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I" | Don't P HjSll FORM rjjjrRe copthiomt ttxvi THE F.'XHHEiMER FTSf l|| M pr.l r p ra par Jf? M'a. . ftj^BLSacJ x E||j tL * t. -J I ''I IB BAIL LOCAL LACONICS. Happenings of Interest About Town. Mis-; Minnie Gist is visiting her sister in Carlisle. Mr. J. F. Powell is visiting in Union this week. Miss Bessie Jxnvry is visiting tit Mrs. Jno. Fant's. Miss Beulah Edge, of Jonesville, was in tlie city Monday. Miss Josie Fcwell returned Friday to her home in Rock Hill. M iss Mamie Hughes is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. K. Young. Mr. Claude Wilhurn was in the city this week visiting relatives. \ Mr. B. W. Sexton, of Pelzer, visited friends in Union Sunday. Miss Susie Parker returned to her home in Gaffney Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Swygert are visiting their son, Mr. 0. A. Swy gert. Miss Julia Harvey returned Saturday to her home at Pincapolis, S. C. M iss Margaret Young lias returned home after closing her , school. Miss Eunice Thomson left Monday for her home in Pacolet for the summer. P^l Miss Lillic Gordon, ofSantue, at^'-'tended the Seminary commencement this week. Mrs. Walter Sanders and children, of Camden, arc visiting relatives in the city. Mr. Geo. C. Perrin, Jr., cashier of f Jonesvillc Bank, visited his pa' /b on Sunday. /. Guy Wilburn is attending t! /Furman and G. F. C. commencement this week. Mrs. Aubrey Rice, who has been spending the winter in Barnwell retnrnni.l t/i TTnimi SiUiimIhu Mr. Joel E. Boiriar, of Spartanburg, has accepted the position as stenographer at Monarch mills. He arrived Friday morning from CMLuinbia where he has been in the office of Seibol's Insurance Agency. ut Off?Bu | Tha 1% Sununt M We have ev !?Br gj is New ? J Clothing , Bring Your three 'el co.. ne? vow saigas We will plej Ft* EY - COPEL UNION, S. C. m^^^akSSkS^SSs^M Prof. Walter Smith, who will assist in the summer school for teachers, arrived in the city Monday. Mr Iloland Ringer, of Pomaria, spent a few days in the city this week visiting friends and relatives. Messrs. Thompson, Goforth and Watts, of the Bailey- Copeland Co. ( of Columbia, spent Sunday in Union. Messrs. R. A. Jones and L. B. DaShicld attended the commencement exercises of Converse college Sunday. A telephone line is being built from Pinckney to Mt. Tabor, and there it will connect with the line to Union. i Mr. O. A. Swygert has moved in- 1 to the Scott home on Mountain 1 street. Mr. Swygert occupies the i upstaire only. i Mr. Shepard Nicholson left Wed- ( nesday for Durant, Miss, where he , is visiting Mr. S. S. Beall for the ^ month of June. ( Miss Frances Whitmire, the ef- 1 I ficient principal of West End graded 1 schools, left Union Monday for her \ home in Greenville. Miss Annie Ilodger left for Columbia Friday morning to attend the closing exercises of the Columbia college for women. Mr. Sumter Sumner sustained a painful accident Friday afternoon. He fell from the fire wagon and fractured the bone of his arm at the ellxnv. Mr. Preston Harley, Jr., of Columbia, spent Saturday and Sunday in the city with his wife and daughter. Mr. Harley expects to make Union his home. I)r. Murray Hair is at his home in Barnwell resting up while his 1 wrist is healing. It is remembered | that Dr. Hair fell from the fire ( wagon two wcekB ago. ] Mr. L. 11. Willard left Tuesday * for Spring City, Tenn.. where he goes to take a position with the new 1 establishment under Mr. T. C. . Duncan's management. Dr. S. G. Sarratt has moved into 1 the Jeter honse in the northern part i of the city. He has just returned I from New York, where he has taken t a special course in the hospitals, i The doctor is looking well, and re- 1 ports a pleasant and profitable visit, i ly Now 1 it Nice i iv Suit I erythingthat ?g ind Good in || * * * * jyjjg i ? * *r self to us and ^ ase you .'. || .AND ca I Mr. A. T. Willis, for a long time an efficient clerk in the Rice Drug Co., left Monday morning for Newnan, Georgia, where he has accepted a position in the Cole Machine Works. Mr. T. J. Alverson, of Sedalia, presented the Editor with a basket of fine peaches Monday. How is that for an early crop? And they were good peaches, too. Mr. Al vcrson is one oi Union county's most progressive farmers. lie usually gets the first bale of cotton to market. Editor DeCamp Laments. If we could dream of making any impression 011 Colonel Robert Hemphill, of the Abbeville Medium, for whom, by the way, we have nothing but the kindest feeling and most profound regard, we would attempt to discuss the dispensary question with him. We would like to tell him of the change of conditions in this county since the voting nit ef the dispensary; how beneficial It has been to white men we can name, also colored men; how the ibusive drinking of whiskey has ^een minimized, and how the town md county continue to prosper, lotwithstanding the fact that by diolishing the dispensary we have jo do without a few thousand dolars revenue for school purposes and street improvements. Truly,, if .here has been any curtailmcfit in die work of the schools or on the public highway or 011 the streets of jiaffney it is not perceptible. In n nllintol In w*wv/att& 111 ^univiv/ll I >KJ enow, says there has been no curtailment along this line. It is a fact that lalior is harder to get; that there are fewer loafing negroes m our streets, but we do not know that the voting out of the dispensary has had anything to do with this. We know that there art; fewer cases aefore the mayor and less petty jrimes in the county. But Brother Hemphill is sincere in his advocacy )f the dispensary. He believes it the best solution of the whiskey problem and being sincere and fixed n his attitude he is neither willing /O try something better nor to ac?pt the testimony of those who lave. His is a hopeless case, and nore's the pity, for he could be a jower toward ridding the people of -his incubus if he could only make lp his mind that there is something setter than the dispensary.?GafTley Ledger. Reply to Spring Flowers in Union j Times. The gentle spring moves apace, Decks mother Earth with grace ; Flowers bud and sweetly bloom From winter's cold, chilly tomb. Spring crowns all the earth with cheer; Sublime senson of the year: Lambs begin to sport and play, Birds sing joyous all the day. Farmers with the early morn, Plant their cotton seed and corn ; Thus in lifo they work their way, Thank (?od for the rainy day. The early and the latter rains, Today all the earth sustains; Without it all would be lost. And few would stop to count the cost. In all things men should give thanks, This beats investments in banks; Clod rules above and lielow, Thanks to Him all should bestow. He makes Summer, "Winter, all. Spring time, and the gloomy fall. Let all bow to His command, Strive to gain the promised land. W. M. FOSTER. i I An Inquiry as to Union Building and Loan Association. Mr. Editor: In your issue of May 18th, there is an article in regard to the Union Building and Loan Association. After stating, in substance, that in due time the condition of that institution would be made known, and a meeting of stockholders called, it says: '' When the stockholders meet it is suggested that they continue each series and let it work itself out. In the course of about two years the loss will be recoveree from and without much loss to anyone." Now I desire to know bow the Association is to "work itself out" and recover from the loss; that is, what is the "modus operandi," or particular method in the mind of the writer of that article, for such recovery. The stockholders would like to know this. I am somewhat puzzled, too, as to how the writer of that article could suggest ' 'about two years" for such recovery, because the default had, at that time, (May 18th,) been known by the public only al>out ten days, and very little is known by the public even at this date. Yours vory truly, A Stockholder. A Prima Facie Case. c Whether or not the Governor has the power to remove a memlier of the State Board of Control is for the Judges to say, but the way to test it is to make a case. In emergencies, Governors act. It is admitted that a member of ! the State Board of Control threatened the life of a member of the Dispensary investigating committee 1 because the latter offended him in the course of his investigations. The member of the State Board of Control may have been, for all we know, unjustly treated, but this is no reason why the Legislature's in vestigating committee must conduct its work under the guns of a dispensary official. The removal of f lut naninl\it?* 4 k a dnn h< 1 <\f 4 .1 vuv iiiviiiiA/i ui till; ijuuiu U1 V/WIltlUl would not prevent him from protecting his reputation as a private citizen. Rather would it tend to disembarrass him, and it is not uncommon for high-minded men to resign from public oflices in order that they may be free to act solely in their personal capacity. Prima facie the Governor has legal authority to remove a member of the State Board of Control. If he should transcend his legal authority, the member removed would find the Courts open and the Judges ready to correct the error. The writ of mandamus is available. Meantime, the situation is that tho Legislature's investigating committee is openly and violently defied by an officer of the concern which is the subject of investigation. This cannot be tolerated, this cannot be overlooked unless the State of South Carolina sympathizes with the officer and would array itself against the legislature's committee. The ulfnofinn iu nvf * #? ir*n ? ' OlVlKt1 1V/11 AO VAVIUUIUIIIUI J f IV IS UIH" to which the slow-moving processes for the expounding of the law do not necessarily apply. The question is: Shall the activities of the investigating committee he paralyzed? Shall the committee be silenced??News and Courier. Mrs. R. E. Bell Dead. Clinton, S. 0. June (?.?Special.?At three o'clock today news reached this city that Mrs. It. E. hell died at one o'clock, after being confined to her room for the greater part of six years of paralysis. Mrs. Bell lived to a very old age, 75 years. She was the widow of Mr. Wm. Bell, of Clinton, who died about ten years ago, and sinter of tho late A. Y. W. G lymph, father of W. N. Glymph of Union. She leaves one sister, Mrs. Benjamin Rawls, of Columbia. Mrs. Bell was a woman of great kindness of heart. She owned considerable property in Clinton. L JA ' MiiiMinn^iini mi niHEf tin tffli I FURNITURE H Stoves and Rang y ingf elsewhere, fj just received . rt and every ? M out wit Q guaran jw. H. Bl M3B1E1 Clilliif laL: IISIlIBil I Spendthrift 1 That's the nai 1 Spend most of thi 1 repair shop, costii |j end than a goods I able carriage or p cost. We have no sn; j|j -but good honest v p that are fair to b jp ways glad to sho> f] plain their good f 1 The Peoples p D. FANT GILLIAM, 1 The Well Groo | ====== sj[ Demands a Perfei y but in order to ! || has often found i ^ wear a shoe thai W large and this del ^ sense of daintine< M IOOl. I THE DREW-SI \l By reason of tli M enables a woma I* least a size sm* V has been accust o adds much to bot mm MppvMi cuivv* v w Antiseptic Corn and Bunion Shields In ^ Pain Arising irom a Corn U ^ WE ARE EXPERT S it V I Union SI ?? *|! PHONE 41. O ^fCC^ec-c-C'C'CC'Cc rSTORE^ ;es before buy- 9 We have | a new line g one goes | :h a pj tee. 0 urris.B VehiGles I me for them. j| eir days in the ii rig more in the '4j stylish, depend= |j buggy would | apsor bargains s| eh icles at prices !|| oth of us. Al= $ iv them and ex- ij joints. ||j Supply Co., I Treas. and Mgr. al med Woman 1 x zt Fitting Shoe, ^ secure comfort X it necessary to Sg t is really too <j? i. j. ? -ff Lracis irum me ;s in a shapely ELBY SHOE 1 ie studied last ^ in to wear at x dler than she w tit omed to, and tit h comfort and ^ v it tit tit unediately rid the Feet of all V! or Bunion for Sale. ' jj J SJ it it i >nuc ri 11 ekx | X tioc Co. 1 MAIN STREET. X 4 n. > ' * +