The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, March 20, 1903, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

New Goo< For Sprii i ?= Call a handsorr Spring g received, selection Spring < skirts an fnmp Pi get the v Our ne are arriv: Call on u: you warn ^ - Yours for | M.WJ local Schedtlle for Passenger Trains. TD A Tira VDAU nATTTUDTi ftOAlilB fAVU UUliUiUU.lA , Arrive 9:00 a. m. Depart 9:00 a. m " 1:60p.m. " 2:10p. m TRAINS FROM SPARTANBURG. Arrive 11:85 a. m. Depart 11:8? a. m " 9:10p.m. " 9:C0p.m. Close connections at Spartanburg with trains for Atlanta and Charlotte and intermediate stations, and at Columbia for Charleston, Savannah, Jacksonville and points south. Through trains for Asheville, etc. Nos. 9 and 10 carry through sleepers between Jacksonville and Cincinnati. SKABOARD SCIIKDULK. No. 27?South bound passenger arrives at Carlisle at 2 a. m. No. 31?Arrives at Carlisle at 10:25 a. m. No. 38?North bound passenger arrives at Carlisle 3:37 a. nr. No. 34?Arrives at Carlisle 0:48 p. m. Local News Notes Points Personal and Otherwise Picked up and Paragraphed by Our Pencil-Pusher. Mies Eli/.rbetb McBee, of Greenville, is visiting her brother, Itev. Croswell McBee. Miss Helen Sheppard, of Edgefield, who has been spending a few weeks tit w m v\ tt nr..n * . Wlio Mra. u. xi. it aimut', leiumeu iu her home Monday. Ulr. R. W. Patsons, of New York City, is visiting at the home of Ltev. Croswell MeBee, on Church street. Miss Thorns, the milliner for the Mutual, has returned from lier vacation, and is ready to attend to the wants of the ladies in the matter of headgear. Mr. Went C. Wallace, of Spartanburg, stopped over in Union Monday on his way to Carlisle, where he was going to look after some business. * We are sorry to learn of the death of \ the 9 months old child of Mr. O. T. Belue, which occurred on Monday morning, the result of an attack of whooping .cough. t Miss M. E. Tinsley has returned from the Noitb, where she purchased a nice line of ladies' hats and will t>e ploased to : have the ladies call in and inspect the ' latest effects. J An (flort is on foot to organize a bal I team for Union. The team is being se IletUd with eare and we hope to sci Home good ball this season. Mr. J'enit h his agreed to donate the old park fo ^ J the game if they will get up a goo (team. Tifiii r is tig. * nd see a te line of oods just Good of early joods for d waists. arly and aiucb. ;w goods Lng daily, sforwhat t. business, BOBQ. Dr. McCreery Glymph, of Virginia, scientific optician, lias permanently located in Union, and has his otKce at the Union Drug Co., his residence is on South street. Mr. It. P. Harry has returned from the northern markets where he has been purchasing his spring goods for the Mutual. Watch out for some money saving bargains when his new goods come. Mr. M. W. Bobo has gone this week ' to the northern markets to purchase the spring stock for his mammoth department store. He will have something good to tell you when he returns. Mr. Lewis X. McNeace who has been spending some time in Asheville returned Saturday but left Monday for the northern markets to purchase the spring stock for his growing business. Miss Xellie Brown, of Anderson, is visiting her brother, Mr. It. E. Brown, the popular railroad agent at this place. Miss Xellie has many friends in Union county, having taught school in Santuc a few years ago. Mr. Eugene Sanders, the claim clerk at the depot, ran against a case of the mumps a few days ago, and he is conQned to his room hois de combat for a few da> s. We hope he will soon be at his post again. Mr. W. S. McLure has returned from Baltimore. He says he got some line pick-ups that will soon be in and he will tell you all about them. Mr. McLure says he has to buy a larger stock eveiy time on accouut of the constant growth of his business, and he attributes his flue success, in a large measure, to his advertisements in The Times. Mr. W. C. Xelsou, manager of the Western Union r.tlioa hni rfopived in formation by wire that the electric clock which ic to bs placed in tin (fllce has been shipped. It is controlled by the electric wires direot from Washington, and if it gets off time the hand is thrown to twelve by the current promptly as the ball falls in Washington. There will probably 1? two or three more of these clocks set up in Union. Messrs. ITams & Lipscomb, the hur? tling young wholesale merchaits, have torn away the wooden buildings on their ' 1 ?t fronting on Bachelor street and will kbegin the erection of a handsome twostoiy buck building }00 by 42 feet to 1 cost between $*,000 and $0,000. This - handsome building will add materially a to the appearance of that part of town, 3 and we hope will furnish an inducement r for the tearing down of the wooder d shacks across the street and the building of a handsome city market place. Confederate JBazaar at Rich mo The John Hames Chapter of Daughters of the Confederacy hel< meeting at the residence of the Pr dent, Mrs. McWhirter, Tuesday af noon, March 10th, for the purpose discussing contributions to be sen the Confederate Bazaar at Richmond The United Daughters of the Conl eracy, assisted by the Confedera Southern Memorial Associations. ' hold a bazaar for tho benefit of the . ferson Davis memorial arch and Confederate museum which is now tablished iu the mansion in which Pi ident Davis resided during the v They therefore ask the help of ev man, woman and child in order that entire South may share in the hor The Association of the Jefferson Ds Monument U. D. C., has a directo: each State and the Confederate Muse a regent who represents the room ow by each State in the Southern Conf eracy, and will bo represented by a tf bearing its name, shield and colors, : articles received will be given to table which may be designated by donor. It is befitting that to the dau less Chieftain and his heroic follow these two monuments be raised in capital of the Confederacy, the one s which can never lose its identity w the cause for which they struggled i died. The Southern and Adams Expi Companies will deliver free of charge packages limited to twenty-live poun Whenever possible packages should forwarded from these companies, articles, small or large, for table or i tauraut, for U3e or beauty, should addressed to "Confederate Ba/.t Richmond, Va." Name and reside of consignee should be in the corner not given as part of the address. J The principal work of our Chapte to raise funds to erect a local monum to our Confederate dead. The Treasurer reported $33.00 treasury which amount goes to this fu Below is a list of veterans who h kinily contributed: Mr. Wm. Jeffries ? " Mr. MclCown ] Mr. Herbert James 1 Mr. N. B. Kison 1 Capt. F. M. Farr 1 Capt. A. H, Foster Mr. Reuben Kirby Mr. Z. Reeves Mr. John Brandon Mr. M. B. Gilliam Mr, R. W, Tinsley Mr. C. R. Long The Chapter will deliver crosses honor to veterans who have made i plication, June 3, 1903. So those def ing a ci oss will please send to Mrs. L. MeWhirter at once for applicati blanks of eligibility. Etha IIames, Cor. Sec. Jonesville, S. C. Jonesville Joltings, Jonesville, March 16.?Mar 80 far baa been very ca'ra and wai and the bees, birds and butterflies a buzzing and singing like spring w here sure enough. The blooms a out on the peach and plum trees, a garden truck begins to show, but tin the question comes up is the co weather done for this season? Ai the answer comes back no, there yet to be frost and cold weather plont So it would be better if tbe wai tine weather would hold oir longer. Mrs. J. F. Alman has been cri cally ill with pnoumonia for sever days but sho is some better and seems the crisis hat pas-ed. Several others are sick in town wi gripp aid pneumonia, none, howevc are very serious. The saw aud hammer are qui busy in our town these days, sever houses are gring up. S>me of the are dwellings and some are bu3inc houses. The election for City Fathers w take place ou the second Tuesday April, and tho probability is the will be but one ticket. Jonesville h not ba<l mucn excitement over io? elections since 1882, when wc had prohibit! >n act pasiod by the Legi laturo which set at rest the issue wet and dry, and other issues ha never come up to much extent in o municipal elections. Mr. and Mrs. H. T. MoKissick, Kelton, ^pent Saturday and Sund in our town, Misses Oenevia Ghapraan and Le H irmon made a pleasure trip to Spt tanburg Saturday. Miss Hello Little j din who is tear ing at C.ifton paid Jjnojville a vi Saturday ar.d Sunday. Mr. William McGowan, of t Spartanburg bar. and AJ*. C. J Foster, of the U?ion hir, were town Saturday ou professional bu nes*. J. G. Lmg, Jr., of Union, sp< Sunday in our citv. Messrs. J. B. Foster and son, I tlejohn, men of the grip, both spi 8urdiy at their homes in town. There has been ranch apeculati about the Hopkins Alexander legt i that is expected to drop down ; Union county from Los Angeles, 0 but the hundred aul forty-th M- I ery 553 Roval TTIoveo<^f H IVI W mm iv is r in urn * ??? S You are better ible and don't bring the fact c the the looks is correct dres proper corsets. pot ith ? THE STRAIQi all ids. 1 be ? ANI 1 be but r.5! Are de j" \ are ma 'So will n .00 RoYALV/oWESTEli / ? Sme'472 m0ney SW. T. 25 ? of thousand dollars is a long way off yet, Ip~ and in the opinion of Telephone will ,lr" uever be realized by the Union county , * claimants, because one cannot deed 'on property they do not own at the time, and so far as the will :9 concerned the beneficiary died before the testa tor, and*in that event the property willed would lapse. S3 it eeems clear according to the laws of South Carolina that Mrs. Hopkins and her son will be left out of the whole estate. c?, There is no one, however, who would m be more pleased if the suit could be ire gained by our county people. A8 liev. L. D. Carroll filled his pulpit re hero Sunday morning and evening u\ and he gave his congregation two en g??^ edifying sermons. ,'d Mr. W. E. Alman, of Cross Hill, n,) spent Friday and Saturday in Jones j8 villo. y Telephone. m SEVERE ATTACK OF ORIP II j Cured by One Bottle of Cliamberal Iain's Cough Remedy. it "When I had an attack of the grip last winter (the second one) I actually cured myself with one bottle of ChamMr* berlain's Cough Remedy," says Frank \V. I'erry, Editor of the Enterprise, Shortsvillo, N. Y. "This is the honest truth. 1 at times kept from coughing myself to pieces by taking a teaspoonIII ful of ill is remedy, and when the cough>33 ing spell would coinc on at night I would take a dose and it seemed that in the M briefest interval the cough would pass . olT and I would go to sleep perfectly in free from cough and its accompanying r? pains. To say that the remedy acted as a8 a most agreeable surprise is putting it ,.n very mildly. I had no idoa that it would or could knock out the grip, gima ply because 1 had never tried it for such is- a purpose, but it did, and it seemed 0f with the second attack of coughing the remedy caused it to not only be of less duration, but tho pains were far less ur severe, and I had not used the contents of one bottle before Mr. Grip had bid of me adieu." For sale by I)r. b. G. Duke, Old Charley Is Dead. ila O'.d Charley, tho chestnut sorrel horse lr* of Mr. G. C. Greer, which he ro le dur^ lng the Hampton campaign, Mhilehe sit Wrt3 Pres'^ent ,',e forest Democratic club, died during the storm of twi weeks ago Friday night. lie gave him [j decent burial as he had promised to do jn He Irid made twenty-nine crops with isi- him. The horse was thirty-seven years old. lie bought him when lie was 0 jnt years old for $200, and w?s in his prime during the Ilampton campaign, lie <iti was well known in Union county, at d ent Mr. Greer says he was a!waj n ready fi i him day or night, and never had been i?a sick. lie says he feels like lie has losl lev a friend in the death of Charlie. Hi on began farming with him on a one-honx ? fntn, lint he had dona no work in thi ree last two yctun. > 2 loyal Worcester and ion ion Corsets. looking than that othe >ut prominently enough, ising, and he first step i: iT FRONT ROYAL > 0 BON TON CORSE! signei on hygienic principl ide in all the latest styes. G irself and daughter at once, otice the improvement, back if not as representedBEATY | In An Old StocI D % MONEY tied up in an i l"'l a risky business. Fires oec (2 beries occur more frequentl j?i!j is provided with a fire pre V proof steel safe, and we hold i t\ stolen money. AVe hare S burglar proof outfit that mo Don't keep your in one; h,j stuck away in your house. |/m| it is safe, and let us pay yo n anti put it in circulation. ^ with interest added, ? THE PEOPLE Q B. F. ARTHUR, (V Assets $175,000. ^ ^ Stock Attention I We want you to visit ware store and inspe? largest assortment of Plows ' rt ?-i r\ auu Plow S' I 1 fhe State. We b eat load and can sa> i (Trade with us and b I) UNION HARDI Hardware Leaders, /mSmX *r wnmnn V?nt tt<m? MMV JTUU The basis of good n correct dressing VORCESTER rs Les and ? rst one / Vrm 1 n&nMSl y?>" iKsn s^Sft & CO. :!ni ^ old stocking iit home is )( :ur. Murders and rob- H v than ever. Our bank H iof vault and a burglar \\ ourselves responsible for H the very best fire and H ney could secure. y iu your pockets or H Bring it to us where tf* u 4 per cent, interest W You can get it back Q :S BANK, | President. y holder worth $800,000. uj Farmers. our big Hardct the best and lJ4c lb. tocks y them by the /o you money, e happy.) AT ARE CO., Union, B. O