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THE UNION TIMES ^ PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY THE UNION TIMES COMPANY J BACHELOR STREET, OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE. ^ BELL PHONE NO. i. L. M. RICE, - - - Editor. Registered at tile Postoltice in Union. S. C., as second-class mail matter. ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One year ,.?.$i.oc Six months .5c ADVERTISEMENTS: One square, first insertion ?i.oc r ~ - ]'.v< rv stib-equenft insertion ?? Contracts tor three months ordongei will be m.\'!e at reduced rates* Locals inserted at S 1-3 eeifts a line V Rejected manuscripts will n<>t be re H^#*hfi^turnvl. Obituaries and tributes ol "rV?spe^T\W'" be r .T,.<i f,>r at ( ]lri]j UNlOX. S. G. MARCH S, 1907. L Pay up your subscription. You will feel better and our pocket book will be heavier. * * * The Russian Douma opened or March 5. Red llags and turbulent crowds were much in evidence. * * * A good many new names have conu 011 our mailing list recently. We appreciate the names and the dollars. * * * Plans are under way tor the erection near Aiken. S. C.. a large santariun for the treatment of pulmonary diseases. * # Now that Columbia ha- an alntn.. ^ dant supply of go.id water why -honk itr.Tf,^t .uonmiOl l' 1 open UP UCl arc bei; k trapped and eaten In- th starving people. Lawlessness in on th, increase in the famine districts. r?o- * * * Get ready for a straijjlitout fi^ht 011 the whiskey (ptcstion in Union county. A county dispensary is just a dirty old ruin shop under a new name. $ * * Tin; interdenominational State Sun% day.-schoo! convention meets in - send delegates. * * * A lire resultimj i" $150,000 dama-rc1 occurred, at Mooselle, 011 the Hampton and Hranchville railroad. Mie laret lutnhcr mills owned by the Snlkehatch- 1 ie I.unihcr 0>., located there, were destroyed. Xo insurance. * * * Several students of the State university have been suspended on count of a hizinp episode which occurred there a few dav> ait1'. Some were t. suspended tor two weeks, and others ' for the remainder oi the session. ' # * >:? 11 On March 4th. Dave Gtinter shot ' and killed Jake Taylor at Wareville, v' near Greenwood. Both were young v\ men about grown. Had whiskey was at the bottom of the row. Guntcr ilodged in jail at Greenwood. .' * * * ' * i Mr. J. T. W'ilkins, an aged paralytic ^' /of Cowpens. was burned to death W ed- ' / ncsday in a tire which destroyed the 1 > W'ilkins home. Mr. I'.all W'ilkins, / president of the Mary Louise mills, is ' 1 a son of the deceased. His tragic death * ' / is greatly regretted. ,a ' / NO SHIP SUBSIDY TOR THE PRESENT Z / l'av ff By maintaining a successtul filibus- chr ter, the Democrats in the senate pre- ma vented a gigantic steal from ? L 1 slln ... v11v j^un- i it--..' Ccc lie, to ennure to the benefit ot a privi- ,(<r lige4 .clas* ship owners, in the mat- | cno iV*** 'ter of what is termed a "ship subsidy." is ; The Republican party is a party for the >;,rc classes against the masses, and some '.)l1 ticu of their legislative maneuvers are pal- ,(|| pably frauds. The ship subsidy scheme jn tl is one of the most flagrant class pref schemes that has been proposed for;as x years. In order to control the votes -t'ir , . r, ?' of "close" States, the Republican party ? is willing to commit legalized robbery sign* of the people of the United States, and lice give the booty to a few favored '1(' n viduals. Iariff legislation as enacted pure.1 by Republicans is tor tlte purpose of u.,r(i \enriching the few at the expense of tion 1 the many, and the Republicans do not, ate I attempt to hide the fact. Vet there and \ arc many high-toned, honorable and yer h Christian men in the Republican As a ) party who endorse these base intri- |y fajj gies concocted bv the leaders of the Spl>ecj "part v. flow good men. intelligent and . . . i , thoug sincere, can so widely flitter upon questions involving principle, i- alike a !s a 1 psycological an<l moral riddle. regard 1 . , CHARLESTON AS IMMIGRANT PORT. Congress has passed a bill appropriating $70,000 for the establishment of an immigration station at Charleston, which assures new-comers from distant _ shores to those of South Carolina a suitable place of disembarkation. The matter of immigration has taken definite shape in South Carolina, and the first triji of Commissioner Watson was fruitful of results which have warrantj ed the immigration bureau in sending him back to Germany and Holland. Nor will he go alone this time, but ornier Governor llevward and Mr.' j James Cosgrove, a legislator, will accompany him. These three gentlemen ' expect to visit several foreign couti'l tries, but "their trip abroad will be spe-1 'jeilically for the purpose of obtaining j j from the IJovds Steamship company 'a promise to operate :it regular in-1 . tervals, and frcmicnt, a line of inuiii) 1 .. gration steamers to the port of Charleston. There is 110 reason why Charleston should not become the immigration . port for the entire South, and we trust I . the good old Carolina c'?y will reap rich harvests from the movement. CHANGES IN THE SENATE. The public mind has been turned II to the United States senate during the I nasi winter liv reason of llie fne? llirit ! many worthy senators with records for i .long-continued service, ability and cont servatism, have been defeated by can| didates of inferior intellectuality, with little or no experience in national statecraft, who are political freaks whose success has come from a play upon the prejudice of the rabble. ! Some of the more conspicuous changes , are: Patterson, Democrat, of Colorai do. being succeeded by Guggenheim. Republican; Carmack. of Tennessee, succeeded by Taylor, Democrat: Berry. \rkansas, succeeded by Davis, both . Democrats; while the probabilities are I that Money, of Mississippi, will be sue ceeded by Vardaman. Senator (iiigjgenheim franklv admits that he bore uard f(,r Ilis hherality ^0^^''^p?' publican part\ II.. t, ~ '?r ?! vanity alone hruu-du l ' '' a ',,s " life. |f? "'J' "r,'"a I OVon defends Ins ?lction it. ^ V.V.'n;?:1!U! ( nijd Jho^. ."..V most fToimhed and able senators. His career in the tipper house of congress has been highly it editable to himself ami has reflected i ' fedit upon his State. "Fiddl.V Bob" t ay.or. his successor, owes his election a It- a. ! ty to tell a joke and amuse e ?utdience. Though he has three ? ' - been governor of Tennessee f 11 o :mi. ir -1. ... , - .1 win n? >t nave much in n l;i? 11 v in tin- senate, and the Deni"- a ratio party and the South have "lost a i:t" in the trade of Cannack for lay- *d lUrrv has graced the senate and nt as been conspicu '.t> in his public life, j a* lis keen percepti -n, his versatility is personality have conspired to make I la 5in respected even by his opponents, a Itile his ability to present an argument nil it!) logic and power won the esteem in his fellow-senators. He was one of j ac c strongest of the Democrats, ami e man Davis who is to succeed him I wl very little above a hog. While he th; governor he was excluded from rei s church of which he was a member int cause of hi > drunkenness, and he was lie ceral times engaged in drunken tin nils while chief magistrate of his sh< ite. He is coarse, brutal and itnmor- tlu but he is witty and is a fair speaker, nn: laving "the gift of gab.' Mr. Mon- tha retires from the senate of his own I h< c will, and the outlook now is in the or of Governor Vardaman being sua >sen to succeed him. Money has not mo de a brilliant senator, but he is far whi erior to hi> kinsman who will sue- j tell: d him. Vardaman is a blatant dem- ___ gue, whose mind is not broad ! >ugb to grasp large questions. He1 i narrow*, conn-lorn ? mail WHO (les notoriety. In these changes the nocratic party, and the South parlarly, stitTer immeasurably. With the great men that are to he found he South, it i> a pity the people will er to be represented by such men verc chosen in several states last t the other hand. Senator Spooner. ! Wisconsin, a Republican, has re ;d his seat, because of the -acri- I ... |.iivaic business necessary if emaitis in tlie public service. Mr. tier is one of the strongest, ablest. >t, most honest and straightfortnen upon the stage of public actoday. As a debater in the sente ranks with Calhoun and Clay Vebster. As a constitutional law-, e is without a peer in the senate, political opponent, he is absoluteAs a speaker he is chaste in t and logical in reason. Al1; a Republican, his .resignation n>. to upright public service as s the senate. lik> HIS REPUTATION RUINED. Senator Bailey, of Texas, returned I to the senate last Sunday,?the day before adjournment,?for the first time that session, lie was re-elected to the | senate atfer an investigation of his conduct in dealing with the Standard Oil, company, and the Texas legislature j vindicated him of the charges made j against him. But that vote of the legislature will not remove from his name the stain which it was sought to place upon it. Whatever may be the truth of the case, however innocent Mr. Bai-1 ley may be of the charges, his ene- j mies have damned his reputation 11 ' the eyes of many thousands of people. | He was successful in his refutation of the charges, he will serve another six years in the senate, but his utterances will not be received with that confidence on part of the public which has 1 ! heretofore marked his public words. 1 i Senator Bailey may have been inj uncint of the charges, but he was "too thick" with the folk of the trust. He 11 i< 1 not avoid the appearance of evil. lie dallied with temptation, and even j | ii he did not succumb, lie needlessly (laid himself open to suspicion. Pop. our part, we believe in the senator's I integrity; but we deplore his lack { foresight and discretion. ] I As for his enemies: They have bein successful in injuring the reputation of their senator, and with ghoulish glee the} will soon attack someone else, to I his hurt. The case is analigous to ji petty scandal in a small community,-! Someone sees the Sunday-school ^superintendent emerge from a dark line in the dead hours of the night, aid 'next day tells of the occurrence, ailing in a whisper his suspicions, '^o rumor travels, and grows. The po^r I supernueiuieni mi.'Uty nears 01 it a? [denies his yrnilt. and offers a reasol 1 able and true reason i<>r his prcsetulj i in the alley. His true friends belicvl him and accept his explanation, thou(?ll they think he acted unwisely in travel-1 in;; a short cut when it would take hi ml into evil surroundings. His opponents!^ mile when the superintendent ri adif^ the lesson next Sunday, ami the poor, ,innocent niaji is Uri-v ??T by thcj nj |U> cvlj neurj,!,,>rs I , f),,e cannot |K. ,oo caremJ of his I charges against another. The Coy Problem. The neatest problem in the world today 1> the boy problem. The boy reeeives worse treatment than a.iv hum.in bemi^ or any ^nu.ual oil .earth. business ,,r talking to him in a friendly" ^ confidential manner, or make any effort, m to arouse a boy > friendship, inspire.*! at: lis ambition or help him in any way Ipa 0 see the bit; tilings ?jf life and make ' th 1 man of himself. On the other hand.! \ety loaier in town or eountry, everv e er-<!o-well knows every boy by ame, seeking his eompanioiiship and iend-Iiip and has constant access and . ssociation with hint during the formlive neriod of m.- i:?- ^ i nai any boy ^ lotild go through liicourse of treat- ^ ^ lent ami tlnallv make a man of char- .. . llo tef is a source ot constant wonder.,,. , . Mr nvironment <!oe> deternnnc, to a. .p rge extent, a boy's future, and. it _ boy's atYections and ambition are iltivated and unaided from deterent 1 .p tluences he can't but grow in char- , ter." , W e do not copv all the article from . . and itch the above is taken tor tbe reason j j at we do not think that the writer Lpj erred to the proper means for solv- ^ ( the bov problem. We do not beve that any society or club or Chrisn organization can do this. It ^ >uld be done in the home and by parents. The great trouble with 'ron >.st of our boys arises from the fdct hut t they have no home government, had vy not only do as they please, but tiie . y make their parents submit to their j . et wills. Any one can tell in a* ment what are the home influences1 cli surround a boy. His manner ' lr1c ' 4 the whole story. Let parents j Itann Winter is Death's Harvi And Pneumonia is tl GOWAN'SPNEUMi For years recognized as an AIWOI. pneumonia, coughs, colds ami crouj a? the Great National Remedy. monials. ,\ll druggists, three sire; and one dollar a bottle. You owe i you owe it to yourself to alwuys house. Buy today and apply oxter aluiont miraculous. RICE DRUC I SPECIALS I * ggj SSJ II These specials will be in sight on our j?| ||g counters and we invite you to get your j?5 |H share AT ONCE. ||j 1|| Black "money worth" silk full 36 inches, every yard guaranteed. There ||j is no mistaking this silk for an inferior quality for it has the rustle p| Hj and wearing quality of a much higher priced silk. We sell it for pjj , p| $1.00 per yd. |jl j|| Elbow length mercerized silk gloves, black and gray, $1.00 ||s Black and white silk gloves, 16 button length, $1.50. g|| ??3 Black and white kid gloves, 16 and 20 button length, $3.50 ^ H Gents gloves, 2 button length in brown, slate, white and black, $1.50 jj|| ||| Pure linen lawn, 36 inches, 25c the yard while they last. Don't miss ||| them. |H . m. Mercerized Persian Mull, beautiful quality 44 inches. This is a lead= ggt isbk er for 30c. ||s |j|| French and Persian lawn, specially good things, 48 inches 121=2 to | jjg-f 50c per yard. Eg 600 yards of white lawn, 40 inches wide worth 12 l=2c. We are go* H jP ing to sell every yard for 10c. H! III New Lot of White Madras figured and strinps iSr ?flr vP3 0 ? wra ?|r?U i!/V^ \S V} UIIU HIV J U? H A special lot of check dimity, 40 inches wide, going at 15c. Is |g Many other good things in check dimity 10c, 12 l=2c, 15c, 20c and 25c. ||| Shirt Waist Linene, best values ever shown in Union, 36 inches, 10c, gsgj If 15c, and 20c the yd. You must take a look at our linen sheeting 88 ^ iff inches. 75c per yd. 90 inches $1.00 per yd. |l| H Come in and look through. No trouble to show || , 1 MUTUAL DRY fiOODS CO. I per* yrcec SCT c b??y problem is solved.?Hxeh.m.r,. -Si ?s l^cTBuiwingsT | ^ 31 Hai!e'S Stl0e Store. 1 * . . # # \bbeville is to have two nice build- , ^ J5 :s, a town hall and a court house. Ye learn that the city hall will be on 1? ^ 7 ft I..1 now occupied by llic Ma?c,nio # | g-4 | | V ttJ L ' ? | \l L I | 1 5" * Ihbi uo ri\ii?b 11 it Jo /<: ^ //? tn KJ Mif y ^Ky v ( ? S3 ijft P ' |H \s |7 JBtjI w. ) that ?in ivlii.n. .u- i .... in'- Hani now stands -i-t ^ (? the committee of gentlemen who < 3 /yL> i / E ^ tlie work in charge couldn't keep1 ?1 r i t let theni ^huild their^ fine struct- J I ?P|^, ||| I| ^ ^ !{ est Time J; That Haile's Big Shoe Store j| tie Staple Crop |* j? the PlflfP tn Rm' *? rw^ia * o? ? v uuy JllUtS UNIAUJKt j ? ? J ^ .I-TK PPKCMFIC for j| * 'Satisfaction or your Money Back.*' i 2. I*, will soon Ik-known r ? Thousands of testi- j!: ? * * *, l?-r> ami fifty cents * ? I ^ t to your loved ones, - I . ^ * have a bottle in the I| j J /"T I L fnaile Shoe C0.4 I The Leading Shoe House. ' ^ ? 49 East Main Street Union, South Carolina |j|