The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, January 08, 1915, Page 6, Image 6
WHAT YEAR 1914
GAVE TO MANKIND
Chronological Record of Mosl
Important Events of the
Twelve Months.
NECROLOGY
.1 in. < -Dr. S. Weir Mitchell. noted author
and physician. In Philadelphia.
.Ian. 8. (Jon. Simon B. Buckncr, veteran
of Mexican and Civil wars.
Jan. 13. l>r. Kdttar C. Splt/.ka. famous
alionfst. in Now York.
Jan 14 Count Yukyo Ito. licet admiral
of the Japanese navy. In Toklo.
Jan. 1? c.on Marl- -'h-orae IMerpiart.
defender of l>r<-yfus, it Auiions. Prnnoo.
Jan. 3ft? l.ord Strathoona and Mount
Koyal, IiikIi commissioner for Canada, in
lautilon.
Jan 31.?lldwin (Jinn, Boston publisher,
leaving $I.Oo0.ftoft to tlio "world poaoo foundation"
winch ho ostahlishnd in lftft9.
Jan. 3>i. Shelby M. t'ullom, formor I'nitod
St.it? s senator from Illinois
I'Vli. .". Ooturressman ltobort <1. Broinor
of Now J'-rsov.
T-Vb 13 Alphonso Bortillon. creator of
the famous system of criminal identification
Kelt. 14.? S- t utor Augustus <> Bacon ot
0!enri;ta.
Kelt. 1ft Mrs Koli' tu T.otiis St"V< nsoti.
widow of tie' famous novelist
I'VIi 33.- Samuel W. AlCrton. pioneer
Chieavo | teUer
Jos. ph I Is i ioioti.iif |>! l.i til la oplst
nmi sin do tax 'dvneit. of Philadelphia. i
Keb 23 l-'oriner I'nlt <l States Senator I
T? Her "f c. lor olo.
.m'ii 1*11 11* ft* \t \ ;iiii|inull, owner |
of l'i'
M hi > I't " i'l' h Tmvn* ml M:trli:i.
Mareh 1.'. < it-ore- Wi st i liulii >ns. famous
Inventor.
M ir"li -T t'c li siah I- I'icU.ivil.
fi>i'in>'! 1'i'siilini of it:.- Imvii Sinn i;niversit.v
ami 1? t'nro tli.it superlntenilent of
Hehools of i *1111 npo
Sprit 1 rtnlii'" \\ iilil.-ll, fa limits 1> II
l?l.i \ or
April I -l-'rotl rii-W SVey. rhaeuser. Him111
sol:, Itltl 11M i llliun-i. e.
April if Mrs-. I .Milan M, \\". Stevi-ns
ho.ill . f Hi.. \v r T I*.
Spril ! Ilarnkn, ilownirer cniprrss of
.T.'VP.'i n.
|T\-Oovi i nor P. S. Draper of MassaelriSi'ds
April IS Pnorere Alfroil Townsenil.
loiirnal.si w iio won fame writing ov? r
llie name "riaih."
April IT. MeKi-o Rankin. vt<r:in a tor.
April '.'I. floori!"' I ". Haer. pr.-slili nt of
I lie Re.-i ill nc railway.
April :::. S. S. Pemnn. famous arrhtteeT
May L' Pttki of Arsyll. son-in-law of
tile lot. I.llleeli Vietoria.
Ma\ IT Hen. Daniel IT Siekl. s, last of
the print Pls'il war eoniinamlers.
Ma> ' i "liarles SS". Post, millionaire
breakfast f noil manufaelurei of Until-fro-k,
Mieh.. eommitte.l suieiil.. at Santa
llnrhara. Pal
M.1V 111 t.llhin Vi.i-.lln i -
'"I'-- >
star. in HataxMa. Java.
May 23. William O. Hrndley, TT. S. s?nator
from Kentucky.
May 2'". Jacob Uiis. noted author and
SoeioloRist.
June .1 W. M P'n-nch, director of the
Chicago Art Institute.
June 14. Adtal K. Stevenson, former
xdce-presldcnt of the I'ulhd States.
1 ,ltin< Iv Former United Stales Senator
Frank M. Iliscoi k of Xexx* York
June 21.?Baroness Bertha von Snttner,
Austrian pence advocate and winner of
the Nobel prize.
July -Joseph Chamberlain, veteran
Uritlsh statesman.
July 12. 1 lorneo If. I.urton. associat.
just ire of the Supreme court of the
United States.
A.tj_' ! Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife
of the president.
.Tnles I.onialtrc, famous French litterateur.
Auk 12 l'ol Planeon. famous grand
opera sin?er.
Ancr. lit Pope Pius X.
Auk. 20. - Father Francis Xavlcr
With/., head of the Society of Jesus.
Auk 23 liarius Miller, president of
the HurlinKton railroad.
Sept. X.- Sir J. llenniUcr lleaton. father
of penny postage between Fngland
and America.
Sept. x.? Huron O'Brlan, lord elilef
just iee of 1 r< la nd.
Sept Itl.?James R. Snlliyan. secretary-treasurer
of the Amateur Athletic
union.
Sept IX.? Mrs. Frank I.eslie.
iv.ir oolllirni lliTIXTll
tVinslow. I". S N*., retired.
Sir Jnnos l' Whitney, premier of Onta
rlo.
Oct. in.? Klnv Charles of Roumanla.
Cardinal hVrrata, papal secretary of
state.
Oct. Ifi.? Marquis ill Sail Oiullano.
Italian foreiirn minister
Oct. 25.- Sir Charles II Douglas,
chief of tin Itrltlsh imperial staff.
Nov. 1.?Lieut. Oen Adna It. Chaffee
retired.
Nov. 4 ?John Kcan. former I". S. senator
from New Jersey. f
I Augustus Heinze. copper magnate
Nov. I I Kield Marshal Marl Itoherts.
Nov. It'. I >r. Itohert J. Hurdettc, liumoris*.
writer and pastor.
Nov. "ft Mrs. Vinnic Ream lloxie.
noted sculptor.
Nov. 24.?Cardinal Cavalleri. patriarch
of Venice.
I>ec. 1 Hear Admiral Alfred 'I*. Malinn.
(' S N.. retired.
I tor. 4 Sic PeruKlni. noted singer
aim yicTior.
I toe. s. W \V. Kocklilll, noted Amerlent)
dljdoninf
Doe. I ?> ('oncrre?sman Sereno l?.
I'ayno of New York.
Joseph Smith j.fi s:?l nt of the Rt>organized
?'liur< i ?t the l,;itter Day
Sit nils.
I '< < D Major K A. I tin* low, I' S. A.,
retired. Ill < 'hie;n;o
11. e. > IhiKe '/.Imii. i*i i:11 t'iin innatl
millionaire,
hi ii Tlioni is Slo rwln at Itoston.
FINANCIAL
I
.Tin I. I' M..rt?an K- ('< i. :i 11 n- 11
withdrawal <if menders <>r tin* firm from ,
dlr< > turn t of m.my nrpnrnt inns.
Feb Mi i .'intllc bank <>f M< mphi*. |
Trim, f.i I i|. I "resident 0". II llaine i <i - |
rnitflim lii* had iis. <1 its fnmls in roiioiij
?r>? ' u In I i? .11.
K..|>. U Standard Oil company arrantf. il
to liiul China f*i in r.'furii for ? ? I
conci'ssloiis in Shan-Si provinre.
March I" I' nit oil States Kxpross company
went "in of business.
April I The ureat "Princes" Trust" of
Olermany enllapsed with loss of $2."..fifHi./v<i. ,
April 2. I.r. ition of lh?? twelve regional
res. a.' t.aiiks under the new currency law
annoiinceii.
June Chaplin, Milne, CJrenfell & Co.,
I,on<tun hankers, failed for $.">.fihrt.OfiO.
June I." President Wilson nonilnated
folio wine as members of federal reset vG
board- f'liiirlpg 3. "Hamlin of Boston.
Thomas I") Jonos of Chicago, Paul Warburg
of Now York. W. P. O. Hunling of
Birmingham, Ala., A. C. Miller of San
Francisco. I
June 2.".?The If. B. Claflln company,
leading wholesale dry goods concern of
New York, failed with liabilities of about
$41,000,000.
July t?.?Iowa's blue sky law providing
for the regulation and supervision
of investment companies held unconstitutional
by federal judges.
Jul> 2i!.?government began suit
for dissolution of New Haven railroad
monopoly.
July 2.1, ? President AVilson withdrew
nomination of Thomas I>. Jones as
member of the federal reserve board.
Aug I. Frederick A. Delano selected
for federal reserve board.
Aug. I 1.--1 tireetors of the New Haven
road agreed to the attorney general's
terms for a peaceful dissolution of the
system.
Aug. 12.?Dissolution of the International
Harvester company as a monopoly
in restraint of trade ordered by the
Fnitcd States district court at St.
l'aul. Minn
r?ept. ?. i"resident Wilson presented
to congress :in appeal for an omcrgcncy
internal rovoniic measure to
raise $100,000,000 to make ap for the
loss in customs reeeipts.
Sept. t'.V- War tax bill passed by the
house.
Oct. 17. -Senate passed war tax bill.
Nov. 10 1'nited States federal reserve
hanks opened.
Pee. 1? Interstate eomtneree commission
granted in part the f> per eent freight
rate aihanee asked by railroads east of
the Mississippi and north of the Ohio.
INDUSTRIAL
I ,
.i .n " I'ord Automobile eonipany s.-t
is .i ?! ,iai of its profits to distlibiil
nir a_* i1 nployees, mostly in the form
>f ite Iet'S"d wn^i'S,
.T in >' I'l ii il States eireuil court of
lippc'llu eoiltlrnieil the conviction of L'l
ii'.-inl i r of tii International Association
f Pride n.I Structural Iron Work, r- on
the .1 > of dynamite eotispiraey, and
rant. I vv trials to six others.
April e t:'riking eon I miners and ni"inhers
of Colorado National fiuard foitul t
in all da v battle at Ludlow, a mi m > - r
ciea I" Ing killed.
\|-t ii ii' tire National ritiard of Colorado
i all. .I ottt and ordered to Trini ' d
ir kl Z.ll.'V win I" several lllofe 111 '11 H'el'
killed iii the continued lighting.
A11 * i I > lb i\v fighting took pine in
tl.e Colorado mine strike war and l'n si h
ut Wilson ordered federal troops tin re
to i<-store order.
April Colorado mine slrikot- attacked
the Forbes eamp of the Pocky
Mountain Fuel company, killing s< \ n
miri guards and hurtling most of the
tmildliiu Federal troops from l-'ort I*
\ Puss. II arrived In tlu? strike zone.
Mir.' 1 Fourteen more troops of f. d.-ral
envalrv ordered to Colorado strike z>.iic
May 11 Cnlled Stales Supreme curt
s?'t a -al? eotilempt seiileni'es of (lumpers
and .'tier labor leaders.
M iv hi Cnited St ates circuit com t of
appeals remanded l'l union labor men.
otivicte.l of conspiracy to transport dynamite.
to federal penitentiary within three
weeks.
.little line innn klll-'d and two
wounded fighting between factions of miners'
union tit Untie. Mont.
Aug .'! Western railroad niatia rcrs
agreed to mediate trouble with ctigittenieri.
Pee. v The Colorado eoal strike. In
fore.- since April. 101 n. was called off
by t lie niim rs.
SPORTING
Feh Palph Pe t'alma won Vanderi.ilt
. up j.t I.os Angeles. making average
speed of 7:..r. miles an hour.
Feh. PS. I'Mwin I'ullen won fifth International
(hand Prix automobile race at
Santa Monica. Cnl.
M .V pit. I.awr.'tiee Jenkins of Scotland
won Pritish amateur g?df championship.
Mny '.'x. Francis Oultnct of Ifoston won
amati'iir golf clianipioashi|i of France.
May PA P> lie Thomas, driving a Pelage
ear for France, won .VWl-milo race at Indianapolis
in fitftSMRJlfi. an uverage of
SP 47 miles an hour, breaking the record of
mi' speedway.
.linn- 1". Rritish team won first of the
international polo matches at Meadowl
.rook.
Jun< 11.- P.rltish polo team won second
match and International cop.
.Jtint 111.?Vale defeated Harvard by four
feet in annual boat rare.
Harry Vardon won Prillsh open golf
ehani|>ionship for sixth time
.IntieColumbia I'nlverslty won Intercollegiate
regatta at Poughkeopsle.
.lane CT. Jack Johnson retained heavyw
eight championship hy defeating Prank,
Moran in t w'en' v-reund fight in I'arls
July 4.?Harvard crew won the Henley
regatta.
Jllly 7 Freddie Welsh of Wales won
tin lightweight championship by defeating
Willie Ritchie of America In
I .nndon.
July H?.?fleorges ("arpentler of
l-'ranee. receiving the decision over
"liiinboat" Smith of America on a foul,
in London, won the white heavyweight
eha mpion.ship.
Aug. 1.?Charles Kvans, Jr.. of Chicago
won the western amateur golf
eha tnpionship.
Aug. -1. Walter C Haffen. nrofes
slonal, of tin* Country ehib of Hochest<
r N V.. won tin- upon ifolf chnmpionship
of the t'nitod States.
Atts 2tt. ? J M. Karnes of T'hllftdelphlsi
won the national tennis championshin.
Sept. n. -Francis Ouimct won the
American amateur Kolf championship.
Sept. i* Mrs. If Arnold Jackson of
Huston won the national woman's aolf
ohn mplonshlp
Oct. I?Koston National team won
world's eha m[>ionship from Philadelphia
American leasrne team.
Nov. ill.-- Harvard won eastern foothill
championship by heatinif Yale, and
lllinoi-. won the Western Conference
lith when it defeated Wisconsin.
An;- 1.? Oarbajal ahandoned presl?Ar-u<--*
of Mexico.
Ann 'Jii (it-neral Carranza enierofi
Mi s .<?? I'ily anil assumed tlie oltici; of
prov i.-11?n: I president.
Si pi 2:1. -Villa denounced government
lieaileii l?y Carranza and tinr.onnreil
liis inilepenilence.
(let l'i. Coin tuition o/ Mexican constitutionalist
chiefs at Aifiins (,'alientes
voted itsi If lie supreme power in Alex- I
Ico
Nov. I \Ktias Caiientes conference
nanuil K (Sutierrejs president of Mexico
for 2n days.
Nov. 11 ?War declared between Carranza
and Villa factions in Mexico.
Nov. 2~i. American troops unili r Oonera
I Fnnston evacuated Vera ('rnz.
Nov. 2(Jen. I'ablo CSnnzules proclaimed
himself provisional president
of Mexico.
Nov. SO. ? Villa entered Mexico City
111. >" una 1 r....i.u
Don. X. President Wilson sent troops
to protect Naco. Ariz., on Mexican border.
Doe. i?.- flcneral I'.liss tol<l commanders
of Carranza and Villa forces at Naoo,
Mex? that be would open tire on both it
any more shots came across the border.
Dec. IX. San Tails Potosl surrendered to
Carranza forces._
Da
T>ec. 21.?Oen. Hugh 8cott and General
Maytorena, Vlllalsta leader, conferred
near Naeo reardlng tiring across boundary
line.
POLITICAL
Feb. 18.?Mouse passed Alaska railroad
bill.
Feb. 21.?Senate ratified general arbitration
treaties between ITnlted States and
Great Britain, Japan, Italy, Spain, , Norway.
Sweden, Portugal and Switzerland
March 5.?President Wilson read to concress
message urging that the clause In
the Panama canal act exempting American
coastwise vessels from payment of
tolls be repealed.
March W. ? Senate approved Alaska
railroad bill.
March 31.?Mouse passed bill to repeal
canal tolls exemption clause by majority
of SC.
June ?Mouse passed the three Wilson
antitrust bills by huge majorities.
June 11. Pill to repeal exemption clause
of the Panama canal tolls act passed by
Senate.
July 1.?George T. Henry, Jr.. of Pan
Francisco and Washington nominated
for ambassador to Russia.
July * C.? Ira Nelson Morris of Clii' ago
appointed minister to Sweden.
Aug 1 it.--President Wilson appointed
Janu s (\ McUeyuolds to the Supreme
court and T. W. Gregory to succeed
Melteynolds as attorney-general.
Sept. 15.?Secretary of State Ilryaa
and the envoys of Great Britain
France. Spain and China signed tb?
Bryan peace treaties.
S"pt. 21.? Frederic Jesnp Stimson ;.pI
pointed ambassador to Argentine.
Sept. L'!?.?The house passed the rivers
and harbors bill as reduced to !?
n?b oo<? l>y tin- senate.
???-t. 2-1.?<"iinirress ndjourned aft> r
a session of .-Ii7 days.
Nov. ?In jrenernl elections Repu'.
lio in party grained over tin* vote of 1!'12
but failed to control eontrress. Pro1
ma-ssivo party fell to tbird place. Wiu iimton.
Colorado. Orotion a It d Arlzo i
\v? nt dry.
I in'. 7.?Sixty-third conprrcss v is
called to order for its final session.
HAS NOVEL USE FOR RUBQf \
Italian Surgeon Has Lroi -hi Abe t
Perfect Fusion of That Substance
and Human T'csue.
Rubber ltas many uses, even to ropairing
the human body externally.
The great Italian surgeon Fieschi
conceived the idea of using porous
i rubber ui the form of tine spoor
j counting upon the nihility between
it and human tissue to bring about a
perfect fusion.
Doctor Ficschi called this "nuova
earne," or "new flesh." lie expert
mettled with it upon animals befor?
he tried it on his patients. He in|
sorted bits of sterilized rubber spoil ye
in various parts of lite bodies of do.us
and rabbits and found that in a very
short time they were not only enveloped,
but thoroughly penetrated
by granular tissue without any inflammation,
suppuration or other ill
I effects.
luiviiiK uius proveu us value, Doe
tor Fieschi used the porous rubber in
healing two k.rge wounds resulting
from the reductiou of hernias, lie
inserted it where it would be ai' st
efficacious in strengthening the Muscular
walls that retain the internal
j organs. The wounds healed without
I complication.
A year after the operation an X-ray
examination revealed the rubber still
in place and apparently become an
integral part of the tissues.
DOCKS STRETCH FOR Mii.ES
Millions of Tor.s of Shipping Annually
'Jse the Quays and Wharves
of London.
As London is the world's largest
market, so, also, is it the world's leading
port. Yet few people?least of all
Londoners?seem to realize what marvelous
hives of industry are the docks
of the metropolis.
In the course of a year more than
30,000,nod tons of shipping use the
quays and wharves that constitute the
port of London; and the value of the
foreign trade alone is something like
390,000,000 sterling?about a quarter,
that is to say, of the annual exports
and imports of the United Kingdom.
it wouiu iiiKo a million men a year
to produce the amount of tea that
passes annually through the port. The
figures relating to other imports, such
as grain, timber, wool, meat, sugar,
wines and tobacco, are on the same
enormous scale.
In the wine and spirit vaults at the
London docks the gangways where the
wine is stored are 28*4 miles in length.
For the wool trade the port of London
authority provides a space of 32 acres
and it call Ktorc at mm timo rrw.r,. than
a million frozen carcases of mutton
and I lie 120,000 tons of beef thai Australia,
New Zealand and South America
send to London each year.
The Infinite Procession.
Wo look through the microscope;
physicists, chemists, biologists, pry
into the inner recesses of matter, only
to find energy?energy heaving tossing,
turbulent, imprisoned, perhaps, or
bound to other energy, but everywhere,
in the egg, in the spermatozoa,
in the minutest particles of matter,
animal, vegetable or inorganic, restless
energy, eternal effort. If we
turn to the history of past life upon
our globe, what do we find but records
of energy, whether physical, eh mlcal
or of that seemingly peculiar form
which marks living organisms, everywhere
energy leaving its trace in innumerable
forms. In this history of
life, according to our human standards,
there lias been a long procession,
in which the principle of organic life.
from the earliest period of vegetable
existence, has advanced through manifold
forms, upward, upward, in the
depths of the sea, in the air, on land,
by devious routes and strange passages,
up. up, to the fish, to the bird,
to four-footed beasts, and finally to
man.?Atlantic.
i I
I }
NEVER SAY
DIE
Never Lay Down
On the Job!
\
Never give up the ship as
long as she floats. In other
words, buck up, brace up,
get busv.
Prosperity never came to
meet any man, and if you
ever look on prosperity's
beautiful countenance again
it will be when you take a
strangle hold on determination,
and put on such a spurt
of endeavor that you will
outstrip the held of obstacles
and achieve the goal of
accomplishment.
Now is the Time
and the
Union Grocery Co.
Is the Place
Some of the things that
will do most good right now,
and more good at a later
date will be to buy from us
ample supplies of red, yellow
and white Onion Setts.
We have them ready and
waiting and anxious to
grow, and the price is less
i per quart now than the next
lot will cost us wholesale.
.
January is the time plant
i English Peas or Garden
| Peas, called by some Sweet
; Peas, or June Peas, anyhow
you know what we mean.
We are offering ample
stocks of the best and ear
host varieties. They are delicious
for the table, and
coming so early they like
onions will add something
to the income, for you will
have i^) trouble selling your
surplus Peas and Onions at
a good price.
Don't forget the Union
Grocery company for Seed.
Just opened the largest assortment
we ever had. If
! you will come in now, it will
be a pleasure to help you
make your selections, and
you can get just what you
want.
Don't wait for the rush,
now is the time. Get busy
i and pmn't r?rnent?r*if\r Mii
better way than a good garden
for home use with a little
surplus truck for those
i who can't or won't provide
these comforts and luxuries
by planting for themselves.
Remember, that dollar for
dollar and quality for quality
we are determined that
no concern in business shall
give better values than we
give to every customer of
this store.
j "We Ruy the Rest Seeds We
Can Find, and Sell Them
Like We Ruy Them. We
('ant Make Seed You
, Know."
UNION GROCERY
COMPANY
L. L. Wagnon, Manager.
Phone 100.
I BAILEY UNDER]
X
1 Funeral Directors ai
Y
?* Having combined the resourci
Wagnon-Bradley Company and
Company puts us in a class wi
1 concerns in the South and it will
$ and manager of this Company tc
with service, equipment and fun
be excelled by any and equaled 1
Y Our undertakers are attentive
rlnOl VA/-1 O
uuiiicu dim iiecessury wc will
?*> with whom we will arrange fo
charges will be reasonable and c<
Our parlors open all the time
the officers of the company will ]
^ anywhere in the town or county.
| BAILEY UNDER1
Y L. L. WAGNON, J. T. BRA!
i Vice-President. Secreta
|Use'"'Dus
X
I For Sweeping a
| Floors and Car]
| down the dust am
X and moths.
X
1 Bbl. Lots at 2% cei
y % Bbl. Lots at 3 cei
A 25 Lbs. for One Dolla
J
I BAIL
| Furniture & Li
UTA AT4. ATA ATA ATA ATA. ATA ATA A^A ATA A^A AT
f^r f|^
Hnw'n Thi??
We offer One Hundred Dollors Re- coj^<!
ward for any case of Catarrh that jp{er
cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh j^oi-i
Cure. th ,
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. JJ? ^
We, the undersigned, have known pjece
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, par^
and believe him perfectly honorable wou]
in all business transactions and fi- cojns
nanciallv able to carry out any obligations
made by his firm.
National Hank of Commerce,
Toledo, O. I)isc<
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter- foi
nally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system Ex
Testimonials sent free. Price 75 tor.
cents per bottle. Sold by all Drug- Pr
gists. ' It
Take Hall's Family Pills for cons- Th
tipation. neigl
? Th
May Honor Stuarl.
He
Washington, Jan. 4.?Gov. Stuart j
and Senator Swanson of Virginia
asked President Wilson today to honor
the memory of Gen. J. E. B. Stuart, wcre
Confederate leader, by appointing his
grandson, J. E. B. Stuart of Norfolk, j.
to West Point. The president promised
to consider the request. jj ^
Invigorating to the Pale and Sickly
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic, from
GROVK'S TASTELESS cliill TONIC, drives out
Malar in.enriches the blood .and builds up the ays- re lie
tern. A true tonic. For adults nnd children. 5UC or S
trrav
Sale of Personal Property.
laste
State of South Carolina?County pr
ot union. a;mp
Pursuant to an order of the Court j)oar
of Probate for said county, the under- jyjr
signed will, on Monday, the 4th day c0'
of January, 1914, before the court
house door in Union, sell at public outcry,
the following personal property .
belonging to the estate of J. F. Bet- . ^
sill, deceased, to-wit: J'1y ,
Six mules, one horse, two wagons , ,
and gears, one buggy and harness,
one saddle and bridle, one gold watch a
and pair of sleeve buttons. _e
On Wednesday, following, to-wit: a"!
on January Gth, at 11 o'clock, a. m., at ^ J
the late residence of the said J. F. cei"V
Betsill, deceased, in Cross Keys town- V
ship, said county and state, the un
u* i di^iicu win nvii av nuvnwii tnu iuilowing1
belonging to said estate, to- .
wit: Lot of corn, fodder, and cotton |
seed; cow and calf, one hog, lot of w?,
farming tools, and all other petsonal
property belonging to said estate. ,
Terms of sale Cash. Lrar
S. M. KICK.
J. A. BETSILL. {jl,
Evecutors of the will of .J. Fineher
Betslll, deceased. 51-St. &
p nV
Mrs. Furman Atkinson of Lee coun- q, yi
ty committed suicide on Wednesday ^ *
by shooting herself with a shotgun. ?Ctt(
She was before her marriage a Miss fir i P'
I'roctor of Sumter; was married last
September. She had suffered lately
from some nervous trouble.
Hi
Cures Old Sores, Other Remedies Won't Cure, mud
| i*he worst casea, no matter of how long standing. W
are cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr. vrm
I I'orter'a Antiseptic Heating Oil. It relieves sL
Pain and Ileala at the aame time. 25c, 50c, fl.00 Trar
i A A A <j%
^ ^'VVVVVV'/VV
rAKING CO. |
nd Embalmers X ,i
es and equipment of the ?
the Bailey Undertaking
ith the largest and best
be the aim of the officers jL
> furnish this community %
eral supplies that cannot "V
by few.
? and capable, and when
call in a lady assistant V
r* f hnon A/?/?ooiA?n Ati??
* viivov wvaoivild* V/Ul
onsistent with the times. &
. Phone calls to any of
receive prompt attention <^
rAKING CO. |
>LEY, T. E. BAILEY, ^
,r.v. Pres. and Treas. 1
V
i^ViViVAAAVA j.^4
" tat (6 +
A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A
idown I
I
ind Cleaning %
pets. Keeps |:
A kills germs f
t
t
its per pound
its per pound ?
r, delivered
< E V J!
imber Co. |
For Now Coin Issue.
isnington, Jan. 4.?An of
to commemorate the Panama
national exposition would be auzed
by a senate bill which passed
mii?e tmlov If <"<?I-1 ".**' : ?
vx/v.MJT. A%, HUUHI aillliUir/it'
oinage of $50, $2 1-2 and $1 gold
s and 50 cent silver pieces. A
of the issue of gold $50 pieces
d be octagonal like California
in 1851.
DON'T GIVE UP.
luragcd Citizens Will Find Com t
in the Experience of a Union
Man.
:perience is the modern instrucofit
by the experience of others,
may save your life,
e experience of friends and
ibors,
e testimony of Union people
ill bring renewed encouragement,
ire is a case in point:
M. O'Shields, 8 South Enterprise
Union, says: "I had inflammaof
the bladder and my kidneys
in awful shape. The pains in
back were terrific. The doctor
I had gravel and during one at
lour pnysicians sat up with me
light ;they thought I was going
ie. A doctor advised me to try
l's Kidney Pills and I pot a box
the Palmetto I)rupr Co. I was
ved after I had taken them a day
o and before long, I passed a
el stone. One box of Doan's KidPills
cured me and that cure has
d for eight years."
ice 50c, at all dealers. Don't
ly ask for a kidney remedy?get
i's Kidney Pills the same that
O'Shields had. Foster-Milburn *
Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
Teachers' Examination.
special teachers' examination for
white and colored teachers will \
leld in Union court house at 9 (
ck, Friday, Jan. 15, 1915. All
lers who have not conformed to
law must take this examination,
all those who intend to teach, and
.vho have not received a teacher's
ficate must also take the exami>n.
H. C. LITTLE,
t Supt. Education.
Knows Danger,
idy?I'm afraid you don't like
c, my good man.
amp?How kin I, mum? Work's i
killed my pore wife.?Boston
iscript.
5LDS & LaGRIPPE
or ? closes 66G will break
case of Chills & Fever, Colds
.nGrippe; it acts on the liver
;r than Calomel and does not
e or sicken. Price 25c.
Getting It Straight.
usband?You spend altogether too
h money.
ife?Not at all! The trouble is
don't make enough.?Boston
iscript.