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1 B I YC 1 Anythii J Hats o . j| want y< 1 WE with th Saw / || hny an 7 ||| modera || mercha # 1 CAL rrTA I Bail LOCAL LACONICS. Happenings of Interest - About Town. v * J fi Mr. David Eison is attending the g South Carolina College. t; fi Mr. S. T. McCrary, of the Spar- j tanhurg bar, was in the city this f week.' y Mr. D. T. Duncan, of Whitmire, ^ is visiting his brother-in-law, Mr. Eison. I? 0 Miss Rliett Sheppard, of Edgefiled, is visiting her uncle, Mr. Dan Wallace. (j Mr. Frances H. Carey, of Balti- I more was here in attendance on 1 the mill meeting. 1 Mrs. B. Jones, after a pleasant fl visit to friends in Cartersvillc, Ga., ^ returned last Saturday night. Mr. H. M. Grimball, formerly an fc esteemed citizen of Union, and now t a resident of Spartanburg, was in t 1L. . 1- 1 I . me city tins weca on Dusmess. I Judge Bur well, of Charlotte, for- 0 merly an eminent member of the c North Carolina bench, was in the city during the special stockholders 51 meeting of the Union Mills. I Mr. James Simons, of Charleston, ? president of The News and Courier J Company, and once a famous speak- q ^ er of the State houses of reprcsenta^ tives, was in the city this week. | The Southern Railway now has a most efficient and accomodating agent at this place in the person of y Mr. S. II. Mclean. He is wide ( awake and looks to the interest of j the company in every particular. Mr. C. W. Goforth left Sunday 1 to take up his new position with i the Bailey-Copcland Company in i Columbia. His host of friends hate f to see him leave for ho was very y popular and liked by all who knew 1 him. 1 .T T ... < New hotci a? jonesville. < At tho completion of the new 1 hotel in Jonesville, Misses Hattie < and Lilla Crenshaw, who havo been ] keeping a boarding house in Bir- 1 mingham, Ala., will take charge, i and Jonesvillo will then have a first class hotel, something that has been i needed in Jonesville for years. 1 With this great acquisition Jones- : ville will be an up-to-date up country town. ] fftftMSfffr1'1 ' S&. 1EFORE 5U BU rig in Clothing, 5 r Furnishing Qooc ou to see our lines. ARE REA e best that monej id our prices are te for good depen M /I J uuidc. .L AND SEE U The ev - Copela Company. The New Store. Mr. A. A. Swygert, for sonic In ime manager of the Mutual Dry loods Company's store at the Bufilo Mills is about to open a dry oods store in Union. He will run he store himself and liis many riends wish him success in his un- tli lertaking. His store isTiext to the co urniture house of T. E. Bailey and ias recently been renovated and pj landsomely fixed up. teath of a Beautiful Little t< Child. at th Dorothy, the three years old laughter of Mr. and Mrs. James G. jOiny. .Tr n tiriof illnnco flind til ^esday morning about 10 o'clock. J}' )orothy was beautiful and bright, icr mother's joy, her father'? pride, c? nd a general favorite with all who j)l :ncw her. She has gone to join . he bright angel throng and is far \\] lappier than she could ever have ecu in this world of troubles and rials. The profound sympathy of he many friends and acquaintances 8*1 ,rc with the bereaved parents and ^ levoted grandparents. The funeral services were held cr .t the residence at 3:30 p. m., and he interment in the old Presbyerian cemetery at 4 o'clock. The 1,1 ervices were conducted by Rev. L. l]( d. Rice, pastor of the First Baptist "( :hurch. ? ? ?... ir, Jnion County Cotton Associa- w tion. ii, At the regular meeting of the li. Jnion county division of the South- ri irn Cotton Association last Monday, ol President F. M. Farr announced h< hat arrangements had been made tl 'or the farmers to store their cotton ir n the warehouse at Monnreh mills tv it 15 cents per bale including in- fr m ranee. A certificate of deposit a will be given the farmer who puts is his cotton in the warehouse if the tl farmer or any person who putu his ei cotton in the warehouse desires a la certificate, but a tag on the cotton fe will answer all purposes and will ol txj a good guarantoe. The address al cf Harvie Jordan was read. Re- n ports of committees from the several k township organizations were read, la showing the amounts on hand. Dr. tl M. W. Culp, Judge J. M. Greer li \nd Rev. J. G/ Farr made very tl timely and interesting talks to the la members of the association which n wore attentively listened to and appreciated. w i- - .;9 J ? SBmA >hoes, g * Is we H h SB tj Era K-' DY : 11 pSjfl hi g< r can ||j u very 1 S dable li ?! 11 s?u! w ?i k?G li> gSj 11 JSafi w im Era d is. H t I? 13 gjg ii jpRS ir &S 11 rnsj (i ace " nd II Ha f< h Ss fi Ba is Bjfi n Bg g "i "TILLMAN'S TROUBLES.'' ? v , a i iteresting Article Prom o: the Pen of Savoyard, In ? Washington Post. c< h Savoyard, the brilliant writer on it ie staff of the Washington Post, ^tributes the following article on g' Tillman's Troubles" to that news- f< i per: J tl Wlll'll t.llA Plli/'Ofrn mmirnnJinn r\t m <80, concluded its labors Robert n :xmibs, in the United States Sen- tl e, alluding to William H. Seward 8] icn a senator from New York, e] id: "Actaeon has been torn by oi s own dogs." Something like P at is likely to happen to the Hon. T sn Tillman down in South Caro- S la. The liquor question is threat- tl ling to disturb the security of the tl tehfork, and he may have to fight ci r his seat in the senate when the 1> me comes to choose his successor. r< Licker" in politics is nearly as uch of a disturbing element as licker" in a man's stomach. It ive Ohio to the Democrats in 1883. made Wisconsin democratic in >; KM). It elected Horace Boise gov- a nor of Iowa, the first democrat to a] cure that honor in more than a ii lird of a century. It was liquor tl i politics that made it possible to p ifeat James G. Blaine for presi- r, jnt in 1884, for if St. John had tl ;>t been a candidate there is noth- n ig more certain than that Blaine h ould have carried New York. tl Tillman is the man who mixed ^uor and politics in South Caro- R na. He turned the State into a im-sellcr and gave it a monopoly f the traffic. Himself a teetotaler, 3 had discernment enough to sec idt. all i.ViA nrnKilnli/m lnr?!aln4?/>" * MV MISk VI1V 1V1I1W1 WIV/II lVgtOiatlUII i the world would not eradicate *" le craving for alcoholic stimulants j om the human appetite, and it is !' pity that the average prohibition- 11 t has not the sagacity to recognize ft lat inndisputable fact. As a gen- 1 al proposition prohibition makes * tw-breakcrs, perjurers, and not a ^ tw drunkards. It also is the means * [ selling more mean "licker" than ^ II other agencies. The average n lan in Kansas who will have whis- * ey gets it when somebody has vio-' " ited the law. It is risky 'to break c le law, and, as a Oonscquencc, the quor supplied is tho cheapest and ic meanest to be had, for it is a. iw of trade that tho profit is com- ? lensurate with the risk. South Carolina went into the ? 'hiskey business. Tho personal ! t iberty of the citizen was eradicated o far as the right to buy and sell I hiskey was concerned. He could ot fetch whiskey into the State for is own use. He had to buy of the tate, and, I believe, he could not uy more than half a pint at a time, i t was the most outrageous exam- j le of paternalism a free people ever i adurcd. The Connecticut blue | tws were enacted to make men digious, and were harmless com- I ared with a law to make men sober. I Tillman put up his State barroom nd called it* a dispensary. I am ' ot certain but one had to get a octor's prescription before he could 3t even half a pint. There were j miplaints as to the quality of the \ uff, and that is not strange. The late made money, for liquor sell- 1 ig is a profitable business. It re- j uccd taxation and that made the J l. _ A A 1 11 ' ' r&uriiujr Buiiivwiiut toieraoie. 5 But this is the age of graft, and raft crept into tli<4 rum trade of outh Carolina just as it had in the lsurance business of New York and ic postoflice department of the nited States. And now South arolina is thinking of regaining i er lost liberties and with a pretty iod chance of succeeding, if you will take the cranks in the nited States congress who want ic government to do things the jvcrnment has no constitutional athority to do, such as making lilroad rates, regulating insurance mipanies, and subsidizing stcamlip lines, and reenforce .them with ic cranks out of congress who ould regulate the animal appetite I man by statute, and turn the tyout loose with unrestricted aulority to govern this country, you ould soon have a more intolerable espotism in the United States than urhey ever labored under. ) For one I would be sorry to see ' en Tillman retired to private life, tc is an honest man, and the most j ldcpcndent character now in pub- I c life. He has learned a great 1 eal since he fetched his pitchfork * j lto the Senate chamber. He has j rnnd out that other men arc as I onest as he. He survived that ) lock. He did even better than [ aat, he rejoiced over it. He is lore of a statesman than all his . illow hot-gospelers together, and j n f\n roe ?* 11 V ? iu Iiiui(jn UUIIU UI UlL'Ill I ould think of undertaking. Ruf- j anly as was his conduct?and there j i much room for further improve- i lent in that respect-Tillman has ained the respect of all his fellows 1 the senate, and the cordial friend- I lip of many of them. ? His speech on the death of his illcaguc, whose name I do not now . call, was a remarkable production, ad the only intelligent elucidation, f the political situation in South i arolina that has come under my otice. No man has a proper eonjption of the "New South" until e he has read this speech and medated upon it. ^ As for myself?I suppose it is disraccful for me to say so?but I pre- j ir the Old South. There was somcling about it that is lacking in this nnmcrcial age, something that no ation can do without and retain le respect of anybody whose reject is worth having. Unless this J poch shall manage to retain some f that spirit of the Old South ex- j ressed in an address of ofie of Ben illman's predecessors in the United tatos Senate the last session of the lirty-sixth congross, tho chapter rnt tells our story of the first doide of the twentieth century will e an ugly one in the history of our public. WagorwJ-oads of fish. j Saturday the flood gates of the leal Shoals dam will be shut down J nd the. water below the dam will ? 11 flow away down the river, leavlg the bed of the river bare and ic fish exposed, nothing to do but ick up the. fish. Everyboday get \ i.. i .1 i 1 L'uuy sum go on mc eariy train on 1 lie U. & G. S. railroad Saturday ] lorning, stay all day, and come oine with fish enough for two or .] Iirec days. laid on Gamblers?25 Ar- \ n, rested. 1 Wednesday night the police raided he gambling den of Tom Farr in j he cellar under the store room of , Ir. J. Cohen and arrested 2f>gaml>- 1 srs. There were four small boys < a the gang. These were retained 1 s witnesses. This place has been 1 inder the watchful eye of the police or some time and the raid Wcdnes- ' lay night was the first success of he many efforts made in the past o catch the gamblers in * the very ,ct. At police court Thursday norning 17 of the 25 were fined 16.85 each, and two $5 each. The >thcr 6 were released. %T - XJ a once. All parties holding claims against the sstatoofH.C. Lawson, deceased, will >lease present them at once, and al, hose owing the estate will please call ^ md settle *t once to H. 0. Lawson, Jr.i ; Executor, gasH. finsfifiafiiitsi I What ar I Going t ! About !IP YOU CAF A $3 Bed for $2; a 75c; a $2 Rocke" fo Rocker for $1.98; a for $3.98; a $10 Oat $7.50; a $4 Safe f Dining Table for J| tress for $2.50; a 60c; a $9 Go=Cart $1.50 Pair Lace Cu a $2 Boy's Wag $9 PaiSilk r Finis for $7.50. AT... BAILEY EURNI fOLD HIC I WAGO ffe Vnn rannnf tnoFt i> vxm VMHIIV/L IIIUIXV by buying an 01 Wagon, which the test for a r years. ....SOLD BY Peoples Su| ^t.ararererarsrersrA 130c Foi J Mow much money have ; want to exchange on this b* ^ we are doing with every poi J Tobacco that we are selling a 45 cent Tobacco (worth e L* at 10 cents per plug, 3 plugs J We have it in 10 and 12 is going like "hot cakes." ^ in line with the rest and ge J it is going. We do not me* the finest tobacco in the ^ mean that it is the best ? union s lonacco market to< ^ a box, whichever you like % | Union Groc ^ Largest Handlers of Plug ^ Etc. in (Jni L. L. WAGNON, - S?S5ES?irr2g C You! 0 do ] ; it J J KIIV S 1 UU I till $1 Chair for $1 r $1.48; a $3 g i $5 Bureau g c Dresser for g or $3; a $3 i >2; a $3 Mat= g $1 Lamp for & for $6.50; a II rtains for $1; g on for $2; a g ;hed Portiers g ITURE CO. | Bggggggg iicoRyl iNICI i 1 ",4-7i i ; a mistake |[ Id H ickory || has stood |1 lumber of || F?P<V Co. J rgrerarargr^Z r 45 c* you got that you ^ isis? That's what ?J[ .md of Sweetheart ^ . We are selling J very cent of it too) ; to the pound. ! pound boxes. It J You want to get ^ t some of it while in to say that it is world, but we do value offered on ^ jay. Try a plug or J and be convinced. * ery Co., 5 Tobaccos, Cigars, 3 on. % Manager. ?