y kind can be bought elsebest
when it costs you no
you the best goods, the best
appreciative attention.
lifxr rv, A/l/\ln4-AC1 r* I I!
ntj vuuvuiatcs anu
i, and Chase & Sanborns'
not excelled any where for
e Cream Cheese every day;
of the finest grade, Country
5, fresh and wholesoYne, Poibbage.
ted Seed Rye, Seed Winter
yer, Crimson Clover, Hairy
irnip Seed all varieties, Valstard
?eed.
ims and Breakfast Bacons
Mooto irnn no n rvnf fU.m I
wiv lijj juu van get tiiciil
from
GROCERY CO.
2 FOOD STORE.
L. L. Wagnon, Mgr.
^
wtlncK
MT' 11V111V
Melfue
EASY!
two of you have planned to
le, we can help you. If we
i want?an unlikely event?
t. Long experience of iust
as given us a fellow feeling
d we can make your dream
cker than anv other store in
ntry.
alk it over today. You need
iell you what we can do for
d talk it over together. We
i.
dMER GOODS
gs, Screen Windows, Vudor
m mocks, Refrigerators, Ice
e sold at reduced prices for
LEY
& LUMBER CO.
t
E FURNISHERS AND
ILDERS.
\
Therefore, I Tell You?Watch!
(This poem is going the rounds of
the religious papers, ascribed to
"Anon." Who wrote it?) r
At even, or at midnight, or at the
cock-crowing, or in the morning.
It may be in the evening,
When the work of the day is done,
And you have time to sit in the twilight
And watch the sinking sun.
While the long, bright day dies slowly
Over the sea.
And the hour grows quiet and holy
With the thought of me;
While you hear the village children
Passing along the street,
Among those thronging footsteps
May come the sound of my feet;
Therefore I tell you?Watch
By the light of the evening star,
When the room is growing dusky
As the clouds afar;
Let the door be on the latch
In your home,
For it may be through the gloaming
I will come.
I It may be when the midnight
Is heavy upon the land,
And the black waves lying dumbly
Along the sand;
When the moonless night draws close
And the lights are out in the house
And the watch is ticking loudly
When the fire burns low and red,
Beside the bed;
Though you sleep tired out, on your
couch,
Still your heart must wake and watch
In the dark room,
For it may be at midnight
I will come.
It may be at the cock-crow,
When the night is dying slowly
In the sky,
And the sea looks calm and holy,
Waiting for the dawn
Of the golden sun,
Which draweth nigh;
When the mists are on the valleys,
shading
i ne river's chill,
And my morning star is fading,
fading
Over the hill;
Behold! I say to you?Watch?
Let the door be on the latch
In your home.
In the chill before the dawning,
Between the night and morning,
I may come.
It may be in the morning,
When the sun is bright and strong
And the dew is glittering
Over the little lawn:
When the waves are laughing loudly
Along the shore,
And the birds are singing sweetly
About the door;
With a long day's work before you,
You rice uo with the sun,
\nd the neighbors come in to talk a
little
Of all that must be done;
But remember that I may be the next
To come in at the door,
To call you from your busy work
Forever more;
As you work your heart must watch,
For the door is on the latch ? .
In your room, Hyh
And it may be in the morning *
I will come.
Motorcycle Facts,
"Although many physicians are using
motorcycles in making balls and
consequently are enthusiastic in their
praise of the modern motorcycle, it
is a fact?strange as it may seem
upon first consideration?that the
motorcycle is bad for their business,"
said Lewis M. Rico, Harley-Davidson
dealer in Union.
"The motorcycle is the best tonic
known today. Nothing can compare
with the motorcycle in creating a
healthy appetite for good, wholesome
food and in stimulating the digestion
of food. I don't know of a single
motorcycle rider who does not eat
with the zest of a growing school
boy. Girls and women who ride motorcycles
boast appetites as good as
the men and boys.
"It is wonderful what the motorcycle
will do for any person who lacks
an appetite for nourishing food. I
know of nothing that can compare
with it. Golf, tennis, baseball, football,
hunting, fishing and other outdoor
sports 'put an edge' on the appetite
but the motorcycle seems to
make the stomach fairly shout out
loud for good, old-fashioned victuals.
Many riders have told me that they
feel so Rood they wish it was customary
to have six instead of three
meals a day.
"The best doctors welcome this appetite-stimulating
and health-producing
wonder of the present century.
Many of them are prescribing the motorcycle
for patients who are suffering
from lack of appetite, from nervousness
and from other disorders
that can be cured by exercises in the
open air. Is there any exercise in
riding a motorcycle? Yes; just
pnnncrh fa Ka honofininl uh'IKaii*- f
b? ? " ? ? ""?k
the rider.
"Ridng a motorcycle does not pro'vide
as much exercise as walking or
as much exercise as riding a horse.
But there is just enough exercise unconsciously
required to attain maximum
benefits for the rider. From
fifty to one hundred miles can be covered
on a motorcycle without unduly
tiring the rider. This is impossible,
of course, with even' a good saddle
horse. And at the end of the side
1 11-i. zi?iL.i At ?
vnc inuiurcyciiKb nnus mai> mere is
only one thing that he wants and that
is good food?and lots of it."
There are six candidates for the
legislature in Lancaster county.
Three have declared themselves for
Ira fe. Jones for governor; three are
non-committal.
Soldiy iest
(</??>
^unsryivAere^
Whitmlre Dots.
Whitmire, August 20.?Our mayor,
Mr. S. B. Sims, was painfully but not
fatally cut by JJob Brock a few days
ago. The friends of both parties
regret the affair. Mr. Sims is very
popular as mayor and citizen. The
cause of the trouble is unknown.
The Glenn-Lowry is having a half
dozen wells bored, hopig they will
prove to be artesian. From these
wells Whitmire will be supplied with
water. Then an ice plant will be
installed. We wish the ice plant were
here now as the political pot is hot.
The vote here will be divided.
There will not be much difference in
the vote for governor.
I attended a. Union county campaign
meeting recently and could
hardly hear the addresses of the candidates
for the question: "Are you for
Blease or Jones?" "Answer a fool
according to his folly" would have
been proper in such a case.
Would any good citizen go into office
with a collar on his neck branded
"Jones" or "Blease"? If so, he is unfit
for office.
Bill/ Gilliam, Dick Moblev and Will
Wilson, all from just across the river,
are candidates ior county commissioner.
If these men were in Newberry
they could get any office they
wanted.
Union county can boast of the pretgirls
in the Stfjbe as proven by
the last ball here .
The county campaign will be here
on the 24th. Governor Blease will be
here and a great crowd is expected.
Warren D. Suber will give a fine barbecue.
Music will be furnished by a
band from Columbia.
D. C. Bybee, teaming contractor
living as 669 Keeling Court, Canton,
111., is now well rid of a severe and
annoying case of kiUney trouble. His
back pained and he was bothered
with headaches and dizzy spells. "I
took Foley Kidney Pills just as directed
and in a few days I felt much
better. My life and strength seemed
to come back, and I sleep well. I am
now all over my trouble and glad to
recommend Foley Kidney Pills. Try
them. The Rice Drug Company.
Quick Work.
An idea of the possibilities of the
telephone in the rural districts may
be had from a recent experience in
Tift county. As soon as it was
learned that the army worm had made
its appearance, which was simultaneous
in opposite corners of the county
the secretary of the Tifton Chamber
of Commerce called up the manager
of the local exchange and had
him warn every farmer that could
be reached by telephone that the
worm had appeared and tell him what
preventive to use. As a result it is
said the situation in that county was
under control within two days. Tift
county has twelve farmers' telephone
lines, reaching every section of the
county and connecting nearly 200
homes.?The Morning News, Savannah,
Ga.
A Jones and Wilson Egg.
Mr. E. A. Holler, of the Rock Hill
Hardware Company, was exhibiting a
"Wilson and Jones" egg recently, the
same having been laid by a hen belonging
to his mother, Mrs. A. D. Holler.
The hen fruit was examined by
a large number of people and all
pronounced it something far out of
the ordinary.
Alongside with the freshly laid egg
was another egg laid by Mrs. Holler's
hen in 1892, a few months before Grover
Cleveland was elected to the Presidency
if the United States. As the
second egg is almost exactly like the
first one its appearance, Mr. Holler
says, pressages the election of Wood
row Wilso and Ira B. Jones.
The eggs have marks on one side
that looks as if the imorint of a sunflower
had been made on the shell
while it was soft. Both Sunuflowers
are distinct, there being ridges in the
place of the petals.?Rock Hill Herald.
QUALITYbetter
w $$
^ Buy it for ECOi
?one pound ea
? ?w
two of the ordit
ary kinds.
|\ THE REIL Y-TA YLOR CO.
Nmw Or It ant.
Notice of Special Term of Court tc
Dedicate New Court Hou??.
Notice is hereby given that th(
Chief Justice of the Supreme Courl
of South Carolina, upon the requesl
of the Union Bar, has ordered a spec
ial term of court of General Sessions
for Unipn county for one day only
first Monday in September, (.being
the second day of September), 1912
for the purpose of dedicating the nev
Court House. Judge Frank B. Garj
of Abbeville, who will hold the regu
lar term of court beginning the nex
day, will preside. The Grand Jurors
will please take notice artd are re
quired to be in attendance. No othei
jurors or witnesses will be requirei
to attend that day.
1 Frank . Peake,
Clerk of Court.
Union, S. C., Aug. 12. 1912.
Jerome Wilson stabbed Caesai
Shaw to death at Florence on Fridaj
night and then escaped?both ne
groes.
SUMMONS FOR RF.I IFF
(Complaint served)
State of South Carolina,
County of Union.
Court of Common Pleas.
B. M. Hill, Polly Bishop, Bird Hill
Sallie Stone, Nannie Duval, J. H
Hollis, W. J. Hollis, J. C. Hollis
Birdie Griffen, Sallie Geeger
Plaintiffs,
Against
Hiram Yarborough, Lewis Yarbo
rough, Rosanna Hill, T. E. Whit
ten, LeRoy Whitten, et al, chil
dren of T. E. Whitten and Mrs
C. J. Whitten, Defendants.
To the above-named Defendants ii
this action:
You are hereby summoned and re
quired to answer the complaint n
this action, a copy of which is here
with served upon you, and to serv?
a copy of your answer to the saic
complaint on the subscribers at theii
office at Spartanburg, S. C., withir
twenty days after the service hereof
exclusive of the day of such service
and if you fail to answer the com
filaint within the time aforesaid, tht
Maintiff in this action will apply i<
the Court for the relief demanded ir
the complaint.
R. B. Pasloy,
Plaintiffs' Attorneys
July 29, 1912.
To LeRoy Whitten and the othei
minor children of T. E. Whitter
and Mrs. C. J. Whitten, Tak*
Notice:
That unless you procure the ap
pointment of a guardian ad litem*t<
appear and defend this action on youi
behalf within twenty days after th<
service of this Summons and Com
plaint upon you, exclusive of the daj
of service, Plaintiff's will apply to 1
Frank Peak, Clerk of Court for Un
ion county, for an order appointmen
of a guardian ad litem to appear an<
defend this action on your behalf.
R. B. Pasloy,
31-Gt. .. Plaintiffs' Attorney
Final Discharge.
I Notice is hereby given that C. N
Lawson, Administrator of the Estat<
of William Lawson, deceased, has ap
plied to W. W. Johnson, Judge o:
Probate, in and for the County of Un
ion, for a final discharge as such ad
ministrator.
It is Ordered, that the 27th day o:
August, A. D., 1912, be fixed foi
hearing of Petition, and a final set
tlement of said Estate.
W. W. Johnson,
Probate Judge Union County
July 27, 1912. In the Union Times
31-4t.
Final Discharge.
Notice is hereby given that J. L
Jolly, Administrator, of the Estate o
Bell F. Jolly, deceased, has applied t<
W. W. Johnson, Judge of Probate, ii
and for the County of Unionj for i
final discharge as such Administra
tor.
It is ordered, That the 8th day o
August, A. D., 1912, be fixed for hear
ing of Petition and a final settlement
W. W. Johnson,
Judge of Prodgate for Union Co
Published in the Union Times. 28-4
-none
WOMY
uals
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Premier Carrier of the South
Schedules from Union, S. C.
WEST BOUND.
No. 3?For Spartanburg, Asheville
j and Knoxville, 2:2(5 a .m.
No. 9?For Spartanburg, Asheville,
Knoxville, Cincinnatti, Atlanta, Birminfrham
and points west, 9:20 a. m.
i 07 i: c- '
- ?v <iiv>iiii?i opcciai iu rtsncville,
Knoxville, Cincinnati and all
points west and northwest. 3:07 p. m.
No. 13?For Spartanburg and Ashe.
ville. 3:45 p. m.
, No. 41?For Spartanburg and local
stations. 6:40 p .m.
EAST BOUND.
t No. 42?For Columbia and local
t points. 9:00 a .m.
No. 14?For Columbia and local
> points. 11:55a.m.
, No. 28?Carolina Specia Ifor Cor
lumbia and Charleston, S. C. 2:37 p.
, m.
r No. 4?For Columbia and local
T points. 6:40 p. m.
No. 10?For Columbia, Charleston,
t Savannah and Jacksonville. 9:22 p. m.
? Nos. 27 and 28?Carolina Special?
- Through electric lighted train, conr
sisting of day coaches, Pullman cars
1 and observation car between Charleston
and Cincinnati.
For further information call on local
agent, or address L. I). Robinson,
C. P. & T. A., S. H. McLean, D. P. A.,
r Columbia, S. C., W. E. McGee, A. G.
r P A. Columbia, S. C., S. H. Hard wick,
P. T. M., E. II. Coapman, V. P. & G.
M., Washington, D. C.
Bankrupt's Petition for Discharge.
In the District Court of the United
Stofac ^A*? TAI nt A# C! P
?_? vm wVO) i. VI V/liV L/IOV1 IV. t Ul VJ VVk
In the Matter of J. L. Gault,
Bankrupt.
To the Honorable H. A. M. Smith,
Judge of the District Court of
, the United States for the District
of South Carolina.
> J. L. Gault of Union, in the County
? of Union, and State of South Carolina,
in said District, respectfully represents
that on the day of April
' last past he was duly adjudged Bank"
rupt under the acts of Congress re"
lating to Bankruptcy; that he has du
ly surrendered all his property and
rights of property, and has fully
1 complied with all the requirements
of said acts and of the orders of the
Court touching his Bankruptcy.
* Wherefore he prays that he may be
' decreed by the Court to have a full
j discharge from all debts provable
| against his estate under said Bankrupt
Acts, except such debts as are
1 excepted by law from such discharge.
> Dated this 1st day of August A. I).,
i 1912. J. L. Gault.
J ORDER OF NOTICE THEREON
, DISTRICT OF S. C.?ss.
1 On this 7th day of August, A. I).,
1912, on reading the foregoing petition,
it is?
Ordered by the Court, that a hearing
be had upon the same on the 12th
r day of September, A. 1).. 1912, before
l said Court at Charleston. S. C., in
? said District, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon,
and that notice thereof be pub.
lished in The Union Times, a newspa?
per printed in said District, and that
H all known creditors and other persons
; in interest may appear at the said time
. and place and show cause, if any they
r have, why the prayer of the said pe.
titioner should not be granted.
And it is further ordered by the
t Court, that the Clerk shall send by
I man x,o an Known creditors, copies of
said petition and this order addressed
to them, at their places of residence
. as stated.
Witness the Honorable H. A. M.
Smith, Judge of the said Court, and
the Seal thereof at Charleston, S. C.,
. in said District, on the 7th of Au3
trust, A. D., 1912.
Richard W. Hutson,
f Clerk.
33-Jlt.
j. Automobiles strike some people as
r being instruments of sudden death.
A woman, like an epigram, is not
old so long as she is interesting
enough to be quoted.
Your Capital.
Your SPARE TIME is your unem-e
? :ji
vujjiiui i iium ui me luie mof
ments you lose at night that could
3 be profitably spent in taking, BY
[i MAIL., lessons in Bookkeeping,
a Shorthand, Penmanship, Business
- Letter Writing, Business English,
Arithmetic, etc. For prices on Home
f Study BY MAIIJ( address Jno. F.
- Draughon, President, Nashville,
Tenn. For catalogue on courses at
college, address Draughon's Practical
>. Business College, Columbia or Greent
ville, S. C, or Nashville, Tenn.