The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, July 18, 1902, Image 8
WAN
The people ol
community tc
the invitation
cnlinnl an fVi r\v
Converse Com
OPENED
16TH O F
A FULLY I
BUSINESS
In tin* ( rat led School 11
busines education to the
this community who wis
a thuiiui.li and complete
BOOK KEEPING,STI
WRITING and RA
k The work done in this si
same in every respect as
school. Thoroughness
what has made Conrer;
stand today at the head
colleges of the South. J
holding our diplomas b
that it means competency
, ?
Vo 6 ) ^ O \
^ \^4- -\
Phonography is so '
learned by any o?c of or
public licnefils I" he ileri
lable.?Jons Hkigiit.
in the JWnn J'it man Sv,
\
What Bright says regarding
ing a most liberal opportunity t'
this art. Typewriting is taught
hand, the two going hand in hai
/. th. i i.i.inni/J'.
\
j ") C, 1- V <\X
I ^ V. . ^ ?
I <S * , .
For full information co
and all information ivlati
r address either
PROF. DAVIS JEFFRII
Supt. of City Graded
PRC
Klkif! cnuiADn Tfti/m
IXM1U LUTIHRU 1 AMLW
ABOARD ROYAL YACHTS
Is Conveyed In Ambulance to
Kni .way Station.
> W?L WAKE A SHO' T VOYAGE.
Upon Arriving rl Portsmouth, Where
Yacht Was Mccr . J, I he Majesty is
Taken Aboard by Blue Jackets?
Warships Fire Salute.
la?idon. .f.ily ir?. King Ktluard IpU
Victoria /.lion at 11: :r> o'clock for
]V)j(smooth, where he will hoard the
loyal yacht Albert and Victoria. ^
The king was conveytd from Hu? kinchani
palace to the* railway .station
in an ambulance drawn by tv o horsi a.
The only other o< r i; rnt 01 the ambuiar.ee
was Quern /] xnrdwi, Til",
vehicle was driven at a walking pac .
Although th e was a small nowd ai
the station, tb re was no demonstration.
in con ; !' c w:th the < xpressed
wish of ih/ kdiS. The doctors and
Hpr?P8 it <; the as rival of the a:ubalance.
nrd a party of l>ln?> jackets
reran*.orl his majesty irom the vehlfir
to a royal salon car, formerly
used by tin* led" C|no n Victoria. Absolute
privacy uvs se em : d by a lofty
screen of i\ d plush, whic-n surrounded
the platform.
Porthmouth, Kn??., duly |".?Th<
reiv.ova. of hi.' nrn.i si* fjoru tlio train
to the royal yacht \vn. afely accomplished
l.y I-lip-t 'c' ft' .- .*i- ?i t .o> Kin", s
couch v*s place:! In a i* pti.n too.,
which ii.' ! !k";i f ? i. '.i.. cor.. I ru< ted
on the upper c'm'. .
The warp.hips in the harbor fired a
roval salute as the kins embarked, and j
[TED
f the city and
> know that at
of the Graded
ities of Union
mercial School
I ON THE
r JUNE
EQUIPPED
COLLEGE
uilcliiig, thus bringing a
very doors of those in
li to avail themselves of
course in
SNOGRAPHY, TYPE
PID ARITHMETIC.
liool w'll be exactly the
that done in the home
; until graduation is
.IV/ V/Vill UiViVKU W
of the leading business
business men seek those
ecause they have fount!
- in every instance.
/V c~-- ^
.b ^ \x
simple a? to l>?s readily
Jin.iry capacity, and t'l
ivcd from it arc incnlcuitfii:
/ /'Aohi'i; > itf>hy?
Style.
* Shorthand, and we arc oller>
those desiring a knowledge ot
in connection with the Shortid.
. . . i
; "*/,; r. rsjio .v.V/fC .S/j
, V. I I V t ... * <
j I j
-) J . * |
-)'s v. ^ |
neerning rates of tuition,
ve to the course call on
IS,
i Schools, or
)F. Wm. P. ETCHISON.
all the vessels dressed ship and
manned yards or decks. The royal
yacht learned off almost immediately
alter the transfer was completed.
SERVICES FOR PAUNCEFOTE.
Remains of Late British Ambassador
Consigned To Tomb.
1 ondon, July 15.?Memorial services
for Lord Pauncefote, the late
ambassador of Great Britain at Washinglonfi
were hold at noon today in the
chain I royal. St. James palace. All
Mil members of the American embassy
and many members of the government
were present.
King ICdward was represented hy
Lord Church ill, the acting lord chamberlain.
Prince of Wales and
the Duke ? : OonnauKbt attended in
perron.
PLnultancously with the services
fc'ro the remains of Lord Pauncefote
were interred in the church yard of
Karl frttoke. near Newark !Jpon-Trent.
The sitnpli' service was entirely of a
My character. The principal
rue reus v. ere the widow and hor
''anyhters and other members of the
mr :ly. T>" rc.ri?I tribute:* included
wrestle .ic :n the Brooklyn, the Ameri
can socio: . of I ondqn and Director
Michael Hc'hert, the newly appointed
British an.Taussador to the United
States.
Lew Entertains Alabama Editors.
Mew York, July 15.?Mayor Low,
will, at noon, receive the Alabama
Press Association, the members ot
which, with their families, will arrive
during the morning from Boston. In
the afternoon a tour of the city and
tlie parks will he made, and the evenin:;
will he spent at a Broadway theate;-.
Tomorrow morning the party
will take an outing to Manhattan
Beach and Coney island, where special
programmes have been provided.
ASPECT OF CHICAGO
STRIKED GRAVE
Eight Hundred Policemen
Held In Reserve.
-
A CRISES IS NEAR AT HAND.
Strikers will Resist Any Attempt on
the Part, of the Wholesalers "to Move
Their Freight?Merchants Losing
$1,000,000 a Day.
Chicago, July 15.?TiJigtat hundred ^olicemen
wero held In reserve at doVutown
stations Or at the railway warehouses
this momlnr; in anticipation ot
a possible attemr-t to raise the embargo
of 'freight oc< asloned by the
freight handlers' etiiko, and the syrtv
pathetic walk-out of the teamsters.
The situation was regarded as even
SQro serious than yesterday, a4 the
ilure of conferences scheduled iQt
today %vae believed to mean that the '
merehatits, who are suffering oyer a 1
million dollars' loss every day Of the
strike, would assume a determined attitode.
At meetings held yesterday houses
in different lines of the business, but
especially those handling perishable
goodB, declared their intention of manning
their trucks and attempting to
take freight from tho warehouses of
the railroads. After tho meeting of
th'o teamsters after midnight last
night, when it was arranged that the
freight handlers should make tho last
proposition to the managers, the merchants
changed their plans of action
tlie first thing today to await the result
of tho conference. Few were
found to express hope that these meetings
between tliem and their forpaer
employers would resuTt in peace. The
men were instructed, among other
things, to demand 17V4 cents an hour
for truckers, and on this point the
Team Owners' Association-is quoted
as stating that eight of the firms woro
willing to pay 17V6 cents, but -tho
others not agreeing, would remain in
the agreement to pay no more than
17*cent8.
The extra large f^rco of reserve
men on hand at police stations this
morning was a reflection of the feeling
that today, more than any other
day since the strike began, was liable
to bring rorth trouble. Any attempt
of the South Water street commission
men to remove perishable goods,
scores of ears of whloh lay spoiling oa
the tracks or in warehouses, was regarded
as certain to precipitate conflicts
between the police and piokdts.
The tentative plan of the big wholesalers
and manufacturers to deliver
freight' would, it was judged, certainly
result in similar conflicts. Said
one wholesaler:
"Wo are awatlng the result of today's
conferences. Slfould they ail, as
the others have failed, then it will bo
a fight to the finish. Wo have got to
do tnisfnejs, eVen if the jullUla ha&
to be called out. A few hours Will
tell the story."
Others expressed themselves in a
similar vein.
A continuance of the striko threatens
to tie up building operations in
the city. Several cars of brick were
on the tracks today, where they have
been for some tlmo. T^re supply comes
in day by day and it is said that the
present supply will last only a little
time, possibly not more than 24 hours.
Business Agent Hanks* of the Brick
Makers' union, declared that should
the freight handlers continue to refuse
permission to move brick fryn the
freight yards between 10,000 and 20,000
building men will Ik- out of work
within a woek.
Some of the merchants prepared to
move freight this forenoon, while the
majority preferred to wait in a forlorn
uupe ui a settlement. South Water
stroet men calletf a mooting to confer
'with representatives of the teamsters
and sock moan# to got their
goods started.
TRjAVCEY AT HIS OLD TRICKS.
Oregon Convict Doubles His Tracks
and Again Dodges Pursuers.
Auburn, Wash., July 15.?Tracey,
the escaped Oregon convict, has repeated
his old tricks and doubled on
his tracks. He was seen on a road
near the Muckleshoot reservation
by an Indian boy. "Ho was also seen
by Henry O'Neill, n rancher, at the
same time.
| While Tlraeey "was stealing by old
' roads and trails back from Enumeni
claw, the tyloodliotinds wero on a stampede
to Palmer Junction. The outlaw
had an open field before him. Thd
few guards who were left in tho vicinity
of Auburn could
1.V1CI ?*!? kUU
I Intricate approaches from Enumenclaw.
The territory tjhat Tracey covi
ered was Phenomenal., and when he
reached the ridge of Muckleshoot he
I was undoubtedly too jfatigned to pro
cccd further. Othor* isc nothing lay
I In his why toward Seal tie.
Saddlery Associat ion Meets.
! Cleveland, July 15.?Two hundreJ
: and fifty delegates from all sections of
j the country were present when the
fourteenth annual Contention of the
, Wholesale Saddlery a*;f?oeiaition was
called to order h'fre today Hy Presl.
dent J. E. Denver, of St.. Ixntls. Af- j
1 ter an address of welcome l?y Presl!
dent if* D. Ooulder. of Cleveland chain1
bcr iif commerce to which Denver responded,
the convention took up rouI
tlne? business. The canvsntlOD .will
| hold dally tsytloni nntih
$
AWFUL EXPERIENCE <
OF PLEASURE PARTY
Night of Terror Is Spent on
Lake Michigan.
CLINGING TO C??SIZED BOAT.
Yacht Arab IV, Containing Ten Persons,
Overtaken by Squall and Was
Swamped?Two of the Party
Drowned?Fearful Sufferings off the
Others.
Chicago, July ltv.?Two persona perished
in the lake last night and eight
others fought for life, clinging to the
overturned yacht Arab IV, owned by
John H. Cameron, cashier of tho National
Bank of the Republic. The
yacht suddenly was capsized by the
flroce stoyro which rushed over the
city late in the evening. The dead
are:
Mary Taylor, 16 years old. 1
Harry Jenson, ?.7 years old. |
The rescued: J
John H. Cameron, Mary Phoenix
Cameron, his wife; Miss Cameron, ?
Miss Maml? Goodman, William Cony,
E. S. Haskins, Arthur Barmosa, keep- 4
er of the Arab IV? Ono unknown. I
When tho storm struck tho yacht no I
attempt had been made to reef sail
and with all its canvas flying the bo&t
with ten merrymakers aboard, who s
were wholly unconscious of danger, V
went over in a flash, filled instantly _
and left eight persons struggles f?r ^
life in the waters of the lake, 8 miles
from shore. .
By heroic efforts on the part ot tho
men tho women were supported in the
water until they could bo given a firm
hold on the ovorturned boat. Tho
yacht, as it left the moorings, had "for* .
tunately towed along behind Jt a smgil *
yawl, and the men finally got all but V.
Cameron and Barber and tlift twp J;
drowned persons into it, and starfcfd
for the 'long row to the shore. Alopg
toward midnight HaiVy Boylau, thh
steward of the Columbia Boat elub,
heard a hall of tlhe faintest klfld como
out of the darkness of the ctllbhouse. 0
Slowly the heavily laden rowbOat Cft$lo j
creeping up to the landing "with the
women in a state of collapse and Cor- h
cy so exhausted that he could hardly
move the oars. All he could say was:
"Send out llfo-savlug crew. i\Jhb
overboard; two dead and more* cllhgiug
to boat." i
Cameron aud Barber when found '
were nearly exhausted and about to
drop from tho boat. They had despaired
of rescue bofore dawn. Cameron
was in a state of collapse owing to his
anxiety for the safety of his wife and 1
Miss Cameron, and grief at tho death i
of Young Jansen aud Miss Taylor,
whom he knew had not been saved.
The Arab TV was built last spring
and tool; part In tho races for the Sir
Thomas IJpton cup.
Thirty Persons Drowned. t
St. Petersburg, July 15.?Thirty per- '
sons wero downed today by tho sinkitlsr
of a small nasseneer stearfler on i (
tho Luge river near Probora-Scljeiv
Bkula. The disaster was caused by
overcrowding. Only tlioso of the local
passengers, who were on the upper
deck, were saved.
Even the Effort Connta.
"1 alius try to bo a gentleman," said
Undo Ebon. "Mighty few people succeeds,
but de fact dat anybody's makin'
de effort counts u heap to his credit."?Washington
Star.
If a boy is perfectly healthy itnd nor- .
rual, a quart of raisins which he is '
given to stone will du%idle to a half
pint before he is through.?Atchison
Globe.
>M vlM
IWOMANSRELI EFf
I A really healthy woman boa lit- I
tlo pain or discomfort at the
menstrual period. No woman 1
needs to have uny. Wine of
Cardui will quickly relievo those ^
8 smarting meustruai pains and I
Etho dragging head, back andU
side aches caused by falii ug of I
the womb and irreguVar menses. I
IWIKE'CARDU:!
I has brought permanent relief to E I
1,000,000 women who suffered I
every month. It mokes the men- E
I strual organs strong and healthy.
It is the provision made by Na-1
turo to givo worn ten relief froinm
I the terriblo aches. m<l pains which
1 blight so many h onicc. a
ff Ohmwww id, La., Oct. 14, 1900.
I hnvc hecn very <?Jclc for some time.
I was taken with a. nevero y??in in my
I >tdo and could iw>t get any relief until I
I tried a hot tlo ot A Vino of Cardui. Be
foro I had taken al/ of it I wks relieved.
I fee 111 my duty to say that you have a
wonderful modioli id.
Mm. M. A. YotiNT.
For ad vice* (4 llt?r? {mv.addn wi, frlvIhiR symp
torn*. "The i>die?' Advisory Department, Toe
Ghatraoooga Medu- inoCo., ChaUanoo.*?,Tean.
m t-~-3
5HI RTi
Shirts are a speci
This season we ha1
weather Shirts the
workmanship ha\
equaled by any <
tvi ocm c o ?*?/%r? An
1 VUl> UO&
$1.00 and
>
Madras, Batiste
BAILEY & C
3RASP THE Of
)f getting a Good E
>ffered you. We h
S t y
o select from and you d<
is to order for we carry
lave
ROCK HILL
f all styles. If you want a Bug$
larness come and look over our s
ell you.
REMEMBER YOU TAKE
ou buy and we guarantee what w
GREEN 6
LEADERS IN VEHICL1
UNION CARRLi
Are the people to see v
R E PA I
High Grade Trimming and
jet their estimate before having
UNION CARRL
W.JF. HUQHEf
NEXT.TO GREEN &
-4DR. I. M
+ DENT
3rowi: and Bridge
WorV Sn^ololt.Ty*
> fk-:-' T
g,?r
4>e>?,
| WHY U?
^ 'a
l THEVEGET
. SUPERIOR 1H QUEL
f i TO ALL 0
sin I
I * ?-ADDRESS
SAVANNAH. GA. ^
N y
Celebrated Fall of Bastile.
>tow York. July 15.?Frenchmen to ,
?ie number of fi.OOO celebrated In thl? \
city the on<j hundred and thirteenth^ i
anniversary of the haatile'a fail. Mac I
ante CAjnbon, wife of the French am* I
basBa<Jor to the. United States, tftm <
preaent. j
p?
X FOR JULY
^ and?a
S AUGUST. ?
I
f
v 2
ialty with us.
vealine of hot
9
it for style andl
re never been
one, and that
n.
<
>, Linen, Eto. j
OPELASD
3PORTUNITY
uggy when it Is
*?- * ? ? m m' r ^
avc it vat icy vi
1 e s!
*
ont have to watt for
r them in stock.We
BUGGIES
;y, Carriage, Surrey or Bet of
tock and we are ,eure we will
NO RISK. You see < what
re sell.
l BOYD. *
LS AND HARNESS.
1GE WORKS
trKnn iri r\4- n r**?
i iivii iu uccu v/jl auj "
RING.
Painting a Specialty.
your work done elsewhere.
5.GE WORKS,
>, Manager.
BOYD S STABLE.
rfjAiR,^Office
Bank Building
TTnion. 8 P.
i in ? i i
: LARD?1 .
m I (
!***? 1
ABLE FAT 7H
ITYAMD PURITY %d
IT HERS
MlX?wayXzcX <r\ Ufl
ygF M
.? SOUTHERN COTTON OLCQ Vfiii *
, m cARajNaS""''
Pootmao|orp Appointed.
Washington, July 1$.?The fpljpwto?
presidential postmasters appoint- 4
nritfnts were announced today: ' * 0. J
Shannon, Camdon, S. C,j George D.
itiore, Sntntor, S. C.; Dallas Herbert,
Dompneicoa, Tpg,; George 8. 8. 8elfl?#,
w3ki&,m. J