The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, May 11, 1906, Page 2, Image 2
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III Get on
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that it
g Our Prices ?
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atfiOtn?Ml
11"? BAIL
* L^fcAL -LACONICS.
s& Happenings of Interest
p About Town.
Dr. IT. I*. Tliiir Knmit. Rimiln.v in !
[Spartanburg.
Miss DcPass, of Camden, is visiting
in the city.
Miss Cornelia Greer spent Friday
in Spartanburg.
I)r. J. M. Wallace visited Spartanburg
Sunday. (
Mr. Perry Sartor is with the Wallace
Lumber Co.
Mr. Harry Dashields visited
Spartanburg Sunday.
Mr. W. E. Colton left Monday
for Jacksonville, Fla.
; Mr. Preston Ilicks, formerly of
Union, was here Monday.
I Have you seen the new fire wagon
and street sprinkler?
Miss Addio Hughes, of Trenton,
is visiting Mrs. Claud Sartor.
Mr. Jno. Smith, of Carlisle, wab
in the city Sunday and Monday.
J. Helton Lyles, Jr., of Spartanburg,
visited Union last Sunday.
Capt. J. T. Douglass left Tuesday
for Columbia on official business.
air. Vj. r. iNorman, 01 uoiumoia,
| spent Sunday and Monday in the
" city.
Miss Beulali Edge, of Jonesville,
was on a visit to friends in Union
Friday.
Miss Daisy Neal, of Spartanburg,
visited at ltev. D. M. McLeod's last
week.
Misses Kate and Bess Summer
and Mary Murrah spent Sunday at
Jonesville.
Miss Bessie Humphries and Mr.
Taylor, of Cross Keys, spent Sunday
in the city.
Mr. Roland Scaife and sister,Miss
Mildred, visited relatives in Spartanburg
Sunday.
Mrs. Geo. II. Burbage, of Columbia,
visited her sister, Mrs. Davis
Jeffries this week.
Messrs. II. B. Carlisle, of Spartanburg,
and A. F. McKissick, of
Greenwood, were in the city Satur?
day.
a
Put Off
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ew Sprits;
HanoMBnBnnnnnDiana
e now whilfe ther
c
variety of styles
; to choose from :
will take time to
nd examine our Si
ng for Spring and
you will be conv
s the sort you wan
are as Low as
ling can be Sold
EY - COPEI
UNION, S. C.
Mrs. J. L. Calvert and children,
of Mt. Tabor, visited at Mr. B. F.
Foster's this week.
Mr. W. S. Glenn, the real estate
man of Spartanburg, was in Union
Thursday of last week.
Mr. II. G. Bailey has closed out
his market business for the season,
and will not reopen till fall.
Mr. Clough Steele, who has bSbn J
visiting in the city, left Monday fu>r j
Columbia and other Southern points. |
Mrs. Louis Crawford returned to
Chester this week after several days
visit to relatives and friends in
Union.
Mr. Allen I). Price, of this place j
went to Columbia Tuesday to stand
the examinations for admission to
the bar.
T > f 1/ TT... 1!-. f .i 1 P
i iui. i\t. i\. nuruin, c?i me \> 01ford
Fitting School Faculty, was in
the city Friday and Saturday of
last week.
Misses Armstrong and Blair, who
have been visiting at Mr. Henry
Holmes', left for their rcspec ive
homes Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. D'Oize left Friday
for Columbia, where they will assist ,
in a play to be given during the j
Confederate reunion.
Mr. F. M. Smith, of Laurens, 1
arrived in the city Thursday, and J
began his duties as manager of the j
Union Mills company store.
Hon. A. L. Gaston, of the Chester
bar and also a member of the
State Legislature, was in the city
for a few hours Friday.
The nine-months old son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. Tr Byors, died in South
Union Thursday afternoon and the 1
body was taken to I'acolet for burial.
Mr. G. C. Glymph, assistant superintendent
of the Virginia Life '
Insurance Co., spent the past week
in Jonesville where he established a |
branch office.
Miss Anna Clement, who 1ms
been visiting her sisters, Mrs. R.
E. Bruce and Mrs. R. E. White,
returned Tuesday to her home in
Spartanburg.
The Security Trust Co., of Spartanburg,
has bought the S25,(X)0
bond issue. Scasongood <fc Mayer,
of Cincinnati, was also a bidder.
The bonds sold at par and bear
per cent, interest. ^ j
. stira .? oik j. ^
Buying I
g_ Suit! I
e ls a El
arid ||
come Ip
tvlish if
Sum= j|
inced 1|
t gPjjJa
ReaBBy Good B
for. H
AWB co. i
IH I \3 SU' BQBRXB
Mr. Kliphas Bcardcn left Union
CI _ A . 1 < .... . ..
naiumay ior a visit to relatives and
friends in the Glenn Springs neighborhood.
Ho expects to stay a
week.
Capt. E. \Y\ Foster and Lieutenants
J. Frost Walker and Thos. 1.
Swygert went to Columbia Tuesday
to attend the meeting of State militia
ofliccrs.
Mr. 0. Barber and wife, of Fort
Mill, after a few days visit at the
home of Mrs. Barbers' parents, Mr.
and Mrs. It. W. Hamilton, left
Monday morning for their home.
Rev. J. B. Wilson, of Gaffncy,
preached a sermon during the Conference
that was greatly enjoyed by
the audience. His text was Col.
1:21, "Christ in you, the hope of
glory."
Mr. T. I). Neland, formerly with
the Bailey Beef Market, has gone to
work with the Mutual Dry Goods
Coinnnnv. of UiifY-do ATv V/Un ? ?/ !
is an up-to-date market man, and
will have charge of the market for
the Mutual.
The total receipts from the Damon
and Pythias entertainment
were $2~>7.00. , After all expenses
were paid there was a neat fund of
$112.00 half of which was forwarded
immediately to the San Francisco
sufferers.
Mr. Pen Kennedy, of upper
Union county, was carried to the
hospital in Columbia for an operation.
The operation was successful,
but ten days after, Mr. Kennedy
took a relapse and is reported to be
a very sick man. Several of his
brothers have been in attendance at
his bedside in the hospital.
Will Moorhead, wanted in Joncsville
for breaking in a restaurant,
was captured by Chief of Police, K.
L. Broom. Will lied to Virginia
after he made the raid on the restaurant,
but came back to Jones
ville and fell into the hands of the
oflicer. lie paid out and left for
parts unknown.
"Some of the greatest problems
of the preacher are met in dealing
with the child mind in a mature
body. To meet a spirit of childishness
in a mind dominated by full
grown passions and appetites may
well fill the preacher's heart with
discouragement." Rev. W. A.
Massebau in District Conference
sormon.
L >
" 1 ~T~~
Invitation to Cin.ircli Choirs of Union, j j
The members of the various j r
church choirs arc invited and earn-! I
cstly requested to unite in a chorus j *
choir at the First Baptist church . L
j during Dr. 10. O. Taylor's course of |
lectures. The Gospel Hymns is tho j Jf
hook that will he used, and it is |
hoped that this invitation will he a
accepted hy the members of the va- M
rious choirs. All the pastors unite |
; in making the request. Dr. Taylor
j will lecture May 17-20, S: 150 o'clock jt
land on Sunday at I p. nr. *
A Biy Hail Storm. *
One of Fnion county's young men I
spent Sunday in Greenville, ?S. C.
He came hack reporting a hail, |
storm in that city on Sunday. Says; %
I he measured some of the hail stones : 1
and found (1km- iyinociii-.nl ...... .....1 E
three quarters of an inch in diamc-j I
iter. The ones he measured, lie says, I I
j were by no means the largest speci- Rj
I mens. It is said that love is blind, | I
perhaps it is also a magnifying glass. ' I
i However, the young man in ques- U
j tion is considered one of our best I I
boys, and as being above "story Jj
j telling." !
Work Begun on New Mill at Jonesville, ~
1 it
Mr. Munro W hitloek.a prominent
' citizen iif Jonesville, called upon us b
| Monday. lie informs us tbatgrad- j f|
: ing for the foundation of the new i l>
j mill at Jonesville is under way, and Vj
| that the making of brick will begin 1]
soon. This new mill is to be annex- ; K
od to the old mill. The old mill! 1
i had machinery put in capable of '
I running double the size. Mr. Whit-j '
lock says the mill is in fine shape i
1 financially and in every way. He j ;
says they have a wide-awake presi-!
dent, who is an all-round hustler. ;
We congratulate Jonesville upon her i f
j enterprising spirit. She is a grow-1 I
ing town with a bright future. j v
Death of Mrs. Martha A. Gregory. , t
' , . . . [
I 'I bis good woman died in the Bo- j JI
gansville neighborhood Wednesday, ' '
j May 2nd, and was buried next day | <
at Putman Baptist church. She; ;
was the widow of the late B. A. :
Gregory and the daughter of Church- ;
well and Sarah Gibbes. She was in \ 1
her Tilth year and had been for 501 I;
years a member of the Putman i
! church. She was a faithful church I
j and Sunday school worker, and has h
left a name for good works that will ; f
long endure. She was a mother in [i
Israel and a daughter of the Kinul
! of kings. May her good influence I
loiTg live to work in the good cause! 5
of Jesus Christ. j
From Scotland. : -i
j ?
Mr. Thomas Whitelaw arrived in ?
Union last Friday. lie conies from j ,
Scotland and was directed to our \ j
.State by Commissioner Watson.)
Mr. Whitelaw is a young man seek-j
1 ing his fortune in our great America.
lie has begun work in the
Excelsior Knitting Mill, and expresses
himself well pleased with
; his new home. The class of immigrants
to which this young man belongs
will help any community.
He is strong physically, industrious
1 and intelligent. It is to be hoped I ;
that he will he so well pleased with j j
! our county that he will be led to |
induce others to follow him to
Union. 1 *
What the Fight Really is. :
The approaching light against the ,
State dispensary is not one to project
a warfare against individuals or j to
found a new political ring as *
as some are so industriously and so i .
vigorously trying to make believe, j
Hut it is a fight of principle against
an institution which has been productive
of more debauchery and corruption
than has arisen from any! .
1 other source since the days of cor- j
i motive carpetbag rule. The cry of i
' "reform it" has come down to us j *
J from year to year since its establish-. 1
i ment, and almost year after year i ?
lias the effort been made to reform I ^
it, but each effort has met with dis- j
mal failure and each year has wit-1 I
nessed a growth of its corruptive *
power and influence until the peo-1 1
pie of the State have come to real- ize
that it lias reached the point
when it must he destroyed or it will
destroy the State. If the dispensary
is to he maintained they prefer
that it shall be done by the county
dispensary system, when those in
authority will ho brought nearer i the
people.
The State dispensary method
masses too large a volume of a very
corruptive business and puts it in
the hands of inexperienced business
men who have scarcely ever before > .
I conducted business aggregating even
a few thousands of dollars to conn
1 \ii ai r* nea it 4/\ i \ >11
j null/ it UUOlliLDO tllllUUII l/I I \AJ Illli!
lions.
j No, sir, it is the people who want
to be rid of the State dispensary and . .
it is the politicians who want to retain
it, for the reason that it forms
the nucleus for- the only political
ring we hay?.?Kershaw Era. i ;
\ 1 \
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lj Refrigerators, Ice Boxes. Whi
3 Best on the market. Con
a Glass and Opal lined. Pric
From $5.00 to $40.00. wan
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good as new at ?
sonable price.
The Peoples S
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