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MprnhantQ Ri. If I Ul UIIUIIIU "The 0 : The Oldest and Lar ? On .July 1st we paid < <ioi~.fi No. 80, making a stockholders in Cash Di While the chief objet ; profits for its shareholde ! of its customers, and its ! ment of the community i I ment is liberal, pursues strictly to legitimate lin< I If tilis appeals to yoi ? LOOK FOR THE BAN I | And deposit your mono ? j F. M. FARK, W. F. President. II AAUUMAIIftiklAAMAIMfeMAII ! SUMMER' v t ? X | These Buggies JL With fair and reason; |> If any part of the v Y imperfect material oi ^ parts are returned tc without charge. Y Y Come and T ?% I The People A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A TO C Through Sleeping Car l):i FKOM Charleston, Columbia, Spi Not Springs, Knoxville.?"Quee CAROLIN Croat ly improved Service ?Chicagi /^< TT Trr^T -w MJU 1 111^ K Premie;* Ca Leave Charleston 8:00 Leave Columbia __12tafi Leave Spartanburg . 4:80 Leave Tryon - r>:io Leuvo Ilendorsonville .. C>:">7 Leave Asheville - -- - - - 7:80 Leave Knoxville - 12:0.7 Arrive Cincinnati 10:5.7 Arrive Indianapolis . 8:20 p Arrive Chicago - 9:00 Kxcellent connections made from hnry, Crcenville. (ireenshoro. On K(J I I I'M ENT?< thscrvat inn Cars Charlcstoa-Cincinnati, I Chicago, ( oachcs Charles U. c. COTXKK, Travi-linjj I'assci Airent, 11U W. Main St., Spartan!) S. C. STORE YC V Farmers' Bone Home Bonded Custodian, when you (jet ready cotton and sell to win R. F>. HARR Lawrence G. ?outhar<3 ATTORNEY AT LAW Will Practice in all Courts Office Opposite Post Office PUNDER1 ^GOVERNMENT ^SUPERVISION MEMBER BANK UNDER jj 4 EEDERA L RESER VE ACT 3 ?THE * Planters Nat'l Bank Hd Reliable" j ? '(jest Bank in Union County aur o per cent. Semi-annual Divi- <4 total of $288,000.00 paid to our * vidends since organization. ! t of this bank is to accumulate ' rs, it is ever mindful of the rights ; constant aim is for the advance- I n which it is located. Its manage- "i a progressive Dolicy, and adheres es of banking. * K WITH THE CHIME ClOCK * | y where it will he absolutely sale l GILLIAM, J. D. ARTHUR, ? Vice-I'resident. Cashier. ; fl ' : t - m 11 n Ti i iftflfcii ii - niio n u : S BUGGIES I T ^VNNNXSXVNXXNNWNNNXSXN^N f T > are Guaranteed | X able use FOR ONE YEAR. !t! x ehicles fall, by reason of r workmanship, and said V v > us, we will replace same Y Look at Them! | % s Supply Co. | HIC AGO lily HeRinninj; Novt'mb<>r 22. 1914. irtanburjr Tryon Hcndersonville, Asheville, 11 At rri'SCl'llt Uoulc" "Itil* Knur Ifnutn" [A SPECIAL from the Carolinas and Georgia to [? and the West.? N RAILWAY irrier of the South a.m Arrive 9:40 p.m. p.m. Arrive ? 4:45 p.m. n. r>. Arrive 1:45 p.m. p.m. Arrive 12:25 p.m.] j?u.vi: __u:.su a.m.| p.m. Arrive __9:20 a.m. a.m. Leave __5:10 a.m. a.m. Leave , 0:35 p. m. . m. Leave -- 2:55 p. m. p.m. Leave 8:55 a.m. and for Aiken, Augusta, Charlotte, Salis-i Idsboro, Raleigh and Intermediate Points. Drawing-room, open section sleeping >rawing-room Sloping Car Charlestonton-Cincinnati, Dining Car Service. iger S. II. McLEAN, District Pass. Agent, 1513 Main St., Columbia, S. ('. >UR COTTON VITH led Warehouse Co. | Enterprise Cotton fully insured, and to sell you get your own om you please. V, - Custodian I BARRON & BARRON A t I itvtui IICJ o ai now UNION, S. C. Practice in all Courts. Money to loan on City and Farm Property. LOCKHART JUNCTION Lockhart Junction, Dec. 8.?We sure have had some rainy weather. It's like the old darkey said to his master, "more rain, more rest; all fair weather is not the best." Well news is scarce. I have not been about much this rainy weather ? and have not heard of anything inter- i esting, only the same old story every ' one tells of hard times; but I met an 1 old negro the other day that said it was no difference with him. He was 1] always poor and if he had bread he 1 was thankful for it. I hope that we II can turn awhile from this dark time II at least and look on the bright side. II It does look like there will be enough U breadstuff made in this section next year for every one has sowed and is B sowing wheat and will be more sowed E if the weather will get so they can. B There is going to be a change. In the B future things will not always go one way. Vernon is our oniy money crop in the South but of course when it gets below 10 cents there is not much money for the farmer. If all the cotton States would do like this countrv is going to do we will pet 16c for cotton or might pet 20 cents. I remember when my father only made about 4 to 5 bales of cotton on a four-horse farm and I knew one time when he pot $100 for one bale; now he made this cotton without any guano. He had more than one hog to kill; he would have from 10 to 12 hops to kill ' and man, they were fine ones, too. His cribs were full of corn and his j wheat garners full of wheat and he was not particular about locking up his cribs for every one had plenty and he was not afraid that some one I would want his. Now if people will, & in a way, go back to those days there I will be a cotton ppanic at^d not a 1 money panic. f I want to compliment Hey Denver. . ' He said some good things in his last ^ letter about prices and what he thought about things in general and "7 what the other fellow was saying and *sc ought to do. 111 ? This great scare of 15 million bales n< or more of cotton. They have made the crop is the worse scare I have heard in a long time. Why, if there ,n had been that much made last year and then that much made this year, } u might have thought we had too ranch and then there could have been a cry of over production; but with a 15 mil- ?. lion bale crop, even if it should be, 1 this writer does not believe there will |l be, cotton ought not to be 7c, as many spindles as there are running will consume every bit of it. If some of the mills do not stop in July or Au- ' pus! to take a rest till they get soin-l. I ? Now God knows I am in favor of mills . ' and corporations and everything that l)C goes to build up a country, but 1 hate to see so much speculation, as think a heap of it is going on. Well,* I will quit that subject for this timt .l 1 met a friend of mine on the street f i of Union one day last week and hefc said he wanted me to visit him. for hiZ_ his section some ladies had cfempli-Gj mented my letters in The Timeej they wanteeb-tv^iee rae.'^-Now^frjfra you, but I fear if they do see meUmM(ja not make the impression on them tli&lj my letters do, but I am going, Mr. D.,| some of these days. I hope the ladies' won't view me with a critic eye, but ? pass my imperfection by. ki Mrs. W. C. Edmonds and children hi are visiting in Abbeville. yc Miss Lula Gault of Union was a In visitor in this section on Sunday. de Miss Corrie Haney, who has been visiting in Union, has returned to h^r home. Miss Louise Plaxico of Loekhart cc spent, a lew days in this section last week with relatives. Moxy. " ll( JONESVILLE la Jonesvillc, Ilec. 'i.?We have passed through another whole week of cloudy weather and rain. It has been a tieup for the farmers but they have most of their crops gathered in and the small grain sown. Rev. W. S. I'orter filled his pulpit SI here Sunday and Rev. J. A. Cook went d to Bogansville and preached in the morning and then he preached here o that night which will be his last $ermon for the Jonesville charge, as he will move to his new charge in Spai;-* N lanburg this week. ^ Editor Rice favors grain elevators for thf handling of our surplus grain V while Lowndes Browning opposes the p elevator plan. Of course this is a free country and all men have a right to ..-1:1: ? i ?= u.c.1 |MMiLn:t;i, litigious or any omer or opinion, be they what they may. I can .see no good reason for bonded warehouses for cotton or grain elevators either as yet in our country, and if we had I am sure every famer should take care of his own stuff till he could put it on the market. I said r" just now we are all free agents, but if we don't mind we will not be so, and we are about already there now, for a farmer cannot plant as many acres in cotton as he pleases and when ? we get warehouses and grain elevators all over our country and all the < cotton and grain stored in them, it mill I... _..i - ? it-- * - * win uc uut ui me lanniTs nanus ana | in the commission men's hands and the farmers will have to nay the stor- ( age, insurance and the commission on j their stuff and the longer it stays stored up the more the expense. I know a farmer who has sold two hundred bushels of corn at his crib at f)0c per bushel. If he had put his corn in ' a warehouse he would have had to shuck and shell it and haul it several miles to the elevator, pay storage and ; commissions, which would all cost about 20 cents a bushel; then he would have to get much more for his corn to come out even and perhaps { wait much longer before his corn was sold and it is pretty much the same ? way with cotton?too much red tape ' and too many strings for the poor . farmer to pull. 4 ' Miss Pearl Harris of Union was the guest of Mrs. L. J. Fowler on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Hames of Gaffney spent Sunday with Mrs. Ad- " die Hames. Mrs. A. N. Eison and Mrs. Hattie McWhirter attended the 19th convention of the United Daughters of the ^ontetleracy for the State at York- II ville last week. I I ffo to Charleston today to attend I the Grand Lodtfe of Ancient Free Ma-'"" : 1 ' ' vA. jf-Cured^ I] vMrs. Jay McOee.ol Steph- 3 H cnville, Texas, writes: 'Tor H m nine (9) years, I suffered with f II womanly trouble. 1 had ter- W Lrible headaches, and pains in K Iff my back, etc. It seemed as if W *4 I would die, I suffered so. At J V] last, I decided to try Cardui. A 11 the woman's tonic, and it I Lj helped me right away. The S y full treatment not only helped IK Id me, but it cured me." * TA Li TAKE U Cardui | d The Woman's Tonic u a Cardui helps tftnen in time 4 t of greatest need(' because it 3 | contains ingredients which act m J specifically, yet gently, on the m weakened womanly organs. f So, if you feel discouraged, K blue, out-of-sorts, unable to K do your household work, on auuuni ui your tonuuion, stop IB r I worrying and give Cardui a 1 LI trial. It has helped thousands Is bj of won'.n,?why not you ? m Try Cardui. E-71 Wi ?ns of South Carolina which wil cot at the Grand Temple at hig )on tomorrow. Mr. Davis Crawford of Columbi >ent Sunday in Jonesville with hi other, Mrs. Lou Crawford. Telephone. 'hy They Recommend Foley's Hone and Tar. P. A. Efird, Conejo, Calif.?becaus t produces the best results, alway ires severe colds, sore chest am ngs and does not contain opiates o irmful drugs." Dr. John W. Taylot jthorsville, Ga.?because "I believ to be an honest medicine and it sat fies my patrons." W. L. Cook, Nei irt, Mont.?because "it gives tlv ist results for coughs and colds o lything I sell." Every user is i iend. Sold by all dealers every here. k Mrs. Jackson Improving. Bs. Stonewall Jackson was report be a little better last night al . the improvement was ver> kShe has caalied somewhat am > a lit] itronger. She re n1-iarl ey>-Y)bserver. Pains in Hack and Hips Are an indication of kidney troubl a warning to build up the weakenet dneys, make them vigorous, rid you ood of acids and poisons. Go ti >ur druggist for Foley Kidney Pills i 60c and $1.00 sizes. Sold by al talers everywhere. Wheat Borrowed for Belgians. Rotterdam, Dec. 8.?The America) immission for the relief of Belgia: as sufferers has just borrowed fron olland 10,000 tons of wheat, val ;d at $1,000,000, for immediate dis ibution among the famished popu tion of Belgium. Notice! We do general repairing ach as Welding Cast Iron razing Copper, Bras* teel and Cast Iron; solder lg Cast Iron, Steel, etc. All kinds of Lathe Work 11 kinds of Threading, etc ulcanizing Auto Casings ,epair Guns and Revolvers All we ask is that yoi ive us a trial at your work W. NEWELL SMITH AUTO COMPANY. UNION, S. C. This is the place you have always av ed money and even though the great European War is on, we can continue to save you money, by having your prescriptions filled and doing vour o / w ~ ~ drug business with the PALMETTO DRUG CO. UNION, S. C. | Rockers I | and Arm f l I Chairs ~ I I are conducive to restful 5 I Y the lovely and cosy ones v II i. ? ? must tempting prices. Sun X Chairs in great variety fo or piazza. We are showin ?|> hold Furniture, Rugs and Oil-Cloths, at attractive pr | Bradley-E 13 | The cost of wiring your he | will return to you many tim< y I cheer, cleanliness and incre e We are making a special j .Lights in every home and tl r tion varies from $10.00 up i e material. Call and let us g mation. 1 MUNICIPAL ELEi AND WATER R. A. Easterlii 5 ^ T J I "UNION ; 5 | UJ ? WE CAP < | UNION P : X WITH i I SANITARY > ?Everything is Y ' Send Your Wash to the 3 Y handled right. Avoid unss - Y tronizing US?the only Sa in Union. > <? IT SUITS you to have yc Y DON'T FORGET CHA1 Y De will call on you. Don't j him the whole family wash . A Flat work finished. Shir l)anes regular price. ?Yours for Pror | UNION STEAK X P. T. HAWKINS, Proprietor. Summons For Relief. Cle Sts State of South Carolina?County of I Union?Court of Common Pleas. W. W. Johnson, Judge of Probate, ( Plaintiff. 48 against Pringle llayes and Lizzie Havnes. '? Defendants. j SUMMONS FOR RELIEF ha (Complaint served.) tui To the Defendants: La YOU ARE SEREBY SUMMONED "J, and required to answer the complaint ... ?? n...v.. ? ?-u|7y ? imre- with served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office in Union, S. C., within twenty days 1 after the service hereof, exclusive of sli] the day of such service; and if you Ch fail to answer the complaint within adc the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in ret this action will apply to the court for Fo the relief demanded in the complpaint. for The defendant Prinze Haynes will Ki< take notice that the summons in this Tal action has been filed in the office of wh VVVVVVV V V frVy b a n Comfortable. < j Portable JHHH TRICES \JVJ ? satisfaction?especially ?|> ve are now offering at *? lmer Rockers and Arm r indoors or for porch X g a full line of House- <|? Carpets, Mattings and ices. V Y stes Co. I V ATa A^A ATA ATA ATA ATA ^TA rouR MOUSE ^ CAM BE" % 'WIREU t TO YOU >me for electric lights 2S over in convenience, ased* illumination, effort to get Electric he cost of the installancluding all labor and ive you further inforCTRIC LIGHT WORKS ng, Supt SUITS" I T ST i d SUIT *]:* EOPLE | OUR A LAUNDRY I X All Right? Y Place where it will be mitary methods bv panitary WASH PLACE T Y Y )ur Wash done right? ^LIE?the Wash Hoy. f turn him down. Give V i. 50 pieces 50 cents. ts, collars, and counterI npt Service? 1 LAUNDRY 1 J. T. DILL, % Manager. A (rk of Court for the County and itp aforesaid. Dated November 3, A. D. 1914. I. FRANK PEAKE, jlerk of Court J. G. HUGHES, 3t Plaintiff's Attorney. Publish Weekly Paper at Landrum. Landrum, Dec. 7.?This town will ve a weekly paper in the near fu e to be published by Mr. Crews, of urens, a veteran newspaper man. he Landrum News" will make its pearance next week and will be blished in the Hampton building ?r the hotel. This?and Five Cents. ~>ON'T MISS THIS. Cut out this enclose five cents to Foley & Co., icago, 111., writing your name and lress clearly. You will receive in urn a free trial package containing ley's Honey and Tar Compound, coughs, colds and croup, Foley Iney Pills, and Folfey Cathartic blets. Sold by all dealers everyere.