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V V U t . -v : / v-<.. t) THE T OWFTQ FUN IO tTH~AS |jf ^ m "T r g|- __ ?- , _ |^THE TOWn'DFVUION ^A?1! A . JJ Two Cotton Mills, one the l/l I I B B I 1^ | T B d jk ] ! B gj A /H I M iT 1 The largest Knitting Mill and S jjl largest in the South. Two Fur- W I fl?B BJ fl B flL 9 ? . B / H HJ [(( Dye Plant in the State. An Oil // B| niture and Wood Manufactur- ))) I BI B 1 , 111 I fl fl I ^kl I I M/ H I] . . { and Manufacturing Co. that )r III Concerns. One Female I H H H I J ' ! B fl fl v i V I I W I H 1 L 1)1 ,l,akes an unexcelled Gunno. (( L Seminary. Water Works und ( Jfl . B B B A ^ fl _fl_ -1- fl -B _H_ -1- ? -B- B M T^y % (\( Three Graded Schools. Arte- '[( W Electric Lights. fl] * ]fl s'mn Water, Population f>,.r>00. fl) - VOL. 1, NO. 10. UNION, SOUTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1900. #1.00 A YEAR. * <W <! -#? ** <? , F. M. FARk President. | OCO. MUNI<'\ Cashier, J. | Merchants' and Pla V ? O F U IN I x Capital Stock T Surplus. ... f Stockholders' Liabilities ijl TotaL * Directors?J. A. Fant, > p". x T. C.Duncan, J. T. Douglass, Win. Coleman. T ' We Solicit V <w>Xe m m m"?6> m M m m m v# * CATAPHORES f5; DR, H. K <^DEN1 Crown and ^ Bridge Work. ^ fr. ? _ . 1900 MAY 1900 Su. Mo. Tu. We. Th. Fri. Sat. LJLJLJlJL 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 m 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 UNION COUNTY NEWS. Items of Interest Gathered from Various Sections by our Correspondents. ' r ?? Santnc Sifting*. r "Sunlight and Urn noontide high And the wandciing ffnyo of men; Iu search of pleasure far and nigh. They know not where its valleys lie, Nor how, nor why. nor when !" Gtt out your summer faus. C Due hundred per cmt. of sunshine ' C lilt week. v Tbo birds are singing on fas', sched .-? ule this nocr.iing. Thi quails are beginning to whittle ; their "bub white" so >g*. It is very bail to have a c>U, then X have a big sner z> that won't come off. Rsv. T. II. Garrett preached a flue sermon at Salem ohnroh yesterday from ~ the text found in Mark 5; 27. Rev. J. Russell preached at the TL Presbyterian churoh yesterday af;ernoon." He will preaoh at that church ? two Sundays a month this year. Candidates are beginning to put in * an appearance about here. Mr. Jos. *. II. McKisaick was in Santuc yester day and attended religious s? rviccs. I hope candidates will refuso to "treat" the professiora'. treat seekers, ; to drinks, barbecue dinners, etc , etc , j this year. Their votes are uurcluble t anyway.. ^ Peaches, the farmers thiuk are well ee?, and a good crop is assured, fnjni cold anyway. Apples aro not doing % ' well. Last week was a very fair one, and rain is needed to soften stifl red land, femall grain is needing rain. loj irueuB uro uoi u ueg >vu i in t.icau pqrts, and good vegetables are, as yet, a Jopg yiy cfj'. I{iwks qra Ua 1 affsr chickens thi< qprjqg taking several a day from many yard?. WoU tb^y know agojd thing when they see it. Crows are making their ravages on corn coming up. j wish a cheat baas bill ground was el >ai to uiy II id and crows w old get no com out o: there, on Sunday, for little negrot-i w ni!d pluy or "bust." ' 'llello! what is that! \vl at is bro h er Thos. fl. Goro telliug ? As th* ^ i? negroes would say, I know who he ii 'jinUu' at. He, j ) speaking, uses ar i o\l uom do plonn that once I foj-n : " by the waysido au 1 used to paci ? ? -1 ..w.l ?? ttiitAn f Kuil a four Kit ' HHUUII UIIIICI, mien i unj a ivn : tti'fij. ' Telliug ta'ca out of ech jo1 tfi'T' Suppose one issuaceptable cnoujl 8UCCU ..b and Hip some << tho soft intoxicating draught thai roer3 prc?e* ce, or tweet tacit influeac k (Tirds, well? then what. Wtlldoo' ) yoy ki/pw tl $ro arp ni^ny pretty girl brer there "Jf a girl ia pretly, T????'? 'ti" no matter, IV *h" l?'o. ?l or brunette bu tl.e h ts me look at her." i r-M-?** -ifr?*- 4KA. H. FOSTER, Vice President. J . D. ARTHUR, Assistant Cashier. T titers' National Bank * B orv, h. c. | .* GO,000 f ., 50,000 J 00,000 1 $170,000 >V. H. Wallace, Wm. Jeffries, X E. P. McKissick, A. II. Foster, X I 'our Business. ^ -tx--m-?* -?*- 4* -in- ** , "*+*" ELECTRICS. . SMITH, risT._^ 1 ! $t= Union, S. C. I navy B B. at the recent convention at Pdiigeti'd Crcik, aud l:o was looking ts if time was dealing well with him. I was g'al to see him, yes, and Bro. Thou. 11. Gore. B. B. was very busy, and we did not 8} end all of our tiro ! t >gether, (we "bad other fish to Iry ?' ) but I know lie e> j >yed himself I ihiuk he wai very busy forming Mutual Admiration S >cieties, and was personally canvassing for the most select and congenial membership The initiation lee is always too higli f ?r other "Presidents ?" thai the isidividuil organiz r, but I hope to son c Jay get some rituals, and order tf busiuees from him aud orgauiz* myself. When he ge's the society iu good working order, 1 guess he will "make the rn.iitti" that he enter .L - LI! r I 1 me ujloaiu 1 muuaane erapyrtau cust<mirily <lisignaled as the state of. connubial ii icity. Cross Keys? Yes I raisa ray hat, and for a Vote i f thanks and apprecia li ju of geuuir.e h? spita'i'y so cordially dispensed lo visitors, I cast my ualh.t This section of sections ; I include all around Cross K"ya and Sodalia both surrounding Padgett's C'roek church ILre, let me say, it is always the people that makes the country, or rather the community. I Iky Denveii. Santuc," May 7, 1900. w? r.u olct Paragraphs. Paolet, M ty 7.?What jarae nea: proving a dmstrou* accidout occurred here Saturday evoaing about 7 o'clock Afier a bill gime played betweni Pacolet Mills an'! this place, the train for the Mills lei'- the dep.jt with about 150 persona on hoard. Some miscreant had thrown the switch open and j ist ft3 tlvy left tho ni tin line the cars jumped the track hurting tw< of its pissengors very piinfully, though it is thought not fatally, li was, indeed, a miraculous escape. A ' rewarl of 880 has been oflerod for the perpetrator. Small pox has b.en eradicate 1 and the patients have been set at liberty ; \S'e now feel decidedly mure com : placont. Tho farmers are making all possibh 113*3 of the favorable weather. Tlx I acreage < f cotton Si'.ms not to hav been reduced i:i tho least this yeari if anything greatly increase!. Thi prospects for a good, small grain cro| 33pm to be unusually 11 ittering jus n>w. Tae fruit crop will be fairlj good. Mr. I^vugford, of Prosperity, th now dep >t agent, moved his famil hero a tew days ago, ami ocoupieg th 1 house recently vacated by Mr. Yato ' O ir town was well represented b ihj fair sex at the Festival at Sjar ' tan burg list weok. 5 Mies Eilie Thomison ran up frori Columbia lad week and speut sivera " days with her parents and friends. Mrs. \veBf. of Montgomery, Ala ? ii visiting hor sisters, Mesdarae 1 Wright and Cunningham. Mr. J H. 81 >an,. of Wilruiugto: ? was mingling with his Mends her * last Fri lay. ' Mis? Minnie lioer, of 8helby, hn '' been on an extended visit to Mi ' Nannie Wood. r Miss Maggio Walker, of Cum' f ran up yesterday and speqt the da 1 will) her sister, Miss Ethel. Air. Jas. Wood and daughter, Mi 'I'erriai, wdj leave in a few days f* an e< en ltd visit to relallves In C v pens a id Oaffuey. Migxosette. All Alarming Religions Crisis. A crisis is iho decisive state of things, or tho point of time when an aff iii is arrived at its htight and mtist soon terminate or suffer a materia! change. In this age of progress scieu titic discoveries ?ud inventions, scionce seems to be running a very close race with religion, in fact we might say that science has with a great many supplanted the Bible with reference to the creation or rather tormation of i the earth. Oar ckil Iren are sum* be tog taught iu the geographiis used in a'l of the school: oftc-iay that tho earth was not made in the manner taught in the Bible; but on the contrary was tho result of natural causes, a red hot ball launched into space, | by whos> rapid revolutions underwent I a cooling process t' us firming a crust < vl rock, which rock iu t h s thousands i of }ears weathered and hocorno soil, i and by this ooling p-ocess like a i roasted apple with its crumpled sur- 1 face are the elevations aud depression?, hills, mountains and valleys. ? fiomo writer in contradiction of the l Bible itory of how Mcb63 and the children of Israel cro8??d the 11 jd soa, says that it waa no miracle, but that * the waters of the Had eta at that par- ! ticular place, 'ike the ebb and fl >w o! I iLe tide, periodically separated and i left a load way of dry laud as it were, i and Moses with hi3 peop'e reached it ' in timo and cropped in safety, hut 1 Pnaro was a littlo too late, ltnt the I meat startling and alarming announce 1 rnent ia that made by Dr. Harper, i one of the most intellectual cf ll:o I younger Biptiat leaders of the present i day and the head of that great B ip? 1 list, educational insti uti hi, Chic.tg ? | University, when he says that the i story of Iho creation as told in the Bible is a fable, li". oa'y for children. Fhore art. doubt!e?s mtuy other min I istera of bia faith and of different I faith, who teliovo as he does. N at- ! urally Dr. Harper's views are curreut in the institution of which he is the president, his opportunity tbr diaserni Dating his views all tho greater aud < the consequences all the more disattrona. ; Dr. Parkhurst and Dr. TI tyr ? of the u.tuistcrj of the Presbyterian church, by their radical departure from the doctriuo of that church are guilty of hcrc3j. The doctrine which they have s ably advocited in the past years ol their pastorate, they now hold up to public gaze as absurd and rediculous. All thie, to our mind, is but the result of too groat and an unwarranted reaca cb, culture, "which is a poor substitute for Christ." The doubts expressed by theiie .eminent divines . ii.tf iu n.ku ... ? i nuii lite uiuic is iiic iui^|micu n ji u ut G id is an evidence of culture, such as dostroys tl:o simple faith of the Chrisliau believer. Of all the Protestant denominations the Baptist and - Presbyterians have beea the mo3t strict ia rr quiring an absolute ad. hereuco to the belief in the Il.blc as s the inspired word <f God, and yet ) these expounders of IPs word dure say , at this late day, that tin re is a doubt - ab )ut the Bible being inspired. ^ Shamo on such men who woul 1 fain r hide behind their culture, their elo quer.ca. These views are but the inI initiative to the propagating of a new doctrine which must be apace with - (hie age of intellectual activity. Tho activitv dianlaved bv the # * ^ ^ ,f - V 0 c ergy in pronouncing the liible an J uninspired work and accounting for e the miracUa related in the liible upon - scicutific priooiplcs and theoti ?s ii but a ihe forerunner ol the downhill of the ? Christian religion. This greatect o! t all nations like tho ancients who had f reached the climax in science, and then went hack, back to darkness, 3 those nations to whom the gospel o: y Christ is now being preached by the ? missioi n-ies from this great nation ol ?. America, The United States will in y the next century be soiling their mis iomuies to us to try to lea' us hick t> that frith an 1 knowledge n from which wc are i\rw so very rcadity d retrograding. Tho Methodist so fir is the only one of tho Protestant do , nominations th-t has made no such e radical departures. Not long since & bishop ?j;i t to s mug young probationers b "If you don't believe our doctrine we e don't want yo i." The ministers ol this chuich are 'sent to the different 13 fields of labor by tho Annual Cor),-. *3 fercr.cc, and they go whether the pay bo much or Th'g method more Q. pjo^qly resembles Christ's iijtuclion y t) go prta-h the gospel to every cre ation, withe ut money and without 88 prioo, thorefore the Methodist minister , ii never sobjeotcd to a flattering call y to a church and has no opportunity | to see the finger of Ood pointing to a Held i \ which there is tho most incn'y. In tho Methodist wo msy bo longc sparod from this u tor darkness tba now threatens us. Obseuvlp. TIIOROUGJIXF.SS IW TIC ACII ING. A Strong I\ipcr on an Impori.itt Snbjpct by one of our Teachers. MyrtJhj sot, I know will c smtnend it self toAMsohets everywhere. O.ie of my school journals says tha the firi^Mo juisites of good teaching i IhoroUg.Qness and it is also the secom aud the third requisite and I for on* agree. Without it there can ha no laslinr good tji^ho pupil. The lessons wis bo 1< nrfle;i uud recited as separate an. lisiiuct tasks having little or no connection kith each other and as sucl speedily: forgotten. When, if proper!) (nas'ered ami understood, they (should fkroi links in a chain. Wo ntvvc ali kuown important lessons siKr^iilv IcarucJ. recited and f >r gotten, iho hist more speedily than jither of the otlnrs. To prtvcnt this a3 far as possible, to 83o tfin', tha pupil gets the greatest ;coi po$eib!e out of a le.-s >n, thoroughIy unc^ifc'cn Is the points and auhj ts it bririgj out and uuders'amls its e >11 nectipn.*?.ith lessons before ami}, for, s L tbi.ee: I ho tf Roller's d ity. To be able to all tLis is not easy even in the prw&k'ry grales as I know by sad pxperiecci. The teacher, of course, must have a thor ugh grasp ( t the lesaon bef.ic it i? poraiblo aad this involves'study, but to know that y ur work has been th iroughly done compensate* cite I lhi::k. There are si mas y diffrtnt ways t f heating even i third gkt la leading lesson, For x|;iitttUC0, hero is a gr*do (.1 twenty flic ?>r thirty reading and to hear e?c? oue drone through a i ara graph orjtwo is dullness itstdf. The pupil neither knows nor c.trej what thf less on is trying to teach hi n B>th thrf moial mil the kason intended Will lost unit eh pointed out. 1IU part d^??Ad thryvuh and tho ietsin \over for let I'jo v>(jher aafc a Ij\v leading questions or point 90mo particularly good jneiago arui the eagiu interest is refreshing to jo.and Lhe crowding questions otten sliov keen intelligence uuawakened by tin ltssoa b? fire. Keep up this inter** uutil tho losson is read and then til the story i:i your own words aad thei will quickly understand both lesioi and moral, though until that momen ueilhcr baa really existed lor him The rtaviu is plain if we stop to think These children arc much more used t taking in thiugs through their ear thau with their eyes, much more usei to heariug stories thau to r.adiD them. Consequently what wo eay appea to them much more quickly than whs they read, and this applies to all let 9ons more or less. We must mnko tl; dry studies as interesting as p ssibl if they are to do lasting gcod. W like our bodily foo 1 palatable and 1 course our mental equally so. But in our elfirts to be thorough i iL. .1 1-.!..! - r ! 1 ... luu iuuuuu rajuiug ui i.ur {Hipus >v must not neglect the watra litll hearts and the growing bodies undo our care. Ii3's on healthful exercist proper ;>>$itiuu3 in bitting and stnm iug and proper protection in ba weather and wo have done what w can. Tiiey ought t> havo plenty < "thought food" of which we heard t ranch at 11 >ek Hill last summer, < the .,eet to ktoj> heart uud lives pur With p'euty of tin best there will I no r> m for impure. With the pui little hearts foil of love f *r the teaehc ami a child's love is a beautiful thti and so easily won, and of got.due and purity as taught by Iter wor ami example and the child is v.c started in lifo. I pUoa the tcachei re?p visibility a? a'ntont j <j isl to t'n of the parents. Weeds will grow uncultivated UddsiO we cannot alibi to neglect any. Truly a teacher's reapon&ibi'utrrs a great for v.e hsvo heart a. I- I ? - I 1 I A 1.* uouy a i unuer our O-ire, out O'.ir unit conscientiously j?ei formed, ?'o c surely /'eel that we form no inconsi tr.vb'e j?hrt in the Creator's gr^at j)!a Mna. J. W. Thomas. " ! r? There will h? r.e army reogauiz t'.i and uo ship snbsuly atoal at this m > ion at least. The J>jniocratio?o)at hnvo fcrvod notice on the Il>p.jblica that u?.l:?7 they prom'no not to try pass thorn until text win'cr, filiSt tcring will he rest rte<l to agftimt eve j measuro that comes up In the Be- a , Tho Republicans have yielded. T jinibil'ty of tho Borate t> ch debato is somotimefl} of ' e \ v.;l to tho country afer al', 5 MAfm. A. NIGHG BANKI RESPECTFULLY - Banking Business and | And promise you the the best s 3! Taking the Census. I 1 | . . I i Washington, I). C., Special*?Con-; 1 sus cuum ?ratora begin work Juno II , | ? , j and must finish ia 30 d v a. Cities of j I | 8,000 or moro inhabitants, es shown -: by perceding census, must be comp'etiJ t*d in twowccVs. The four princip W re pms ?on populal'on, mortality, ag-1 riculture and manufactures ? must be j ! printed by July 1, 1002. Afier that ' t&oulati )n of special inq lirl es will be j 1 taken up. There ia no time fixed in j j which these latter reports must be . < j completed. r Ijjlj ^jJJ ^!seW O M J ^ ^ The greatesi shown ir Our $2.00 < | A CUSHIO ill Whirh mak ^ K t ? * A A V-/ * * AAA WV A A 5 | a pies See our li | "Herricl ;eiS w? ;;ii i y/i vv rcis Wear them one 't' I wear thei ;]i|| Try them once " J try an in 11; IuNior A V/mmmm 3KV&' -tjsw ILSON & SON. ERS. SOLICIT YOUR Your Fire Insurance, best protection and ervice. Killed By Lightning. Saturday arternoon, during the hard rain and hail storm, Lilla King, a colon d girl, 12or 13 yearo old, was killed by lightning in a tenant house on the Dominick Hill place, about 11 mi'es from tho city. Lightning struck the houso, went down the chimney and killed the girl.?Herald and News. T.io Sultan evidently doesn't realize what it mcaus to be up against the "splendid diplomacy" of Secretary Hay. 00. RDS L line ever ? Union. Dxford has N INSOLE es walking tsure. I ne of the c Shoe" omen. :e and you will always, and you'll never y other Q ion ice o. s. c. . ? > i