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?N THE TOWN OF UNION ? T T ~W V 1 TBI ~M M~ U ^ jft Lsrge Cotton Mills, one. Knitting g I 8 mil 8 % I J B ik ! 88 /B 8 I L 1 Tlires Cotton Miltor^puo^tBtdttiMg a Mill and'pye Plant, one Oil Mill, Eg 15 ?| . fy J S fl | m 8 8 M/ B B Mill. nnnthmr hniiAf^f- MsfSmaZS' ... > i:^ 1 I 1 I]. 1 1 I I I > 1 1 | wl Hi ^ * '-?* F*mw' Graded Schools, Water Works and I B *B B J B 1 I 1 f fl fl VI I J k /i Taxable value in and OOi ottoWWpbr* > 'A > Electric Lights, Population 7,000. _M . ? -*? * -BL V-/ J " -B- -BL ? JB- rV?' $5,000,000. 4'o : VOL. L1V. NO. 10. ONION, SOUTH CAROLINA. F ttyfY, APRIL h>. 1904. vrV'A #1.00 A YEAR: Satisfactc Our metti ducting "I calculated you satlsJ v vice. ,\ Wm. A. NICHOLSC liUriclc1 fsi'Ml! CHARLES i Copyright, I D O O. i> 4b Vjy "Mind you, let me pay my sliure," whispered Pago, and then he found himself being introduced by bis first name to two lii^bly colored queens of the ballet, and all four proceeded at ?nce to a private supper room. Albert found the girls bright, vivacious and expressive, ns fai? as a superficial use of 8l-"'-r ?pes. They ordered the choicest ?tnu highest priced items on the bill of fare and talked about their "mashes" In other cities in a way that made Albert grateful that he had been introduced by his first name only. When in the wee small hours they escorted the two girls to their boarding place. Page was glad to be rid of them, nud when lw reached his room he did not feel particularly proud of himself. lie felt less so the next morning when lie received a letter from Alice torhicli read: ts,ra th money you Bent. You do not know how n hurts me to feel we owe so much, ?"V T cried over it more than you Will ever knt^ lj*nt wcek 1 recelvcd m* Xf!" . , - * >?|30-and I was Very U fnr 1* monCy 1 proud of It. for U -,^lf d t ,t wlth ever earned I took % , * ,t to twenty.flve you sent_"wt*for 1 htul {U.I. nuuoa. x nave oniy *i> . ' . . . . to buy some boots and gloves, Dut will last me a month, for I've . v., ! heart to spend a penny I aip not on to until the debts are paid. 1 had to bu*v tho boots because walking four miles a day wears them out very fast. And lie had spent $20 the night before to hear a couple of ballet girls talk slang! CHAPTER VI. J Tfr "|AGE was a little late at the ofI I fioe the next morning, and WUMllj Fr.ve was there ahead of him. Ptwaltl *! was out with young Nnson last evening," hi' explained as the old lawyer hade him a rather crusty good morning, "and 1 overslept." "Oh, that is all right," responded Frye In an instantaneously sweetened tone. "I am glad you were, and, as 1 told you, you are wise to cultivate him. I suppose," he continued, with a leer, "that you were buying wine for some of the gay girls?" Page looked confused. "Well, we went to the theater anil after that had n late supper," he explained, "anil it was after 1 before I returned to my room." "I don't care how late you are out or what you did," said Frye, still eying Pnge, "so long as you wore with young Nason and kept out of the lockup. Ills father pays me a salary to look nfter his busiitess, and his son is the pride of his heart. I trust you ..... 1 mannlnir If vnll flflll't uiiucinuum in j uikM ?? >i0, ?. ? > feel like work this morning," he continued suavely, "mount your wheel and take a run out to Winchester and see if that mortgage on the Reave? estate lias been satisfied. The exerclst and air will do you good." J*age was nonplused. ' "lie has some deep laid plot in lib -jajiad," he thought as he looked a1 <s Frye. He was glad to escape the office .however, for his bead felt full of bees find, thanking his employer for tin permission, he qulckjy left the city be bind him. The crisp October air ant exercise soon drove away some of tin self reproaches at his own foolish con duct of the night before. The errand at Winchester was at tended to, and then lie headed back foi the city, taking another course. Bj the time he reached town he was fnin from hunger, for he had pa ton n< breakfast A good dinner restored Jain to his natnral sojf possession, and tliei be went to the office. For n week he reproached hlmscl every time, he thought how much hi escapade had cost and felt too asliamei to answer Alice's letter. When ho dl< be assured that innocent sister that h Was saving h* eopld and shouh is end more 111/ -'vm a# possible rprntilc called t .... i*-? the second Hjrged Jb^JD Jo Join Jl?e club, to wbld >ry Service. Loa of oonDusinoss Is to insure factory serIN & SON, Bankers. _ ? ^ ffls 5 lerryif ?: psa CLARK MUKN y LEE a2. SHEVAUTi, k$v/:J mMMMMWMM Page assented. "It will serve as u place to spend n lonesome eveninu." lie thouehf Several times Fryc had tnnde casual in<iuiries as to the progress of his Intimacy with young Nnson, all of which ; led Page to wonder what his object was and why it concerned him. At last, one day at closing time and after ho had tohl the office boy he might go, Fryo let a little light into that enigma. "Sit down a moment, Mr. Page." he remarked as the lutter was preparing to leave. "I have a proposition of an important nature to make to you." And then as he fixed his merciless eyes on his clerk and began to slowly rub Ills hands together he continued: "You have been nearly three months in my employ, Mr. Page, and have fulfilled your duties satisfactorily. J {kink the to attend to nil have reason to feel he is1 not entirely .satisfied to continue that arrangement, and I am forced to find some way to bring n little'pressure to hoar 011 him in order that lie may see it is for his interest to still retain nie. j "Now, I believe John Nnson is not entirely happy in his home relations und that a certain young lady receives a . share of his attentions. While tjioy are ( n;<iver seen in public together, gossip I links tlielr names. What I want is for you 1? out tliro"Kli your acquaintance witu tlic Nasons just what bond there is between the elder Nason and the young lady and report to me. I do not Intend to use the knowledge for ' any illegal purpose, hut merely us a Uvnrnco tn ret*i? N'lison's bUSillCSS. 1 1 am jnvare that, to prosecute your Inquiries discreetly by means of your intimacy with young Nason will require more money tlinn I am paying you, and therefore, if T can depend on you to do a little detective work, I shall from now on increase your salary from tT-"> to SIT.". What do you say?" The llrst jjmm'se tbat Page felt was to absolutely refuse thgre and then to have anything to *i /''rye's nefarious scheme, bt?i i .a thought of b'9 situation, tiro unpaid debt at home ami the certainty that a refusal would mean a loss of his position conquered his pride and kept hip) silent. For a moment ho reflected, trying Jund to see a way out of the dilemma, and thoq said:. "It is rather a hard task you ask, Mr. Frye, for I uni not accustomed to the role of detective, but 1 am in your employ, and as long as I am 1 will do the best I can for your interests," It was ? temporizing reply, niul Frye so construed It at once. "I must Insist if you accent }ny of: fer," lie said, "that you give me your promise to do your best to earn the money, Jt doesn't pay to he too squeamish in this world," he continued In a soothing tone. "All buffinpss Js t<> a certain extent a game of extortion? a question of do the other fellow or he ? will do you." Then arising and hold' ing out a skinny hand Jo grasp Page's, J he added, "I shall expK-t you to keep " faith with me, Mr. Page," and the Ju' terview ended. - Wheu Albert met Frank at the club that evening he was preoccupied and morose, aud prank, noticing his fra?_j of mind, tried to cheer Jilm. ' "lou iook as 11 you una neeu givei) 'f n fncer, old lunn," he said. "What * Is the matter? Has Frye been eall9 lng you down for something?" ? I'age looked at his friend a moment, 3 and the impulse to make a clean breast of It'and relieye his feelings t was strong, but he did not. 9 "I do not like Frye," he said lu1 stead, "and the more I see of him the 3 less I like him. At times he makes ? me feel us If ho was a pnnkc ready to 3 uncoil and strike. Hnvo you over notlced his eyes and the way he has of e . {Continued on 8rd page.) THE CASE OF SANTO DOMINGO. An Argument from the Facts for Immediate Consideration. The political condition of the island is really a minor detail in (lie total scene of its wretchtdness, though it is this that has attracted the attention of tlie world. The two nations whoso seats of government are itsj>ectivcly at Santo Domingo and at Port-au-Prince are nominally republics. They are, in point of fact, pure military despotisms. Presidents have alwajs obtained ollice by force of arms and have ruled by terrorism. Elections aie legendary. Liberty is a tiction. The pretense of self-government is a farce. Ine ordinary institutions of government ?except the arnry?are largely mythical. TIih urinv is u ft.*.:* ..... ? ...J ? .. ...v. JUII Dec lb GVCiywbeie, shouting for its local general, indiffeient us to whether it is on thebideof the lecogniztd Government or agaiust it. Soldiers throng the cities and picket eveiy trail; they bivousc peruiatieuily in the streets, Uuowiug dice on the drumhead at every con er, lioiling their plaulains in the lee of eveiy wall. There are two lanks in the aiuiy: privates aim cel.ends, the latter gmgenus in uniforms in eveiy sty le known to the art of military tailoring, the former content with a red stripe down the hg of jeans trousers. Theie is no lack of constitutions. The people wonUl dessise a Piesidetit who pieitnded to jegairi one. The Govern uieiit is confessedly a group of inen banded for plunder. Whatever they can steal, coiiliscale or procure by terrorism and in llie way of biibes is the just rewaid or their patriotism. As lor the idea of governmeiiUas a benefice it. institution, regulating the various public functions, maintaining public order and dtcci.ey, fos'eriug enterprises of comineicial, industrial and social advantage it is utterly remote from Dominican imagination. Consider it in any fealnie and you htiug up in a quaguure of hopeless ineptitude and monstrous ma1 ad ministration. A STATE OF AIISOLUTE ANAKCIIY. 6anto Domingo proper, in the east, of late tar outstripped her sister "republic" in i be kaleidoscopic brilliancy of her political history. Accoiding to the constitution, the I'reMuenlal term is four \eais; since 18UJ Santo Domingo has rejoiced in a gl.nl procession of sevtn 1'iesideuts, and before this article is in type Moral lis, the present incumbent, as well as Morales, their common foe, -very luteiior valley haibors a chief who is ready at a moment's notics to start ior the city of Columbus, burning towns and gathering a lagged horde as lie goes. intau icvtiiuiiuiio impiy iiu mil ul ideas. They are not thfc consequence ot -ociuPof |vo)ilicai aspiration. Tney are ihe lesuttof mere lighting liable, nieiouiial lemperameut and sellish ambition. Revolution is the noiinal siajeot the island. Tiie liieial tact is that, in its Spauish ami French countries alike, absolute anaicby prevails in Haiti. The tiroup of advenluiers which at present, hi litu of a better, is recognized by the United Mates as the lacto government ot Santo Domingo is powerless except in the streets and a port or two. Within a few weeks tiie American consulate at Samana lias been invaded by an armed foice which dragged refugees from its pi election; two American mei chant men, ilie Cherokee aiul the ?few Vork, have been repeatedly liied upo.,; ihe American naming ship, Yankee has beeu iired upon, a machinist aboard her being killtii; t* e launch of the American muu-of-wai Newalk has been'iired upon, and the Mewaik lias lien forced to shell the woods lying nctuss the river from the ci y of Santo Domingo. &uch a state ot a flairs is simply intoleiable. T|ie great danger iu wliictr it ph.ces the peace of the world is illustialed by an incident tliat occurred a few weeks ago: Supporters of President .Morales board'd the German merchantman iJolatein, then in tiie harbor of ;?aii P. dro Ue Maporjs, and seizing ibree refugees carried them off as piisouets to the Domii.ican gunboat Pas dene. Germany is occupied just at Ibis time, but other such u.so ent affronts, if tbiy a.b permitted, may b.ing down upon t) e island ihe just wrath of Europe, and t'oice US to as-eit the Monroe doctiiue against fcou/J great Eutopean powei winch has undertaken to establish order in llatai only bt cause we have neglected to do it ourselves. It is a mistake to suppose that Dominican revolutions are slight and bloodless atTaiis. Asarule, the slaughter is great. Pave in t|ie partjctllpr that the leaders are much given to such formalities as the piomulgaijon of constitutions and Ibe appoint i> t ?# cuoiuems, campaigns on the iid.ii i >ut> much like raidg of wild Indians, of Zulus or Earths, upon other tubes, panto Domingo and Haiti are i.ot I/atin American countries; they are African, with a slight mixture of Spau| idi and Indian in the east; their people tight with the rage and blood-lust of savages, and irom time to time from among tlieiu f.se captains of no little military genius. Many thousand have I l? si their lives in the battles of the past {two years, and many tiiousand more have been summaiily executed or done to death in captivity, l'risons in Haiti are una{>eakable welters of infected corruption wheie victims lie down with yatjs ip pools of UUh. War in the island has horrors all its own, Eve?y Domiuiceu can pound with ins terrible cocomacaque and hack with bis machete, whose poisoned wounds t.tal slowly. Hides are qnjy?tia|ly dis. inbuted, and machine guns are plenty, but though they possess and manipulate * w ? all thy deafly engines of modern warfare, the blacks know nothing of the appli ances for nleiviug the sufferings of Lh % wounded. There are no surgeons, no mediciues- !allen with a broken leg the soldier is let to succumb to hunger and ! thirst, or b be devoured by the wild hogs that in'eat lhe forests. The physcal and social conditions are worse the political. The laud's maeiial thli may be said now to be complete. 2ven the coffee trees, whose litw is thai o.a generation, are being no lmger tranfplauted. All other crops are failing; Ure exports are decreasing. No money ^circulating; the currency, what little rxists, is nickel, worthless outside the ouuuy. The reveuues are Hypothecate to foreigners; the riglit of c >astwise lr.de has been sold to foreigners Nobody' in the islauy has eithercapital or crtiit. An appalling poverty lias its clutci upon the laud. The people live arikb deep in Qlth; theii ignorance is incredible; religion has degenerated n\to iuo savage superstition. ILuuia(> Jle is cheap. What we know as morality do? not exist. In the inoun talus of haSelle, at least, and probably clsewliete, serpent worship aud sac?ilice ot chiidrei and cannibalism prevail. This is \rhat a hundred years of negro rule h-is nude of the loveliest laud on the globe; for the physical beauty of liispauolid, as the discoverers loved to call it, is so marvelous that oue is reluctaut to speak of it, so extravagaut must seem his words. From the sea the land is seeu to swim in glories that surround no other West Indian isle, and in its interior the prospects are entrancing. Assuredly nowhere else can Nature have contrived such maguiiiceul panoramas, no other land can she have adoaued with such riot of ravishiug color. But not only is the beauty of Ilispauia wondertui; it is probable that no other like agsa on earth is so rich iu material wealth. "It is sate to say that piobably uo other extent of lerritoiy contains within iu>elf, under proper auspices, so many elements of prosperity, worldly success and happiness," are the measured wodds of Br. 11 ill, of the United States (ieological Suivey. There are fortunes for thous.ujas iu coffee, cacao, cotton, tobacc >, sugar, rubber, fruit, spices, mahogany, dyewoixls, gojd, silver, qopper, uspiiaitom, sulphur, salt, phosphates and guauo. All ihtse sprriugs of wealth lie uutouched, forgotten, by the people to 1 whoui Lite laud has b.eu too long surrendered. FOIL TI1E UNITED STATES. ffffffV'1'*' VffMKBly, .L>'aL t,lw eud has emment loT^Ua'itC l^he Ethiopian has been a failure in his Eden. He lias nothing to Show for a century of independence but a wilderness where there was a garden,' and ruins where there weie g1 eat monuments of industry, art and joy. Ills governments have proven ridiculous effaiis of coutemptable incapacity \ his mortal condition Is an affront to the po'uscience ot the world. He has no principles to peipetuate, no ideals to live for; the future Holds for him, if he is suffered to fciuk into it, nothing but a total atavism into savagery. If ever humane considerations called to a duty It.iUT I tlu uf.fAllllAll t'? II1C V Ul'i LA\J?? vuo nvi?u u UVW/UHUU *\J the case of banto Douumgo. "The woihi," in this instance, is tlie United Slates ?William Bayard Hale iu batu;day Evening l'ost. First Quarterly Report of County Supervisor 190t. W ! liobo.- . ? 20 SO T I Kctenbaugh f>?? 00 1 ( lV;?ke ?... :t:t gg The People's Supply Co 2 00 I i( Kison a 00 T.tley Carter 0 f>0 \V TSmith . lWt 00 W \V Bishop 1 75 Walker K and Cogs Co 17 41 M I' Bank. 1s t on W 12 Uatchford 07 50 I A Smith l 5o Union G >>cery Co ... 5 25 Walker K ?V Cogswell Co 45 40 T 1' Croaklcy 7 00 J W >.iuders 80S 47 it S Poster 2 5o A G Bcntlcy 12 40 W W Johnson H7 50 Mutual Dry Goods Co 10 50 T 12 Bailey 6 00 J W Gore gft oo J 1. Humes 25 ikl t C MeCoole .. ft 10 S S hinder M I) 2ft ?h> C K lobnson 1 fto I l( Whitinire . 4 no CI. Beeves.. 4 25 B G Gregory 147 50 T M Bennett 3 fto I. 11 Dunlap 0 fto W II Howell go oo K M Aughtry ,. .. ift oo JC Jolly 12 fto nion Carriage Works . 1 *jo I. | Moore H 1,1) j Si Kison 2 00 John Nelson g fto J Godbold... g fto Win Dobbe ft <,o Win A Nicholson .V Son anon iyi J l' I'ulmcr 8 "0 ifcosa PcuflprgralJ 2 00 I r. i.fndsey... ? a 5o Su n KstpS. Kit a 50 Jack Worthy 0 50 loin Jlutt* U 50 H N K*?o* 8 <to M. tiary Sparks 8 50 J C W'uiiiiell 8 50 K T Sims. 8 50 Will Thomas...'. 4 00 I A I. Thomas a on W l? Bailey 8 50 K Gregory..,, 8 10 J 1? Bison 1 50 G W Harvey 1 HI W II Sanders 8 50 W II Harrison 2 00 T I H Bates 9 00 John'JIT Wright '2 on j*?ac Gregory..; 2(H) A G Garner 8 50 Wm Millwood 2 00 Crayton Horn 8 50 H II Koberson 85 00 John Connelv 8 60 Union L>rug Co : 1 45 Geo H Crafts 408 14 G W WiJIard...., 20 80 K H^tHIAr i. 202 88 Ksnt Bros V 1747 45 Union Hardware Co 87 08 Kant Bros .1 82 17 T C Jolly 50 Stark* Austin 13 00 Bailor I.umber CO.I*. 202 22 W nfridjr..........Vv ' 9 h Marvin Far* ,.. 100 K WsrottCo J. 10 85 I 11 Hjatt ltj 10 # i ' * Jk F. M. Faiik, Piesideut. ? Merchants and PI Is rot quite (?) thjlat&est Bank o at the "Old ftai?#".. "SuccessHilly, thirt y-t wo years.'v I It. is the OLDEST bank in It is ;he only NATIONAl It has a capital and bun \it It pays FOUR per cent, in It has paid dividends anion It has Butylar-proor vault. It is the only Bauk in Unioi It pays more taxes than AI TKe solicit your business, how the courtesies that are usually ext conducted Bank. Itobt Clark 2 0 I t* Cain ? 0 John Youny. 10 Alfred Johnson 1 0 j H thirties 81 0 1. | Wood ... 10 0 It N I.cncrd 11 & I (J I .nth a ii i 3 0 tioo II Octzel 11 ft I. I. Mcl.emore 8 0 W C lohnson I 0 (?eo II Crafts 28 7 I l?" Heine 28-"> R I It McGowin 2 1 M S I.ec 4 0 II II Itobinson T 1 I) Arthur Cash 248 W 'I' ) Hetcnhau?h 2 itimull roster 3 & The People's Supply Co 805 ? 11 J Harnett 5 M St;irks Bcaty 2 0* I | WillarcT. 15 M C Heaver HP1 J* | oli u Young It N Harris 14 1 I H Burgess 8 01 1 l> Arthur Cash 24 ? 'I'he People's Hank 5000 (* S 1 McKlltoy. I M Mobley ? 0* T | Betcnbaugli 1 '* W F Bobo S ? 1 l> Arthur Cash 21 2( I M Mobley 1 W Arthur & McLure 22 ni Mi-Lure Mercantile Co 21 81 III'' Webber ?? J 1) Arthur Cash 884 1* 1) 11 Fnnt 30 CH Win Grady 2 i? W T McGowan ? 1< W H West Mgr 8 (H II K Soaife 8 (V H 11 Heine 82 IM 11 II Kobinson >*> 13 | I) Arthur Cash 45 M M 1<* Sparks 5 *V I. G Bishop 4 (Ui W M Mitchell 1 OC J D Arthur Cash 17 40 Crawford & Aycock 00 00 Fowler & Co ^tl Otl L L McLemore 3 (HI 11 N Leonard 8 50 J G Latham . i .3 00 John C uuelly \ ' 8 60 1 P Palmer^ ? y. .. 8 00 * P*Ei?oii..'" *;S G W Harvey Vft W II Sanders J ^ Win Habbs !J ) M Rison ^ W II Harmon ** T I H Bates 2 0< John W\ Wright 2 0C Isaac Gregory * "J A G Garner > " W in M i 11 wood 2 (Hi Cray ton Horn 3 5< L II Dunlap 3 M It N Kvans 3 <H McGarv Sparks 3 51 J O Wadilell ? ^ li T Sims 3 ..( J B Lindsay 3 5t S.i in Kstes 3 W L | Moore ' J T Bennett.... { Jack Worthy 3 >' John Nelson 3 51 ltobt Butts 3 fit Kosn PendcVgraff 2 tH Will Thomas 4 m It II and W Y Stewart 15 1H B F' Arthur 123 2} | 1) Arthur Cash 11 1' MWCulpMD 5 Ot Mrs Isaac Eison J W N Lawson ' :h Balaam Thomas I ,K John Young J J* O T Beluo 1 2" Iti-ubcii Itice J '* T J Botenbaugh <? n i* wrcgory 12 J 1) II l-.uit < * I 11 Hamilton " " To*eph Powell 15 W | C Miller ? ? Tally Carter ? ? Walter Sanders ? ? H S Foster 1 4 M W Hobo 30 ? W K Hobo 20 b I \V Sanders 182 3 llailcy Lumber ?o 41 ft W F Hughes .' 8 2 Mr? M C Mangrum 14 0 Allan Nicholson 7 4 T K Hailey " jj Mutual Dry Goods Co . 2 7 1 II Hariles 27 fc j J Mabrey 3 fi 'I II Hurtle* 8 b 'rite People's Supply Co 12 0 | F I.nw son 4 Union Hardware Co 35 1 K S Long 3 S ] It Kison 22 f Milton Foster 3 ? I F I'eakc dfl ? T C. Jolly 12 I I 1J Hancock 2 4 W I) Cudtl . 2 < I 1 A A ill'.. 3 b W 11 Kennett , 2 C W It Gilliam 2 t J F Willard 5 II II It obi nson 34 1 1 It Whitmire 2 J T I Iletcnhaugh 1 I 1 ll llartlc* ........ . ; 13 1 | J M l.qtv^n M 1*...., 100 ( I. G V?it"B 1*8 4 McUure Mercantile Co .. 4 ( | K Minter Ar Hro K ti j C C ltoblnson 12 \ 1 C Jenkins 11 S D It Farr 1 < S 11 Sims 1*1 ' The People Supply Co 7ft ( }H Itartles K* 11 llartlcs tV ^ G Young, Mgr Ill A It Hyatt 4 1 R H Miller 1H0 1 F 11 Culp, Mgr 21 ! Omega llclue 1 1 K S Carter 4 ( J A Hill 8 ( llosa Pqndergraff. 2 1 41 I Milton Poster ' ' 1 j M.ibry ' 1 I. I, Mcl-emore 8 R N Leonard .. a 1 G Latham ? lohn Connelly ... # 1 1* Palmer. 1 A L Thomas 8 V. Godbold 3 \V B Bailey 3 K Gregory H J P Eison G W Harvey .'. 1 W H Sandera 8 W in. Oabbs . ^. 8 1 M Kison ; ? \Y H Harrison .' 2 T J H Bates 2 lohn W Wright 2 Isaac Gregory. 2 AG Garner U 1 t 1 1 ' =grf . J. D. Arthur, Cashier. >HE anters National Bank n earth, bni ft continues to do business , as ft has been doing for the past jfcii Unfa**' ' j bank in Union, 5 of $100,000, tereat on daposi's, ntinR to $106,800, and Safe with Time-lock, n insDeofpd hv an (i?"" _r -..j v/UIVfl ^ ?L tbe Banks in Union combined. r,ever large or small, promising all ended, by an obliging and carefully 0 Wm Millwood 2 00 0 Crayton Horn 8 50 li I. H Dttnlap 3 SO 01 K U Kvans 3 00 0 McGary Spark* 3 50 0 I C Waddell 3 50 I) K T Sim* 3 50 0 J B Lindsay 5 00 0 Sam Kites 3 60 ' 0 I. J Moore 3 50 J 0 J T Burnett 3 50 5 jack Worthy 3 50 0 John Nelso" 3 50 0 ltoht. Hutts 3 50 . <p 0 1> B Kant 74 05 5 W H West, Mgr 0 00 5 W T Bcaty * Co 5 00 r, | K Mcng 43 83 M 0 L I' Thomti 38 80 ffty* I) J K Wliitmire. 1 20 5 B K Wehhcr 148 00 W !5fl 1) James Vaughan 1 00 D Balaam Thomns.^ 50 a M ,V I* Bank 1073 15 5 Heywood Sanders 85 1 Tally Carter 0 50 ? T J Betenbaugh 15 00 I) J H ltartles 27 83 I) Kl.slia Brock 1 on I) T C Jolly 12 50 . Mr" 7^5 !) Allan Nicholson 10 40 J W F Boho 20 Ho ;> Bailcv Lumber Co 7 50 l H <i Bailey 1 20 1 Union Hardware Co 24 80 J W Nance 02 17 I E M Fenny, Agt 27 00 ) C G Humphries, 14 04 1 I K Peake 38 83 I 11 K Brown, Agt 20 TO I A H Lancaster 7 6ft J5>r I J K Fowler 4 00 ) Kd Jenkins 12 42 & i Bailey Lumber Co 207 42 > A J Bailey 1 00 1 Theodore Maddox, M D. ft 0O i Union Carriage Wks 1 05 i 1 It Kison 21 0O I 11 H Robinson 46 00 Jgfc I Tho*. Sanders i i r> Vimlit. Uv \v?ikeri Mb!!! !!!!'.'S] s oo i1 0 *> fl W>" I I G T Gault 1 'i ) I Mis* Sue K Jeter fi 0l? II 1 M Greer, V J ?? 2T> i \V A I- Kelly #> I J T Sexton V 00 i G C McCoolc 1 l Arthur A* McLnre 54 01 i I'omonn Sewer Ca 172 ?V? l The Clinton Oil Co 2.) 78 > \Vm C Robinson & Son Co 7 47 I \V?lker K A' Cogs Co 13 08 1 C W Jeter 3 00 I U 1. Shealy 2U 40 t C W Austcl, M D l> 00 I 1 11 Murphy 2 30 > Walker Worthey 3 #3. I \V I. Ionian !l W 1 \V. Hobo ? ? I Geo H Oct/.cl 30 XD I It It Berry, M 1) ,,, 10 00 I \V It Sinis 3 11) I Kleetrie Cight ft Water Work* 1 <S >1 H 11 Murphy 7 on ? | C 1) Robinson , n no )| J M Harrison .....*. 0 OO i I L. 1* Stanford 6 Oft I I William Adilis a in > I f> It McCritckan 5ft I I J I, Belue ? Oft l It K Brown 4 1?T i H S I.ong 3 Oft > O T Belue 2 loll J I. Bobo 8 00 i) J F Helue a (< '>20 I A O Sprouse 1H TO, [I 1 It ltodger it 00, l) T F Orr ,,, m lift 5 O M Belue 8lk it W S I.awson 2 JO I) Monarch Mill 1 3ft l) 1 M O'Shields. ^ 5ft 5 11 H Kobitwo.u 2 25 I) III Hartlcs 10H 4k l) M M Wilburn & J M Burnett...., 64 TO 5 JH Moore 24 IS 5 W T Farr H 00 5 W 11 Powell ,,, 25 00 0 D B Fant...... 64 05 0 Win Sait(lur?.' 5 ? 0 H H Belue TMlft 0 W M Farr #)? 8 O M Belue 4 75 41 F B Scott 6 09 0 IT Sexton 20 00 10 '! C Jenkins 16 75 0 ' N Galbnan . 0 OO 0 ' F Belue.,,....'., 1 no ,0 H M Sparks . 20 noiO Baiiey Btyuher A Mfg Co .. 500 oft ill A J Boulsvare V *\ 13 A J Boulware ? 5ft ill | D Arthur, cash 3871 8ft A ID Brown 5 Vft K) Italaam Thomas 5# 10 D A Owen 25 Oft 15 G W llarvey .,, I 50in Wm Dabbs 0 no* 15 J M Kisun 2 oft ?\V H Harrison 2 0ft T J Bates * ? hi John W Wright 2 Oft 10 Sace Gregory 2 0ft mi AG Garner..*. 8 50' 10 Wm Millwood 2 00KI I. 11 Dunlap 3 50 Hi 11 W Evans 4 Oft 5 E T Sims,, 9 RO* >n j n i.inusay 6 IXX X) Sum Rstes 3 5W (o I. I Moore 3 SO1 K) IT Burnett 3 BO' X) John Nelson 3 60' f0 Koht. Butts 3 BO [(I J r Kison ,,, 1 6ft 15 F Gregory... S f*? H \V B Rslfty 8 60 16 it Qodbold 3 00 J5 A I. Thomas 3 00 W> P Palmer 3 Oft DO ' ohn Connelly 860 DO (i I.stham 8 00 00 B W Leonard. 3 60 f>0 I- I' Mcl.emare 3 0O 50 J 1 \Wtuy 8 60 IX) CAN Jeter 3 (X) 50 Wtllism Ad.lis 8 60 00 Will Thomas 4 00 50 Mimah Daniels 8 OO 00 I A Hill S 00 00 L N ltoilgcr. 8 00 00 Milton Kuiter... 8 50 50 T. J. BftTKNIIAVr.H, (X) T. C Jot.t.Y, Super. U. C. 50 Cler*. 50 (x) A close game of ball was played at oo Newberry on the 8th between Newberry College and Erakine. Newberry was defeated by a score of lto 0* _ ' f!K if