The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, June 09, 1905, Image 5

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jSpe'isi Sale! Slaughter Sale! | Knockout Sale | Our nine day Special Sale and ten day Slaughter Sale having | ended, we are now going to run j A Knockout Sale For 30 Days in which we are going to give < 1-3 off the price, for cash only, & on all goods except Groceries. | 01 Now Is Your Time! Thousands attended our sales which were, beyond a reason- p able doubt, the grandest sales ; for bargains Union has ever [ had. We give you more goods [ for $2 than you can buy any- [ where for $3. Why we need 3 4-1 1 - i ' ^ Liic uiuncy anu must nave it. y New Up-to-date Goods I ^ are arriving daily and are going in this sale I at 1-3 off the price. We want every man, ? woman and child in Union county to trade 1 ' 50c or more with us in the next 30 days. We ? give you 75c worth for 50c. If you have been n to see us come again, if not you still have the $ opportunity of your life to get a bargain. | Thousands of goods for thousands of people. I Come we want to see you. | Yours For Business, q n. W. Bobo. < ??IMMM?BP?H III I II BMBWWWBBKWMBE ARRIVALS AND DEPARTURES Miss Mamie Octzel returnee ? ^ Saturday from Dillon where she hai vi me uotiDie uaiiy Ka?senger Trains, been teaching music. Union, S. C. Mr. J. A. Fant and daughters Train going North 9:00 a. m. Misses Lillic and Ora, will spent South 11:35 a. in. this week in Washington, D. C. 44 44 North 2:35 p. m. South 8:53 p.m. Miss Louise Browning left Tucs These trains only make a few minr day for Spartanburg to visit hei utes stop at Union, so that the hours (>olw:n Miss Christine Dill ivd of arrival arc practically the hours of cousin, JHISS e iiristllle UUiaid. departure. Any change in this scned- ... . . _ . . ule will be published in The Times for t Miss Annie Rodger came homi the benefit of the public generally. ? from Columbia Wednesday when she has been a student in the Col Local News Notes lcgc f"r Women; ? ! A very exciting and interesting Points Personal and Otherwise game of ball was played last Satur. Picked up and Paragraphed 'hiy ^cning between the You?i a. . /*?_ Dnekar , Sportmans base ball team and West by Our Pencil-Pusher. , Wc?t End playt;d KaUantb i but were defeated. The score was Mr. George Perrin spent Sunday fourteen to sixteen in favor of tin in the eity. Young Sportmans. Miss Alsie Smith returned last The old kitchen at the poor housi r week from Limestone. was burned last Thursday night Mrs. F. M. Farr returned Mon- Mr- Fincher Belue, the superinted day from Glenn Springs. c?t-1 lost all his winter woarini ~ clothes and aliout thirty bushels o Miss Hydrick left Saturday for corn. He is not exactly satisfiei her home in Spartanburg. as to origin of fire but is making i ? n a i . . u thorough investigation and as s M'-C. Cinders went to fepar- c.oulltyBoHu.ia, wiM mnkc hill rcpor ^tanburg T^tMay on business. to commissioners at proper time Mr. A. S. J. McKissick returned The county's loss may amount t( home Sunday from Auburn, Ala. seventy-five dollars. While thi Kimerint.entlenf'h flmnllincr nr?#l l?ii Miss Minnie Fleming visited her Btore room were in danger of burm cousin Miss Minnie Gist last week, through his prompt work anc Q| Miss Wil helm ilia Puckett left assistance of the neighbors wh< uesday for her home in Dal ton, rallied to his assistance the tire was (ja ^ contined to the small building. Miss Nathalie Hunter left Tues- In Mad Chase, day for Columbia to visit her grand- Millions rush in mad chase afte mother. health, from one extreme of fnddisn to another, when, if they would onb Miss Nannie Wilburn is at home eat good food, and keep their bowel from Limestone college for the va- wit'\ ,)r- King's New Life Pitts .. their troubles would all pass away C&uon. Prompt relief and quick cure for live XjfSaa i and stomach trouble. 2f> cents at Dr Miss Kathleen Briggs left Satui- g. c. Duke's drug store; guaranteed day to visit friends and relatives lh Clinton. Master Manley Sanders left Tucs- ttyclone Near West Springs 1 anfi Kcln.WCCk ,^1 T""1% T< 'l * o<Jloek a most terrific wind, rair 1 Mr. and Mrs. ft. W. Tinsley and a?d hftil Bt?rm swePt ?a P?rtio1 v u r" Vttle daughter, Clarice, spent Suii- Bqgansville township, trees aay at White Stone. J fences and small houses were blowr ifffmra ' i down, and some crops were badlj Ij/ Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Jordrtii, Mrs', injured. We do not remember al a T. C. Duncan and daughter, Miss who suffered damage. Mr. M. B jjW Medora Duncan, Misses Maggie and Loc had a rail fence blown awa; { Ethel Walker and Miss Hylzium which, stood near his house. II f attended the Annual Masonic Con- said for awhile things looked ant fl vontioi^n Ashcville Wednesday and felt squally, but the storm did no .J ^ T hursday of this week. last long. 1 Soap! So i = (g) Nine Cakes 01 Yjt Soap for i :? = Don't fail to gei v5j this Soap. Gi i ever offered to Union. Those v I this soap befor i this means. ! For one week. | The Rice jr| The Soap Closing Exercises of ihe ! Graded Schools. 1 The session of the four graded ] schools of the city under the charg.; of Superintendent Davis Jcflferies , ended Friday, June 2, with beconi- . ing and appropriate exercises. Tie day was clear, bright and balmy, L and the radiant faces of the dear! ,.n;m ? i ...ui. : ' V111HULI1 lATUllirU \>1LII Jl\) UI1U glUU- ^ ness borne of the assurance that ^ , they were to have a vacation, a rest from their school duties for the summer, while a halo of intellectual . brightness illumined the fair faces of the sweet girl graduates and crowned the brows of the boys of j the class. The children formed in double column and marched to the amphitheater, arranged seats in front of the rostrum, to the enlivening strains of Baldwin's march by the Union Silver Concert Band. The rostrum was most handsomely 1 decorated in the class colons, yellow and green. Seated upon the rostrum were the graduating class, 1'rof. J. G. Clinkscalcs, orator of the day, Superintendent Davis Jefferics, Prof. Spencer Morgan Rice, Kov. L. M. Rice, Rev. A. G. Wardlaw, Major J. A. Fant, chairman of board of trustees, V. E. DcPass, Esq. j ' THE I'ROGUAM. ^ Sacred medley by the band. Prayer by Rev. ft. M. Rice. ! Music by the band. ' Superintendent Jefferies in a j short address expressed his gratification and appreciation of the , honor and interest shown by the - large attendance and regretted that r the children could not furnish vocal music for the occasion, but that the Union Silver Concert Band had 1 kindly consented to play. Prof. ! Rice then in a few well chosen sentences introduced the speaker, ti? e r 1 i ? i rui. .j. vi. vmuiweaies, a proiessor; in Wofford college. Prof. Clink> scale's address was to the children ' J and most amusing and instructive, ' picturing the school days, the ani' 1 bilious boy and girl and what was I ever in store for the student. In ; * , referring to the certificates to be 5 given to the graduates, he said these certificates of which you are ( t' justly proud, because they certify 1 j to your good work during the school j sessions, and they will mean much ; or nothing according to how you ' j j view them. If you take them home , I put them in a pretty frame and J bang them on the wall to be looked ( 1 at as an evidence of your having ^ completed your education, they j will mean but little or nothing to ' you, but if you fold them away and treasure them as an inspiration to . ^ higher aims and greater accomplish- , ments feeling that your education J has but just begun, then these ccr) tifieates will me An a great deal to ( i you. Ije advised the girls to learn , to make a home, that is learn from their mothers the practical and useful things of life to cook and keep house, relating a number of instanr ces in the lives of the misguided t, and of the successful. Altogether ? the address of Prof. Clinkscales was , full of sound reasoning, practical ideas and good advice. 1 Supt. JefTeries then in a very ' # i' i iii i . iccnng manner spoae 10 inc graduates of their good work and conduct delivering to them their cer tifieates. V. E. DcPaes, Esq., then ad1 dressed the class in the most comi plimentary terms. Ho said that it i had been a very difficult decision to , make as to who was entitled to the i medal, there being only a fraction's T difference between the two making 1 the highest average, that fraction . being in favor of Miss Lillio Blanche V Adams, to whom he delivered the Q Munro medal. The next highest 1 was John Wallace Gibbs, to whom t ho delivered the scholarship in the Washington and Loo University. k ap! SoapY'| J f Good Toilet | a Quarter. ^ j t a package of [ -eatest bargain the people of y* ^ho have bought (55) e knows what | For Cash only, rt Drug Co. | j > People. ZL j f ri^e next highest was (!uy Ilollis g VVjlburn of whom honorable men- fi tion and entitled to distinction was g made, being hut little less in the | l vent go than the others, speaking B ivell for his standing in the class. R The other members of the graduat- I ng class deserve credit as well, s nnce they would not have been enfitled to a certificate had they not ? made required average,, showing i | that they too had done most eredi- fj table work. | Supt. Jefferies made the. usual | vnnounccmcnts. Benediction by g Itev. A. (i. Wardlaw. | This closes the most successful ' ind satisfactory term <?f the graded g ?cliools, having had tlie largest en- 2 rollinVnt-. . The following are the names of I the graduates: v g Lillic Blanehe Adams, Maud g Kthelind (Jnrner, Annie Belle Jean- f nette Gibbs, Bertha Marie Goude- I lock, Anne Odelle Hamilton, Iter- 1 tha Lenora Hamilton, . Valimla Grant Hamilton, Bessie Othella ,] Humphries, Carrie Mildred Meng, [ Nina GerVrude Sexton, Nannie j Kloiis. Sk?W?, Klla Inez Wilburn, | Mat tie Gordon Williams, John f Wallace Gibbs, Albert Sidney Goss, ji DeAubry Gregory, Joseph Starke (j Hamilton. James Glenn Osborne, Guy Mollis Wilburn. ThiK> class was the proud and c happy recipients of many very I handsome and useful presents from | friends and relatives, and many, | many very large bouquets of bcauti- | fill flowed. I Furious Fighting. '"For seven years," writes Geo. W. S HofTnian, of Harper, Wash.. "I had a B Hitter battle, with chronic stomach g and liver trouble, but at last 1 won, g and cured my diseases, by the use of | Klectric Bitters. I unhesitatingly I recommended them t?? all, and don't g intend in tho future to he without ? them in the house. They are certainly g 11 wonderful medicine, to have cured such a bad ease as mine." Sold, under B guttrantoe to do the same for you, by * Dr. F. CT Duke, druggist, at 50c. a bottle. Try them today. Seaboard Air Line Connections k There is lielievcd. to he a good chance now to secure for Spartan- 1 burg connection with the Seaboard B Air Line and give our commercial and manufacturing interests a third g transportation line. The line is 1 already in operation from Pride's, ? m the main line of the Seaboard, I to Buffalo and a connection between 1 Buffalo and Glenn Springs will H firing the Glenn Springs railroad * into use as far as Roebuck, which M is only six miles from Spartanburg. The Seaboard could then come into \ Spartanburg cither over the C. & VV. (5., or by building a line of their own from lloebuck to this city. The connection with the Seaboard could then be made at a moderate cost and the great benefits of three railroad lines enjoyed l?y r>ur citizens. This accomplishment is not so far off as some people may think and those who doubt its success and reality arc in a fair way to be greatly surprised some day.? Spartanburg Journal. A Wonderful Saving. The largest Methodist: church in Georgia used 32 gallons of b. it M. mixed with 24 gallons of oil, thus making paint cost about $1.20 per gallon. They calculated to use 100 gallons of other paint. Saved about $30.00, and also got a big donation of L. AM. Dealers gladly sell L. A M., because their customers call for it, and say they used it 12, 1-1 and even 30 years ago. Don't pay $1.60 a gallon for linseed oil, which you do in rendy-for-use paint. Buy oil fresh from the hnrrol nt. On sonts per gallon, and mix it with 1/. & VI. Paint. i It makoa paint ciAt about $1.20 per gallon. Hold by Unon Hardware Co., (JnioujJ. L. McVmirter, Jonesville; Ji. G. Wilbcnii A Keys. r?m ITT" 1 TnrtT<MiTii n mmmm* mmmm?mmrnmrn* A &? ~^iw &*&kd?B^aSIf?3&_ _/. iii, ~*Ju sl **s&i ctacit? I WHEW IN DOUBT | 1 Never " take unnecessary || 1 chances if you do not want $! Ito suffer a loss. ** TRADE AT OUR STORE! |j A store you know==a store || (all this community knows-- ^ a store that shows you the |g greatest assortment?a store |g that is famous for dependa- . [?] | ble qualities, a store that al= ; g| ways quotes the lowest pos- || sible prices, a store that ?; (means to do the fair and gg square thing at all times g| and under all circumstan= || | WE SELL GOOD GOODS | | AT RIGHT PRICES AND | NOTHING ELSE AT ANY PRICE. g 1 This has always been the ^ 1 rwG S/"?^r /--v ? rv? ? ? - ? ? iu v ui MOi C cUltl IHcHF!83 ^ tained as inviolably today in as at any time since its es=.: S f| tablishment. T || |W. T. BEATY & CO.,! P. O. AUSTELL, Manager. gj MBgaBHaHMMEKBBHHBWWWWPMiM | How Money Grows | 1 If deposited in the Savings DepartI men! of The Peoples Bank. i jfj Save 5 cents a day and at the end of 5 years mi von will have $84.74. jj^ Save 10 cents a day^ind in 5 years it will be |j| p worth, if deposited here, $167.47. ri? ^ 25 cents a day saved will in 5 years he $423.68. 8 50 cents laid away every day for 5 years and ||| you will have $847.35. |j Money Deposited in. our Savings || H Department will grow while r I you sleep. || THE PEOPLES BANK 5 ? y m B. F. ARTHUR, President. Capital and Surplus $800,000.00. Assets $300,000.00. ?jl| -C Q SVl E-1 I am now ready to . j do your Repair ,1 Work of any kind. I Also Horse Shoe- ? J ing I UNION CARRIAGE WORKS, Next to Crawford, Ayco.ck & Deaver Stables. Bachelor Street. Phone 146.