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" p LOOK I f a r iv I ' I The time I for sowi and Wh( have a g ply of GUI at $2.15 Cash, an ** be please ply your c aw. ARRIVALS AND DEPARTURES 01 the Doable Dally Passenger Trains, Union, S. C. Train going North 9:00 a. m. 44 South 11:35 a. ni. 4 4 4 4 North 2:36 p. m. 44 44 South 8:53 p. m. These trains only make a few min? utes 8top at Union, so tliat the hours of arrival are practically the hours of departure. Any change in this schedule will be published in The Times for the benefit of the public generally. Local News Notes Points Personal and Otherwise kicked up and Paragraphed by Our Pencil-Pusher. L Mr. D. P. Duncan, of Columbia. was in Union last week. Mr. E. A. Burris, of Anuerson, was in Union Wednesday. Mr. W. B. Wise, of Danville, was in the city this week. Mr. G. A. Terrail, of Baltimore, was in the city this week. Mr. Ben Arthur visited friends in Spartanburg last week. Mr. W. G. Stribling, of Greenwood, was in the city Tuesday. Mr. H. J. Lancaster, of Spartanburg, was in Union this week. Hon. H. C. Little, of Kelton, was in the city Monday on business. Mr. C. M. Rugheimer, Of Spar tanburg, was in town this week. Mr. J. W. Cunningham, of Joncsville, was in the city last Thursday. Col. J. H. Sloan, of Spartanburg, passed through the city Wednesday. Mr. P. I. Welles, of Columbia, was in the city this week on business. Mr. J. P. K. Bryan, of the Charleston bar, was in the city this week. Mr. Chas. P. Sims, o! the Spartanburg bar, was in the city last week. Mr. B. F. Townsend was in Columbia Wednesday on professional business. r0 Mr. A, F. Gorman, of the Riddell Carnival Company, was in the city on business this week. Mr. Thomas Chatman has accepted a position with Mr. G. W. Going and will bo pleased to see and serve his friends. HERE 1E R S! ( is here ng Oats 3at. We food sup VNO per sack id would d to supiemands. Bobo. Mr. M. Both Crigler, of tho Chei ter Oil Mills, spent Saturday in tl city with friends. The entire student body of Clen son college, 700 in number, will ai tend the State fair one day. Mr. E. W. Robertson and his a torney, Mr. W. D. Melton, arrive J in the city Tuesday morning. I Mr. Charles L. O'Ncale, of Spa | tanburg, a prominent cotton brok< !??? ? l -x i \ja uiut vn,yt wuo ill n Oil lllbl WCC* Mr. Mat. Wallace left Morula for Birmingham, Ala., where 1 will resume his duties in engineei ing. Miss Rhett Sheppard, of Edgi field, wlio has been visiting Mr. I H. Wallace and family, left Frida for her home. Mrs. G. Alfred Guignard an children, of Columbia, were tl: guests of Mr. and Mrs. I). II. Wa lace this week. Mr. J. H. Rodger, Jr., spcr some time in Columbia last weed He will shortly resume his work t Uniontown, Ala. Mr. G. O. Tcnney, the Sparthi burg contractor, who has charge ( the work at Neal Shoals, was i town this week. Col. W. B. Jones and Mr. W. I Jones, Jr., of Richmond. Ky., ai rived here Tuesday and will be hei for sometime. Colonel Jones is th father of Mr. R. A. Jones, of th city. Mr. YV. W. Johnson and brid passed through Union on their wa from Hendersonville to Charlcsto yesterday. They were met at th depot by many congratulator friends., Mr. Samuel Sheftall, manager c the White Stone hotel, passe through Saturday on his way t Savannah. The hotel will rc-ope in January and stay open unt October next. Quite a number of Union peop] may go up to Spartanburg to sc "The Clansman" presented thei Friday night. Tho book, and tli play as well, was laid in this se( tion of the state, and will be of pai ticular interest. President E. D. ?Jmith, of tli South Carolina Division of th Southern Cotton Association, passe through Tyesday, on his way horn from Gaffncy, whero he addresse ?#?1? ;? ? Iviiu luiiuuio iuuuuujr, ui^ui^ uici t5 hold their'cotton until the pric for it reaches the minimum. V* HOLD YOUR COTTON AN ADDRESS BY PRESIDENT HARVIE JORDAN. farmers Must Stand Together. Can command a fair Price for Their cotton and (jet It. At a meeting of the executive committee of the Southern Cotton Association, held at Asheville, N. C., where representatives from each cotton producing state and territory were present, a report on the condition of the cotton crop was carefully compiled from returns of more than 15,000 correspondents, showing a condition ot 73 per cent as compared with a condition of K4 .1 per cent for a corresponding period 1 of 1904. An estimate of the crop *vt?. i j ? ? - 1 iui vi i in ncuouii uasuu oil reports I from the same correspondents indi-1 cated a yield of 9,588,333 bales of cotton. Taking this information as a guide in connection with the present enormous demand for spot cotton I by the spinners of the world, the ' present high prices of cotton goods, and the heavy cost to the produc- ( crs for cultivating and harvesting this crop, the committee agreed that ; eleven cents as a minimum price, J basis middling at all interior points, would be a reasonable and conserva- 1 tive price to be asked by the pro- 1 duccrs this season for their staple. ; It has been generally reported, and ' not publicly denied, that spinners can pay twelve cents per pound for middling cotton at the present time and still make good profits in the manufacture of the raw material 1 into the finished fabric. Peace has been recently declared between Russia and Japan. The whole civilized world is in a most prosperous condition and the spindles in all the cotton mills of Europe and America arc running night and day to supply the tremendous demands for cotton goods. CONSUMPTION UN PRECEDKNTEI). The enormous crop of American cotton reaching the unprecedented figures of nearly 14,000,000 bales has been easily absorbed by the spinners at an average price of nine cents per pound. Of this crop there was only a small reserve stock of little more than a million bales to be carried into the season of 1905-6 on the first day of Scpi.mbar ir no more man ten i?u=> lion bales of cotton are harvested s_! this season to be added to the small j reserve stock carried over from the Invnn lOHI IV, Ill- it.. 1-1 viu|i i?/v/1, buu uiuisui liiu wuriu, at the present rate of consumption, 1" will face a famine in raw cotton before another crop can be planted, cultivated and placed upon the mart ket. d Will the farmers take advantage of the splendid position they occupy, and like men assert their I rights to demand a fair price for ?r : this crop at the hands of the buyers? c* j Will not the merchants and local y , hankers throughout the south line le ' up solidly in unbroken ranks with r- the farmers against the combinations that are so actively at work to Qm depress prices and defeat the will of j the people? y MUST I?C OUR DUTY, .Every man in the South, no matd ter what his avocation, is expected IC to do his duty during the coifiing I- months and to throw his full moral and financial ability in the great fight that we have engaged in. The J "bear" speculators of Wall street " and London are using every device known to human ingenuity to depress prices. The international cotl ton spinners of Great Britain have )f combined to crush the present efforts n of the farmers to maintain fair prices, and exporters arc doing all j in their power to hammer down the r* market. The solution of the prob- , >c lem is easy and simple. The ability c of the farmers to win this fight is lH unquestioned. Stand together like i brothers, battling for the protection of your firesides and your homes, 'c your wives, children and your couny try. Stop selling cotton at present 11 prices. Call upon your merchants c and bankers to aid you in the heroic y struggle that lies ahead. Store your cotton in the seed wherever possible ,f and do not have it ginned until d later in the season. Storo Che lint a cotton under good sheds to keep it n dry on the farm or place it in wArc ,1 houses, whore the receipts are needed as collateral to borrw money to . t meet maturing obligations. All other lines of business borrow money, ;c why not the farmers, when by so 0 doing they can hold their cotton 10 off the market and materially advance its price? Pay no attention r" to the "bearish" literature being j printed and circulated broadcast ie throughout the South. This is done ic with but one object and that to dis d cpurage and induce you to sell your ic cotton at prices below its value. As d producers you know that the crop n is short and that unless you get ;e good prices, at least eleven cents per pound, there will be but little or no . DOMINION Of3 KING COTTO (Continued from 1st page.) Cotton receipts in Newberry far are 15,000. Most of the crop being held. I >an caster shows an increase 2,500 bales over last year. Lot price 0 3-8. Orangeburg boasts of a eott< crop of 6,5000 bales, one half which has been sold. In Saluda most of the cotton gathered and sold, though some being held for higher prices. In Abbeville, cotton is being he all right. The prevalent price 0 1-2 cents. There is a gain of nearly 2,0 bales in the cotton receipts Laurens. T^ist year 540 bales we stored in warehouses at this tim und' this year at the same tin there are stored 1217 bales. There has been a great increa in Greenville, but the farmers a holding on still. mere is an increase of over 1( bales in Anderson. Down in Clarendon have a pret good crop and the farmers are st holding. 1 In Lee county very little of tl crop is lieing held for higher price I n Chesterfield where the farnie ire holding there is a gain of nea iy 2,000 bales. In Union there has lieen consl erablc gain in bales for the tot crop. The people are holding w< and very little is going on the nia ket. The Spartanburg farmers a holding well. The Barnwell farmers are ma ing" no attempt to hold, for they a satisfied with 10 cents and ha been selling at that figure. There has been a gain of 6' liales in Bamberg and the furim arc keeping their crop over. The reports would show til though there are some who are ai have been selling still the majori tends to hold until the minimu has lieen reached. profit in this crop. Hold your cotton and check \ the present, heavy receipts and d niand not less than eleven cents f every pound of middling cotton y< have to offer. The Southern Cc ton association, the Farmers' Ed cational and Co-operative unio the American Society of Equit the Farmers' Alliance of Nor Carolina, liilYl, ,i\l ogrv<*d on tniinimum price of eleven cents ai the membership of these power! organizations, standing together unity and harmony, can defy t combinations of the world and w another notable victory, the like which was never witnnss^rl 1 The Southern Cotton Associate must be maintained and financed the farmers of the south. Its pow to protect the interest of the pi ducers is recognized and feared ail the leading speculative and ct ton interests of America and Euroj If we go down in defeat the ener will bo merciless and it will ta twenty years for the south to i cover again. Stand by the associ tion and thereby protect your i dividual interests. The south both mentally and financially al to manage and protect her interei from the dominating and devash ing hands of her enemies. PH ESI DENT E. D. SMITH's APPEAL THE FAKMERB. To the Farmers and Mcrcliai and Bankers of South Carolina: view of the present decline in t price of cotton I consider it my du to make an appeal to the farmc to hold their cotton off the markt 1 ask that the merchants and ban crs assist them in doing this. T1 merchants, by not pressing ther and bankers by lending them si ficient money on their cotton enable them to meet the obligatio that cannot be deferred. The price fixed by the cxecuti committee at Asheville at 11 con may seem to some rather high, b when the New Orleans conventic fixed cotton at 10 cents the difTe ence between the current price i that time and 10 cents was ve much greater than the current pri now and 11 cents. You will rec?f that cotton, when the New Orlcai convention assembled, way und geven, alx>ut six and a half. I standing together, by unity of a tion, by a little sacrifice and patric ism, the Southern Cotton Associ tion forced the consumer to pay the pnxlucer more than 10 cent Have you thought what that difTe ence in price meant to the indi\ dual and the south? The grow Ua r* a.. i.u~ ? ? 1UO n HBUt W) IIA uu; price OI I product, and can fix it if he w stand by this association, which making a gallant, fight to keep tl speculators from getting cotton their own price. lot every farmer withdraw 1 cotton from the market. This w check the receipts, and the mark will l>c obliged to advance. If y< have to sell try to find some mi who will buy it and retire it fro 1 t.wti 3|4 per cent of 11 On money def 2 | SAVINGS D1 jH compounded se H November 1st j ? I THE PEOPL !u 81 Capital and Surpl ,e ?, ; ? yes, n i! I TURNER & J Ml m) r" 5 that you will find a pretty 1 ro g anc* sizes> a'so Foot C money on the market. S "TRUNKS!"m DO (i ALL SIZES AND fi !rs ? PRICES. E ml jj Have you bought one? {y Jj of our 36 pound featherv 111 J; beds for#10? They can't K ? Jj be beat. 'P p GIVE US A CALL BEF or Jj TMINQ IN 0 OU f* t % TURNER & n? NEXT TO \ y. th ^ hn __________ _ in ^ s C MINCE ME. ^ M?waTwmwwM fe is a happy time for the cr ing to do with it but tc 0- so pleasant for the hou by fe prepare the filling. T1 In cessity for her to do ^ *9 can supply her with e> ko ^ as cheaply as she can o- in suggesting prepar a- ^ recommend II HEI *ts 1 because every one k fcv Meat is cleanly and it 10 % ^0St 'n^rec^en*s 'n ' jSV Glass Jars. Stone Jai llC & ? g Union Gro k- ^ tL Clean, Fresh Oroceri Tj, t "njsrjsrjetj&j&j&j&j the market. There are plenty of B ve men in each county of sufficient | ts means and patriotism to do this. In spite of the report circulated )n hy the bears and their allied interr" ests, who are trying to depress the price of your cotton, we are reliably y informed that throughout the ^ Cft southern states through the intludl once of the Southern Cotton Assolls ciation the farmers a re. holding er their cotton off the market. Let us *y stand hy our southern brothers in c" this great fight. It means the A 't- financial emancipation of our heft loved southland. ^ b) Yours truly, E. 1). Smith, r~ President S. C. l)iv., S. C. A. er A Daredevil Ride. }18 often ends in a sad accident. To heal ill accidental injuries use Bucklen's Arjg nica Salve. "A deep wound in my u foot, from an accident." writes Theo' dore Schuele. of Columbus, < >., "caused me great pain. Physicians were helpless, but Bucklen's Arnica Salve lis quickly healed it." Soothes and IicrIp mi hums like magic. 25c at F. 0. Duke, druggist. et I M Bring your job work to The in Times. We can please you. PA ga rAf... | interest| >osited in our jji EPARTMENT | :mi=annually, and May 1st. |I * _ES BANK, | us over $80,000. 'S AT J YIAYFIELD'S * 4 line of Rockers, all kinds m Beds fhe best for the ^ , "ORE BUYING ANY>UR LINE. ^ MAYFIELD \ -LYNN'S. <sr&&??&&& * ^ AT TIME 4 >se who have noth- ?k > eat the pies. Not ^ sewife if she lias to * lere is really no ne- & this drudgery. We ccellent mince meat ^ make it at home. & ed Mince Meat we ^ NZ | nows Heinz Mince is good. Only the & [*s. By the Pound. ^ eery Co.,? ies, Lowest Prices. ^ JRISTLES IN YOUR TEETH re not very pleasant, but you'll get them there every time you use k POOR TOOTH BRUSH. iet a brush that is built right--costs more but Kivcs more satisfaction than a dozen "cheap" ones. OUR BEST fiRE THE BEST. >almetfo Drug Co., Huict Uenwuk, Owners.