The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, March 17, 1905, Image 5

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? -ft Hello! Mr. Do I} Union? Yes. H you buy goods < I -?-?4QO 1 1 BOB I Everybody g I ...WHY WEAR C la when vou ca\ Iones for 20c of at Bobo's. We our entire line < TAILOR MAI 20 PER CENT f Now is your 1 11)1 i.u ? d* on im wurni iur q)^.uu .4* of Bargains it jj Come quick! i | for many peopl 1 WE ARE UNDE M.W. B H Departmer ARRIVALS AND DEPARTURES Of the Double Dally Passenger Trains, y Union, S. C. r Trait* **~w" .N|)rl M -ao ^ TrT " tju&m * " vf5outn il :35 a. in. H0S 44 41 North 2:35 p. m. 44 44 South 8:53 p. m. These trains only make a few minutes stop at Union, so that the hours of arrival are practically the hours of t' departure. Any change in this sched- 1 tile will be published in The Times for the benefit of the public generally. Local News Notes Points Personal and Otherwise picked up and Paragraphed 1 by Our Pencil-Pusher. j ( Mr. H. L. Goss was in Augusta i this week. Dr. R. R. Berry moved his ^ family to Buffalo last Monday. - 1 f Born to Dr. and Mrs. F. C. i Duke Saturday last, a daughter. ] Miss Nell Hayne, of Greenville, J is visiting Mrs. Win. A. Anderson. Mr. Jno. A. Walker, of Spartanburg, was here on business last week. v Mr. J. Ralph Smith lias a posi- 'c tion with a drug house in Savan- 3 nali, Ga. F i Messrs. V. E. Depass and B. F. j Townscd were in Portsmouth Va. this week. Miss Sue Tinsley, who teaches s school near West Springs, is home i for vacation. 1 f Mr. llayncs Harris who has a position with a firm in Rock Hill, visited his parents Sunday. Judge-elect D. E. Hydricjc was 1 * here Monday, having come down ' * with his daughter, Miss Lizzie. Mrs. C. T. Boyd has been,quite ill for the past week. We are glad to say that she is now much better. 1 Miss Pearl Goforth, who has been teaching the Padgett's J reek school has returned home for vacation. / Her school closed last Friday,March / 10th. Mr. Chas. Moore, who was here with Union Cotton Mills as bookkeeper for some time, but now of Columbia, spent some time visiting fnonds lift* tbie Wdefc* ;; ^ , ^ * You live in Hi Where can |j' cheap? ro O'S j ;oes there. 1 )LD SKIRTS... I k it n buy new f the dollar ;; : are offering f - 1 )E SKIRTS J ?"" ' I . DISCOUNT. time. $5.00 i. Thousand | i our store, i Many things III 6* w| 2RSELLERS. S O BO'S | it Store. NV>1C^;rrgn Miss Julia McGee, who has aught the first grade II. for two ears in the graded school?, esiirned ..I viiuuuYviniu, last Monday. Presiding Elder J. W. Kilgo will hold conference for the Buffalol Methodist church at 2/- in. o'clock I and for the Union yU church at I 4 p.m. Saturday/nd for Grace! shurch Saturday Jight. He will | preach at CI raety1church Sunday | morning. / I] Mrs. Mollie ftwson, of West/, End, died Tuesly morning in her jf 47th year, and buried Wcdnos- [ y day. Deceased s a Mrs. DupreeL. having been i *ried only last/a. April to Mr. (* Lawson. ShcL leaves besides h husband, several |i children and icr relatives to|a?! mourn her loss I " Miss Lizzie 1 Iydriek, of Spar-1 anburg, has b tdectcd t? fill tfie I to i position as ter r irv, the graded l^0' schools, niade ant V ithe resig-1 not lation of Miss Aia MGee. Miss |ftboi Hydriek began r dutuVis teach-1 ^U1 >r last Monda mornnA She is hV(i < warding with J?3, Rodger. |Sprc t 11 I ratio The miniate o\ all l arches I there t.lio tmvn orJ AUTTOUnC* nunities haf decided \ny01 mitcd ser/& in theirC /pr th hurcheH J&htlv beginnifcAJ^ds tftfa mijf to continue a wrfl thin norc. rBftt is, services wilAJ rphcv n each cVrch nightly dunin f]fcr oi >crio<l. \ I/killed, Beginningfelarch 16th, /foe, tl !k>tton MillsVumon Cott<MPv?uld ] md ExcelsiV knittin / Jame ivill inauguratcVe ten hoA/Ed- Pal abor system. Ibis is W^harp, < iction on the partSu[ vh? Ml8(;lf all f )f?these mills. Tl\r WHPockets ; just as much work anH i Aa mile ai jrade will be done in the,HPf goats i is the eleven, and paying round tl laily wages. No doubt tlwjd house *s they will 1)C able to g<Wicked ou class of mill operatives. Bid dress< Bdcs and Auditor Farr says thaWe had alsnit 2,500 delinquent Aclc pAjln crs in the county who di<Bt one n returns for the year 11 Bop for a go to the treasurer's offiBthe nam taxes, having made nAt off 0n< consequently have to c(^Aet duty oflicc to make returns wlHs Alver havo been made Janu^Alf to co< lie says 95 per cent oBc coinp who care nothing for tB>ld man cent penalty as it is su^Arch for amount on their ton doBo go to of returnable property. Ah bef?r, REMINISCENCES OP THE WAR l BETWEEN THE STATES. \ History, Sayings and Doings of Company H, I SYti Regiment, South Carolina Volunteers. NY W. H. H. BK1JL. Company H. was organised at Mt. TalK>r, Union county, on the first of September, 1801, ('apt., Wm. H. Sims, 1st Lieut., \V. I*. Fair, '2nd Lieut., W. It. Briggs, 3rd Lieut., J. M. Porter, and went to Liglitwood Knot Springs on the 10th (11011 commissioned officers appointed afterwards) all full of life, was mustered into service on the 17th, to the best of my recollection. We stayed thcro and drilled until about the last of October. Wc packed up, boarded the cars and went to Summcrvillc, 22 miles above Charleston, and stayed a few days. One day it rained all day and wc could not have any fire to cook with. Anderson Davis, Wiley Ivy, Abb Humphries and myself all cooked our supper in a pan over three candles, cat and went to bed. Our next move was to Charleston. Capt. Sims gave us dinner in the J hotel. Wo then got aboard a steamer, went to Port Royal or ? Hilton Head. On the way we came j in sight of the the federal fleet, the mast looked like an old piney field. Our drummers got up on deck and ^ l>eat. We landed at Buckinghams * ferry. There was a largo orange 41 tree there and Capt. Sims pulled ? down a limb and we got some, but " they were too sour to cat. That ' was on the fith of November. Wo ^ then went to a big open field* near k Fort Walker and stayed. That * night I saw some of the biggest po- J tatocs I ever saw. Next morning, * the 7th, we were called out inMine in front of the yankee gunboats be- * hind Fort Walker and they shelled . us. Wo had a man in the company, 1 Jim Lcvcrett, who was as near seared to death as any man I ever ( saw, not to die, and when we all ( got away from that place he ran 1 away and I never saw him any ! more. The yankces shelled us ' heavily. Dan Inman lost his arm. ' A piece weighing three pounds hit ] Lieutenant Jim Norris of company ' B in the back. When it was taken * out he died. Col. Disaussurc gave * us orders to lie down, which we 1 did, and .Mopian Fowler began to ( pray. When the firing ceased, he 1 said to Lieutenant Farr, "Jack, by God, it's time to get away from]J here," and we did the could. -J x/i'tfoiina. * ' Jjy . V"" , ' " umtlc bluff I 1 was there" a fell!?* ]1 and whilo company K cant fr.?m York, the marsh and a shdTTif afP08s him and threw mud ill ,)0,,lnd, J"PS and ho hol m! ? OVer his , *t made me laugh m , man would hollow f at a mud. \Vf? low fr?m a littu .... away from there that night on some flat boats and t went to Bluffton about '20 miles from tl Hardcville. There we got some n >ysters in the shell, the first I had ns vcr seen. We stayed at Bluffton a R< uw days then went to Hardcvillc. Jn Vc stayed about a week, went back, B. -ossed New River Bridge at Camp Sa imter. There Wm. Howell killed E. dt T. We did not stay there very Me ng, Christmas was drawing near Rd companies A, B and H were B. it off to Red Bluff where the Wn nfederates were building a fort Isaa do picket duty under Bieutenant T. J onel Joseph F. Gist, and we did I W. come back to the regiment until ' J. M ut March, 18G2. While at Red Wm, ff, 1G miles from the railroad, W. I >nly had one wagon, with John G. \\ >U8C as teamster, to bring our Ferdi ns, and it broke down and W. B were several days wo had J. A. ing to eat. A man lived there Jno. ( e name of Whitehead and lie J. G. onic hogs, sheep and geese. B. B. y -rrrftftrcrnTitt mm "Milwood, J. J. i k, got their share of the geese. C, W. , were fat. George Levene, our WmT A r company A, and some more Morgan one of his hogs before his JUjckhai loy wanted to buy and he Pack CP (lot sell. Jno. Jai s Garner, James Milwood, L. B. Bi mer, Wm. Addis, Charlie T. B. Bu Jolumbus Worthy and my- R. T. Pai ook our gun slings in our Thos. Ho ind went up the river about W. J. Vt nd a half and found a herd J. G. Bail n an old field. W-> - * * got,: Uidcon K .v.ii und rap them into ah i W. J. Pai , closed the doors on them, ' Jno. \V. 8 t seven line ones, killed J. C. Eisoi id them, swung them on W. T. Wri carried them to camp. Z. Godbolc plenty for some time. E. J, Peace er and Bill (Jriflin went W. J. Crocl ight and "hooked" a Jno. T. Wei deer from an old man Simion JoIIa e of Cash. Our company e and a half miles on Paint Y( next morning, leaving to $1.00 with son, Lem Bonds and j Paint. It welt ?k dinner and bring it j}*, any. On our way we by Bailey Lam Cash coming to camp his sheep. We told TuCT.uc the Col. and get per s ha want to search, j Magazine Ofl FIc approached Col. Gist in an ibrupt manner which made the 7-ol. mad and lie made him get iway from camp without any icarch. Frank Connor was our aughing man, he could laugh at mything, and if wc saw anybody ,ve did not know, we put Joe Wish;rt after him, he would find out his lamo and business before he left lim. I had the mumps down there and t was a damp, drizzley time. Capt. $inis told me to stay close in my cnt, and some of the boys had got i i fine bee gum and told mo I must rot eat anything sweet or sour, but [ could not keep from tasting that loney. It never hurt me and I soon got well. We stayed around here, did picket duty, and scouted dx)ut until March. Wc then went o the regiment at Camp Gistf but lid not stay very long before we vent to Camp Elliot, on the public oad leading from Hardevillc to Savannah. There we had company md regiment drill, went to work md built breastworks all around >ur camp and soded the port holes vith sods, killed some rattle snakes md some aligators, and every chance vould go fislnng in the canals in .he rice plantations. There was a nan living not far from there by ,he name of Cheviee, and he had a ooster which took up with Vanlew n company B. He found out who lad his rooster and went to the Jol. about it, and every time he vould come to camp the boys would jrow. We stayed there until about Tune, went to Hardevillc, got on ionic old Hat cars and went to Tames Island, camped behind Fort ?omberton. Wo were there on the Kith of June when the battle of Seccssionville was fought. Wc started to go, but did not get far xjfore we got news to go back. A ow days later there was a little ight down at Poeataligo. We started and got as far as Adams [lun, there we got off the cars until urther orders. Several of us rambled around that ivening and there came along a carriage with a basket of peaches ;ied behind it. Jim Milwood slipped ip and cut the string and we all lad some fruit. We found a watermelon patch and that night we went X) it but we found none good ripe. Juards got after us and we ran; Fim Vinson and Charlie Simpson {ot caught. Next day we went i>ack to James Island and moved >ver in the o5t" r**Green (Maridn . 'rcr 80 ^?tayed there y/^otorios of the Japs, broke u to== f.nd 0a'ne iiOIne * ?f J,s ran awaj *hen went on to v n!nc 1 he following i? I he Confederate sol r 1 ?vi?ed list of lc county com,,S0rS to "horn "mth ">? amS "CrS ??no: unt opposite each/ rtl.f It.. . I miris $2 00 10. Nelson 3 (X) J. Moore 2 00 in Estes 3 .50 T. Sims 2 00 i Gary Sparks 3 50 1 V. Evins 2 00 1 H. Dunlap 3 50 K i. Millwood 2 00 I ,c Gregory 2 00 A r. H. Hates 3 00 X H. Harrison 2 00 A t. Eison 2 00 f, , Dabbs 7 00 g I. Sanders 3 00 I) '. Harvey 2 (X) 11 nand Gregory 2 00 II . Bniley., 3 50 E | L. Thomas 3 00 Connelly 3 50 ^ Latham 2 50 ?? Mclxmiore 2 50 m Mubry 3 00 6 Jeter.. 2 00 ddis 3 50 I I Knox 2 50 ffi t Mitchell 3 00 I Shields 4 (X) j| i nes 3 00 g irgess ? ^ UU 3 00 rr 3 00 m 2 00 j inderford 2 00 cy 3 00 icslo 2 00 rks 2 00 mith 3 00 n 3 00 ght 2 00 1 3 00 | ck 3 00 % ccr 2 00 it 3 00 7 2 00 our Buggy For 76c Davoe's Gloss Carriage TT^ jhs 3 to 8 ozs. more to the ; I j\| iers, wears longer and |l ual to new work. Sold w A1 ber A 6tfg. Co. <? Next S and Metropolitan te year for $1.80. Lh J i i ? i ? i i^ , fgaB$?2?3$a?ss3fa&$?3i?iii$e$?3?t?a I WHEN IN DOUBTS I COME TO US. I P Never take unnecessary ?? ! ] chances if you do not want ' ?, % to suffer a loss. 1TRADE AT OUR STORE | A store you know?a store all this community knows== gg g] a store that shows you the greatest assortment==a store p ^ that is famous for dependa= ||j ble qualities, a store that al= |g |g ways quotes the lowest pos- |g cl blUS'C inai [g means to do the fair and square thing at ali times [g and under all circumstan- g| WE SELL GOOD GOODS I AT RIGHT PRICES AND H NOTHING ELSE AT ANY PRICE, g This has always been the policy of our store and main- !jj tained as inviolably today r? as at any time since its es= tablishment. W. T. BEATY & CO., | F. G. AUSTELL, Manage** ^ 8 me if lUL IS FAR BFTttd^ TO DEPOSIT YOUR MONEY WITH At 4 per cent, than to lend it on poor 1 security at double this rate. You might lose both principal and interest by lend- I ing it yourself. When you deposit it j with us at 4 per cent, the return of your I money is backed by a guarantee of Seventy-Five Thousand Dollars?and the | interest is payable semi-annually?May | and November. All dealings between $ this Bank and its depositors are strictly I confidential, and no information, not 9 I even of the existence of an account, is | II ' given out to any one I ^ I TTHE PEOPLES BANK, I B. E. ARTHUR, President. I | Capital and Surplus gy Total Resources Nearly I | ^ $75,000.OO. i300.000.oo. JM -o U M EI am now ready to do your Repair Work of any kind. Also Horse Shoeing. ...... 'ION CARRIAGE WORKS, to Crawford, Aycock & Deaver Stables. Bachelor Street. Phone 146. j - - ,*v '