The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, March 24, 1905, Image 5
II Hello! Mr. D<
j Union? Yes.
| you buy goods
I GO
bob
I Everybody
i ...WHY WEAR
| when you a
1 ones for 20c <
1 at Bobo's. W
1 our entire line
I TAILOR MA
20 PER CEN'
f Now is your
worth for $4.0
i of Bargains i
j Come quick!
J for many peof
1 WE ARE UND
Im.w.e
Hpnorfmp
m ?rmmm
ARRIVALS AND DEPARTURES
Of the Double Dally Passenger Trains,
Union, S. C.
Train going North 0:00 a. in.
" 44 South 11:35 a. m.
44 44 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
departure. Any change in this schedule
will be published in Tint Times for
the benefit of the public generally.
Local News Notes
" Points Psrsonal and Otherwise
kicked up and Paragraphed
by Our Pencil-Pusher.
*Mr.
D. H. Wallace is out after an
attack of measles.
Mr. V. E. DcPass left Tuesday
for Hot Springs, Ark,
Mr. Edgar Norman, of Herberts,
was here Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Whitehead are in
Birmingham for a visit.
Mr. Chas. R. Smith is in Hot
Springs, Ark., for his health.
U.? G. Hughes, Esq., was in
Greenville this week on business.
Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Harry returned
Tuesday from New York.
* Drs. H. L. Fellers and H. B.
Hair spent Wednesday in Spartanburg.
a
Hon. J. C. Otts, of Gaffney, was
here on professional business Wednesday.
Miss Lilly Thorn, milliner for
the Mutual Dry Goods Co., has arrived
in the city.
Elbert Williams, Jr., the colored
tailor, died Wednesday morning
from aff^ttack of la grippe.
If T A W _ i a. ? 1 ? *
?inj. j 110. a. rani reiumeu Monday
from a visit to her daughter,
^ Mrs. Washington Walker.
Mr. Josh Mullinax of the Morgan
Iron Works of Spartanburg, was
hore on business Tuesday.
Mr. T. L. Shippey, a civil engineer
of the Union & Glenn Springs
F ill road, returned to the city Mond
y after several days in Spartan burg,
where his brother, Wofford,
<Jied after a lingering illness.
:> You live in I
Where can |jj
i cheap? T
TOlfe; < <-*- I
iO'S
goes there. |
OLD SKIRTS... I
an buy new i
)ff the dollar
e are offering I
of
DE SKIRTS I
r. DISCOUNT. I
time. $5.00 1
0. Thousand ||
in our store. j?
Many things II
>le. 1
iERSELLERS. S
iOBO'Si
int Store. f|
I)r. J. M. Wallace returned las
Sunday after taking a post graduate
course of dentistry in Baltimore.
Mr. J. Goldberg, of Augusta, Ga.
has bought the stock of The Sinitl
Clothing Co., and has opened fo:
business.
Mr. \\\ B. Oliver, rcprcsentini
Allen & Crews' wholesale tobacc*
house, of Spartanburg, spent thi
week here on business.
The William Wallace Chapter U
D. C. will have its regular month
ly meeting next Monday afternooi
4:30 o'clock at Clifford Seminary
Contractor Griffith is leveling th
ground from the Southern Railroa<
to Duncan Avenue for the depo
yard of the Union and Glenn Spring
Railroad Co.
Abrams <fe Scoggin have the con
tract for the building of clcvei
operatives houses at Buffalo Cottoi
Mills. This firm has complete*
their part of the contract in th
erection of the First Baptist churcl
and has been accepted by the build
ing committee.
The Union County Medical Asso
ciation met in executive session las
Wednesday night. Much routin
business was transacted touching th<
advancement of the profession ii
its local operations and general good
Dr. M. W. Culp was elected dele
gate to the State Medical Associa
tion which meets in Greenville
Dr. J. H. Hamilton alternate.
A concert will be given next Fri
day night, March 24, in the Mon
arch school house by the pupils o
that school, assisted by some of tin
best musical talent in tho city o
Union, for the benefit of the Unioi
County Confederate Monument
An excellent program will be given
Reserved seats 15 cents; admin
sion 10 cents.
Remember the cause, the time
the place and the price.
Two weeks ago Dr. J. H. Ham
ton assisted by Drs. M. W. Cul]
and Maddox amputated the ham
of Mr. Robert Clark, taking it of
at the wrist. Mr. Clark had scv
eral months previous stuck a thori
in his hand near the thumb joint
some time after which a canccrou
sore appeared on the hand. Dr
Hamilton treated it for a while an
then pronounced a cancer, and dc
cided amputation the best remedy
, Since the amputation Mr. Clark ha
bean doing very well. < .
INTERESTING NEWS NOTES
ITom Santuc About People
and Places?Sunday Schools
and Churches.
"We are laboring hard
As farmers today,
To obtain for our products
Reasonable pay;
And the man that hangs l>aek
Is a blot on our sky."
*
Oh, yes, if we are small, and
cannot make much of a ripple,
don't let one be too much of a blot,
&c.
The temperature has risen until
it is almost warm enough for cotton.
The maximum temperature was
80 Sunday. '
"Listen to the mocking bird."
Mocking birds are singing right
along down here, and doves have
l>ccn heard.
Buds of trees are swelling considerably,
and some peach blossoms
have been seen. We all hope fruit
trees will not bloom too early.
Rev. W. H. White filled his appointment
at the Presbyterian
chureh yesterday, third Sunday.
Text: Exodus, 20:23. A large
. congregation was out on that fine
day.
The Sunday school at the Methodist
church will be reorganized on
the 1st Sunday in April, in the
qfti?rlnu\n 1?A" ?*
1UVIC U1V lUUi UI CIU1C1"
ren here.
There are many good tilings that
"go under," while the bad aro
patronized; many church members
patronize the flimsy, the frivolous,
the bad, in preference. Now in
tbe year 1905 will the Baptists do
better by their convention, the
Methodists and Presbyterians by
their organizations? Question.
If any man who rents out land
to the amout of, say for a lwisis, ten
bales, and wishes his renters to reduce
their acreage 25 per cent, and
production to advance prices, he
ought to be willing to meet them
on the halfway ground, and reduce
his rents 25 per cent and help to
advance the prices, and not let all
the "honor" (?) all the work, all
the sacrificing be on one side.
The Santuc Mercantile Co. has
just received a lot of goods and in
opening up saw that a shipping
box showed signs of having been
opened, and later found that a card
lx>ard box of shirts had a hole torn
in it and all of the shirts taken out
of that Ik>x except one, and that
had a greasy place where the soiled
hands of some freight handlers had
1 l>ecn pulling at that. No doubt
t many things get lost from freight
t handlers pilfering them.
They are having quite a job over
at the dam trying to get in some
' crib-pens in building coffer dams.
1 The river is considerably narrowed
1 down, and runs through swift like
a mill tail, and it is deep, too, so
j the material put in is knocked
j around like toys, and too, they are
s framed together on the banks and
are carried out lx>dily on the cable.
Rev. W. II. White, at the Pres
bytcrian church recontly, in preach
i *
11V11I liiu UJIIIIIIllllUlUClllH OI
1 crimen, anger, malice and murder,
and incidentally suicide, said that
c killing time, the time they might
j serve God, <fcc., was a kind of sui^
cidc. I try not to do that, but if
s loafing is killed time, there is a
great deal of that kind of suiciding
?not out of this community. Some
- people wouldn't like to do anything
i if they had it to do, and consci
quently don't try to have anything
1 to do, and wouldn't have if they
e could, lx)th male and female; but
i the most of us call it laziness, and
- it works harm, for idleness is the
devil's workshop, I am told.
"Cut your acreage to decrease
" the production?supply?of cotton"
t is the cry. Yes, that is right, and
B make that production cheaper.
8 But then to bring about equity, let
1 those who receive many bales for
? rents reduce that, that their supply
" may also be reduced, and not let
" them have the same full crop, at
good prices, at the many unfortunate
renters expense of reducing
the acreage, or the thing might not
work fairly and satisfactorily in the
j end. I hope the farmers will gain
" ine tight like the Farmers Alliance,
j not farmere generally, (lid in the
Jute bagging trust light.
1 2 Hey Denver.
Santuc, March, 20/1906.
Preliminary Hearing.
' A preliminary hearing was had
last Monday before Magistrate W.
. W. Johnson in the ease of the
p State vs. Charles Fulwood, Jamct
] Fulwood and Barney Glenn, charged
Y with setting fire to the corn crib ol
? Mr. I. Smith Ivy. The defendant*
ii were represented by Messrs. V. E,
lf DePass, B. F. Townscnd and S.
H Means Bcaty, the State hy J. A.
Sawyer, Esq. The testimony pointed
(1 more strongly and directly to Chari.
lie Fulwood and Barney Glenn a?
the guilty persons, therefore the
4 magistrate bound these ever to th(
circuit court. James Jvdwsod wai
a?rtiiiii
. Honor Roll Graded School.
central school.
1st grade A?Kathleen Arthur,
j Ruth Sprouse, Raymond Harris,
, Aubrey Smith.
J 1st grndc B?Sibley Sellerd, Ruth
Crawford, Mary Rice, Wm. Ander|
son. Toy Charles, John Turner,
D. N. Wilburn, Mario Hill.
2nd grade?Wallace Williams,
John Merrill, Edward Brown.
3rd grade?Henrietta Zeilmrt,
William Arthur, Robt. Hamilton,
Willie Sanders, Harold James,
Aleen Summer.
4th grade?Frances Greene.
5th grade?Collie Miller, Charley
Arthur.
6th grade?Kelly I/edbetter, Wilson
Harris, Curtis Sanders, Charley
Woods.
7th grade?Lottie Smith, Alvin
Jolly, Ed. Whisenant, Herndon
j Thomson, J. D. Arthur.
8th grade?Ixmisa Duncan, Albert
Oliphant, Dudley Beaty, Kate
Smith, Louise Ix>ng, Mamie Charles.
9th grade?Lillie Adams, Bessie
Humphries, Wallace Gibbs, Guy
Wilburn.
monarch.
1st grade?Robt. Waters, Glenn
Johnson, Ernest Adams, Floyd'
Cobb, Claude Howell, Ramon Kir-!
by, Pascal Wade, Sholah Gregory,
Marvin Conley, Manning Blalock, |
Lula Belle Hammett.
1st grade B?Maggie Thrift,
Cyrill Willard, Sherman Hill,
Samuel Wright, Shulcr Wright,
Tom Nichols.
2nd grade?Jessie Hammett,
Rhoda Break field, Elver Stevens,
Wade Fowler, Ernest Hammett,
Ernest Kennett, Otis Matton.
3rd grade?Bessie West.
4tli?Leva Hawkins, Irene MeGowan,
Lillie Belle Pinkett.
excelsior School.
1st grade?John Spillcrs, Ida
Yminff Flvf. A/1omu Xf >? ?!...1 C""*?
"O f * '* A %v*" lUilllUVl 1' U3VUI y I
Sudie Jolly, Kate Young.
2nd?Mamie Jolly.
4th?Josio Lee, Claude Jolly.
WD8T END.
1st grade?Jim Harrill, Herbert
Waldrop, Frank Hames, Rhoda
Arrow wood, Vera Belue, Hallie
Sprouse, Helen Poole, Ethel Adams,
Estellc Burgess, Newberry Carter.
2nd?Jennie Colson, Wynona
Downey, Joe Whitner.
2nd?Addie Colson, Nellie Bennett,
Nida Lee High, Mattie Mardis,
Cohen Poole, Dcwitt Parker, Horace
Scott.
4th?Olivette Smith, Josie High.
City Union of Womens Clubs.
At the last meeting of the City
Union of Womens Clulw the following
committees were chosen:
Reception Committee?Chairman,
Mrs. Davis Jefferies, Mesdams J. E.
Squire, A. G. Wardlaw, L. M.
Jordan, J. A. Sawyer, V. E. DePass,
C. Sartor, Miss Charlotte
Poulton.
Committee on Homes?Chairman,
Mrs. Geo. M. Wright, Mesdames
W. H. Sartor, I.. M. Rice,
W. J. Haile, H. M. Holmes, L. J.
Hames, Wm. Anderson.
Committee on Entertainment?
Chairman, Mrs. JAs. Munro, Mesdames
E. Nicholson, P. E. Fant.
G. C. Perrin, 8. 8. Lindcr, 8. M.
Rice, Jr., D. M. McLcod, C. E.
Gray.
Committee on Music?Chairman,
Mrs. C. H. Peakc, Mrs. R. Shannonhousc,
Misses Mary Thompson,
Belle Whitlock, Frances Whitmirc,
Sue Parker.
Committee on Opera House?
Chairman, Mrs. J. E. Squire, Mesdanics
Mabry Rice, E. Lipscomb,
Crown Torrcnce, J. K. Young, M.
A. Moore, Misses Amelia Cox,
Mary Emma Foster, Belle Moore.
Committee on Finance?Miss
Minnie C. Gist, Chairman, Mesdames
N. M. Linder, M. Huitt,<
W. D. Arthur, F. M. Farr, C. T.
Murphy, L. 8. Townsend.
Conumttcp on Printing?Mrs. 8.
8. Linder, chairman, Mesdamcs
V. E. DePass, H. M. Holmes, R.
Shannonhouse, L. G. Young, R. P.
Harry, E. M. Anderson, T. E.
Bailey.
There will be three addresses,
first, address of welcome delivered by
Mayor R. L. McNally in behalf of
i the city, Rev. D. M. McLcod, the
churches, Mrs. B. G. Clifford, club
women, invocation by Rev. A. G.
Wardlaw. May 16, 8.30 to 10.30
p. m., an informal reception will
be given by Mrs. F. M. Farr. A
formal reception and musicale at
I Hotel Union 18th from 9 to 12 p.m
It is Hneriallv Hntiirml tKo* oil
> members of the different clubs and
i those ladies who are not members
[ who can and will entertain dcle
gates wind their names and number
i of nelegates they will entertain, as
, early as possible, to Mrs. Geo. M.
, Wright.
No Gloss Carriage Paint Made
1 wtll wear aa long as Devoe'a. No oth*
era are as heavy boiled, because I>e)
voe'a weigh 8 to 8 ounces more to the
I ^int. Bold by Bailey Lumber & Mfg
mil f I
???????- ??? ?- ? ?
MWW???IM
IWHEN IN DOUBTS
I GOME TO US. |
it Never take unnecessary
M chances if you do not want is
ill to suffer a loss. is
1TRADE AT OUR STORE |
|g A store you know==a store jg?
gg all this community knows== n
|jj a store that shows you the |g
g< greatest assortment==a store ^
j| that is famous for dependa= {?g
gg ble qualities, a store that al= j|
|| ways quotes the lowest pos- ||
?? sible prices, a store that ||
k means to do the fair and ||
fg square thing at all times gg
H and under all circumstan= j|j
I WE SELL GOOD GOODS I
S AT RIGHT PRICES AND 1!
I NOTHING ELSE AT ANY PRICE. ?
II This has always been the U
j| policy of our store and main- ||
j| tained as inviolably today jf!
ft as at any time since its es= 2^
|W. T. BEATY & CO., 1
H F. G. AUSTELL, Manager. H**
mmmmmmmmmammmmmmummm
yj =^s
STalmblFFapeb's'1
m
r ???^??????
| should be kept in a Safety 3
Deposit Box, where they
S are protected against fire
and thieves. We have ?
a few such boxes to rent
at a nominal cost. Our 3
IS vault is fire and burglar
| proof. |
! THE PEOPLES BANK. 5
m
8 B. f. ARTHUR, President.
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l-C O M E-|
I I am now ready to I
I do your Repair I
I Work of any kind. I
I Also Horse Shoe- I
| ing J
UNION CARRIAGE WORKS,
I Next to Crawford, Aycock & Deaver Stables. $
> I Bachelor Street. Phone 146. ?