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k I EVERY EXPERT j|| Every poi acteristic Hf ations yoi Ml I <vr>Di\ir; snr ij ur unv, Come ant please yoi boys for 1 the BAIL LOCAL LACONICS. Happenings of Interest About Town. Mr. Earnest Spears spent Sundaj at Jonesville. Mr. J. P. Patton left Union Sat ^urday for Spring City, Tenn. tUvo city schools will have holiday to-day, which is Good-Friday. Hon. J. A. Sawyer made a busi ness trip to Joncsville Monday. } Mr. Clarence Sexton is now witl the Mills Avenue Store, Columbia The warm, bright days of earlj spring rejoiced the heart of lover anc gardener? t "^Mr. and Mrs. Judson Little, o j . West Springs, was in the city shop ping this week. Dr. J. G.Going returned Sunday from a business trip of several dayi to Georgia and Tennessee. Mrs. D. S. Pope returned to he home in Columbia after a tw< week's visit to her mother, Mrs & Baker. Dr. J. II. Montgomery and Dr *?& S. G. Sarratt have gone to Ncv York to attend a special course o ;'W lectures. Miss Christine Williams, one o the popular students at the Semina jv, was called homo last Friday le ^^legram. . ^ The graded schools take in at 8:31 o'clock in the morning and dismis at 1.45 in the afternoon now tha I the days are longer. | The Methodist church buildin; [ at Monarch Mills i$ ncaring com |A^<P^pletion, and will be a pretty' an< |J??r// ynvenicnt house of worship. fe f " - \lr. William Moorchead, of Mt KL Tabor, has accepted a position wit R| the Mutual Dry Goods Co., wher v he will bo glad to see his man; 1 friends. I B. B. James and Willie Morga I left Tuesday to attend the Interdt nominational Sunday School Con Br vention which will meet at Pelzc this week. fif* H. Hamilton has move B li JBillicr to the Townsend buildin( M seffind floor. He has fitted thei I 1 out nicely and has every modcr convenience. he Smartes pring Clothe f America's Foremo akers are here f< >ur inspection in a le new styles, patterr id colorings. FEATURE?EVERY AR nt of excellence tha of fine to=measure=i i will find in our K SUITS AT $5.50 1 see for yourself., i in everything1 for Easter wear _EY - COPEL UNION, S. C. xwe. UfcJfcK Capt. E. L. Clark lias withdrawn his name as a candidate for Alderman. f Rev. Thos. Going has begun work as pastor of the Mon-Aetna Baptist r church. The people are already pleased with his preaching and pastorial work. Dr. Theo. Maddox has moved his oflice to the second floor of the Townsend building. He intends to put in new equipments and has excel- r . lent and convenient quarters. Progress, our contemporary, will i try the experiment of coming out . semi-weekly for a few weeks. Good luck to you. If you succeed we r may try our hand at a daily. ' . j It may distress some of the niothj crs to learn that whooping cough is getting to be very common among the children, but they should take comfort in the thought that "spring ; is the best time to have it." 8 * I Capt. J. E. Hunter and Lieuten-, ant Joe Austell resigned their posir tions as officers of the new military 3 company, and Hon. Macbeth Young . was elected Captain and J. F. Walk-, er Lieutenant in their stead. The Union cornet band have rev ceived their new uniforms purchased * by them through the Bailey-Copcland Co. Tho band is composed of f up-to-date boys, and will make quite a handsome show with their y new outfit. Look after your registration cer- , 3 tifica*3. You can register only durs ing four days, April 10th to April t 14th, from 10 a. m. to 7 p. m. If vou neglect your registration certifi cate you cannot vote in the primary B election for city officers. 3 Messrs. J. C. Copeland, C. C. Sanders, Dr. H. B. Hair, Jno. R. Mathis, L. J. Browning an W. M. l' Nabors left Union Tuesday for Columbia. They took the Knight c Templar's degree on the 10th, and ^ the Shrincr's degree on the 11th. n It is published by The State that Rev. Richard Carroll, a well-known negro preacher, has been invited to ;r speak in Brooklyn, April 14th, from tho subjeot: ''Race Problems Due to Immigration, Industrial Comped tition and Colored People." He ?, has also been engaged by Mr. John n M. Shaw, of Bloomington, 111., to n lecture in the West during July and August. it ^ ^ TISTIG TOUGH 1 t is char= ill nade cre= gf| TO $22.50. I 1 We can ^ men and jj? .AND ca I SOME ONE SHOULD BE IN JAIL lo Reflection on Mr. Lyon and Others But Why Don't They Do Their Duty? Washington, April <th.?feenato Pill man left tonight for Clcmson col ego, where he will attend the meet ng of the Clcmson hoard Monday hie will return to Washington im nediately afterward, arriving lien fuesday. He had not seen the letter pub ished in the State today from Mr Lyon of the dispensary investigating committee, but when told of such i ettcr lie said he could, of course nake no reference to it until he seei t. "I will say this, though, I liad n< ntention of reflecting on Mr. Lyon Mr. ITay or any of the rest of th( lommittee in my letter to the pco Me. I only wanted them to reali/.< heir full responsibility in the mat ;er. 1 believe the people will lool ;o them first to keep themselve strictly to the law and make every body else concerned do the sam< thing. I think this should be takei is a kindness. Somebody has vio lated the law. They have bough 57(H),000 worth of liquor when tin law allows them to buy only 81(H), X K) worth. Thfiv have held nn tin paying of the accounts. Now some body besides these liquor dealers i guilty. The same is also true as t< the glass contracts. It has beci clearly shown that the Columbij glass concern has been caught ii crookedness. But they cannot hav been crooked unless somebody else who did the busines with them, wa crooked also. Now, why has n one been put in jail? "It is the investigating commit tee's business, when they have sai that there is corruption and hav held up the accounts, to say who i guilty. It just strikes me that some body ought to be in jail?that1 all."?Washington Corresponder in Columbia State. Spartanburg District Conference. The district conference of tl Methodist church will bo held j Grace church, Union, on May 3-' Rev. W. A. Masse beau will preac the opening sermon. Rev. M Massebcau was for four years pastx of Grace church, and is a minish of rare good qualities. Ho lw many friends in Union who rcjoii , in his continued upward progres THE STATE CAMPAIGN. Arranging a Programme for The Political Fireworks. Columbia, April oth.?Special: At the regular meeting of the State Democratic executive committee here to-night, resolutions were adopted ealling for the May State Convention, to ho held on the 10th of that month, and directing the county chairmen throughout the State to call club meetings on the 1 28th of April, for the purpose of j electing delegates to the county conventions, which will meet on May 7, to elect delegates to the State Convention, each county bc iuK viiuucu w aouoie tno representation it has in tlu* General Assembly. A resolution by 1). II. MeGill, of i Greenwood', caused some comment. It denounced as untrue the statement in Tom Watson's Magazine for March, that it makes no difference whether the Smith's representation in (v)ngress and the Electoral College is reduced, as proposed in the bill of Congressman Keifer, of Ohio, and went on to "denounce the author and those who go hand in hand with him along such lines, as enemies of the South and Southern people, such declarations being unbecoming a Southern white man." Mr. Magill defended his resolution with warmth and earnestness, but other members *of the committee took the view that as Tom Watson is not a Democrat any way, to adopt the resolution would b? undignified and would give him undue prominence and his magazine undeserved ad vertisi n g. A motion was made to table the resolution^ hot Senator Cole L. Blease, of Newberry, wanted to save the committee voting on the subject and moved to adjourn. This inspired Mr. Magill to relieve the situation by withdrawing the resolution. Tom Watson got one vote when he ran for President in the last National Convention. This vote came from Spartanburg, but the voter never made himself known.? A. Iv., in News and Courier. Extract From Address of Andrew Carnegie at Tuskegee Normal Institute. "The rapid growth of the South . in agricultural wealth, especially | u/uwii, iuv:bu iu? jruui'9 jJUSb, iiiui the development of her manufactures, must produce a decided effect . upon the conditions of human life, i With this increase in wealth .must l come the increasing desire in the people to improve themselves, for much of the refinement and clevai vation of life rests upon material prosperity, a fact which is often | overlooked. Money may he the root of all evil in some senses, but it is also the root of all the universities, colleges and libraries scattered throughout the land. No one ^ can tell us better than President Washington from personal experience, that without material prosperity, and therefore increased wealth, Tusk ogee could not have ' arisen. A 'new day has begun to * dawn upon the South and, if I mistake not, the next twenty years is l to witness an advance not alone in materia1 es, but as a Consequence 3 of mate.uu prosperity, in all that elevates, relines and renders human ^ life more worth living. Owing to _ j obvious reasons, the North for a , generation has enjoyed prosperity in far greater degree than the South, but the day of the South's prospcrs ity is now upon us. In this new _ ; era of progress and development , : the colored people arc to prove an 1 j indispensable element.lb-** t Low Rates to New Orleans and Return B - ACCOUNT UNITED CONFEDERATE VETB KHANS REUNION APRIL 25TH27TH, 1006. S ) The Southern Railway will sell ri tickets to New Orleans, La., and rca turn at .extremely low rates from i prominent points (a few of which are e named below) a3 follows: '' Barnwell...-$14.05 Chester $14.70 s Camden 15.35 Rock Hill.. 15.15 o Charleston. . 15.75 Orangeburg 14.75 Columbia.... 14.70 Yorkville.. 14.55 EQUALLY LOW RATES FROM OTHER POINTS, ;a Tickets will be on sale April 22nd. 23rd and 24th, limited good to re?g turn April 30th. By depositing tickets with Special Agent in New Orleans, and upon payment of the | sum of o0 cents, an extension of limit to May 21st will be granted. For the accommodation of the delcgatcs from South Carolina, the Southern Railway will operate j through ears from Columbia, S. C. ^ leaving April 23rd at 7.00 a. m. r and arrive at New Orleans next ' morning at 7:15 a. m. a For full information apply to any " Southern Railway Ticket Agent, or R. W. Hunt. Div. Pass. Agent, Charleston! S, C. . v "Si ? ! MjjfgiaffBiraCTrr Ifurni FI - I-...-. , ^ tt v nave jiisl ffiEEB jg received a new lot ' I TRUNKS ""I M Get our prices ^ B before buying ^ elsewhere. 1 We can save you mo 1 COME AND |W. H BJ pssin H Nine thousand |i square feet of fioc |l pletely covered wi' I WAGO | BUGGIES I SURRI 1 We can interest 1 Tw % 1 in the markel I The Peoples I D. FANT GILLIAM, ' Jspl MEET ME AT HAILE'S Hi I HAIL I! FOOT FORI1 S3 S3 I ; s y S3 jf) g. - ^:/f/ I fiz q| For Children ar ji| not only best best made, but ?? for growing fee 5W ing of toes, no gg no deformities bra i nfot* if *rnn umI <uivi 9 aa juu vv 11 Shoes for your < A Little Higher (3 first, hut Cheap* Q "Satisfaction or Yoi i? | HAILI The Leading SI 40 East Main Street . mmmsmsBB jui bo is rrr in o.iy TUREg '" il "oor ptrfetltei tr? lmk." l ^ 1 mey on this line. fi 1 SEE US! | JRRISJ liiije 3*uljitr riiii'if f- 3^111116 t sstcr-^ I four hundred || >r space com- ? th High Grade m >NS I ; AND | ES* I .f % you if you are j| t. See us. ||| Supply Co., I Treas. and Mgr. |j|j El F'S 8 m 1 SHOES m 'A Q? r $ m ? gj e the best=-= grade, and &j are the best 02 t; no cramp= ? corns, and sK will arise Sg II buy these PR children. rtj Frf in Price at ^ er in the end PM ir Money Back." ^ H B r SHOE ? - CO. Q loe House. jSjjj Union S. C. Q oaasaaasta