The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, March 08, 1907, Page 7, Image 7
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| WE WANT VOIR SHOE TRADE 11
^ I
^ m + m ^
For Sale
f| Honest Leather Shoes %
^ The Latest Styles-One Price to All. %
[||| Do You Want More? ^
. ? We Think Not.
m :<?
^ ? e.
m X
.Wn! \f
The Old Reliable ^
* ?!
i Piione 41. Main Street. ^
b^GALJ-ACONlCS. MRS. IADSIIAWS DEATH.
Happenings of Interest-* ~~~
The Fn/1 ramo Affnr Qn lllnnrr -
I , ? niiV/1 Oil lllllfdd I
About Town. Several Weeks.
Mr. W. H. Jeter, of Carlisle, was in
Union Monday. Mrs. Elizabeth Poulton Ladsha*
Mr. W. N. Bobo, of-Carlisle, was in aged eighty-four, died at her home
Union Monday. this. cit>' February 29th, at 5:30, aft
, ^ _ . . . ~ .. , .. , ta" illness of a few weeks. The Inner
Mr. j. D. Smith, of Carlisle, attend- (sm.jces w||| b<_ |ic|<| ^ ^ g (
?1 the sales in Union Monday. |t.,Uny at 13 o'clock. She will he inte
f Mr. Robert Little, of Jonesville, was | red by the side of the body of her hit
in Union on business Saturday. 1 band and eldest son in the Mcthodi
w, ,, t- /- 'church yard at that place.
Mr. B. F. Gregory, of Jonesville, .
w t T?iirtr? ittr -Mrs. Ladshaw was born in Londo
made a business trip to Union saturEngland,
December 31, 1823, and can
a* America with her parents, Augu
(Miss Essie Sanders is visiting her ,g( ,^2 They lived at Lockport, 1
sister, Mrs. Walter Sims, in Orange- y., for some years, the father dyii
burg. soon after their arrival. At an car
Mr. W. A. Beaty, a prosperous plant- aKe she was placed at Mrs. Willard
er of Union county, was in the city seminary at I roy, N. Y., with In
Monday. eldest sister, the late Mrs. Mary Dav
kins, of Union, S. C., where she w:
Mr. W. M. McGowan, of Carlisle, graduated,
was in Union Monday, and paid The Shc is survived by Mrs Wm Ch()ic
Times a pleasant visit. George E. Ladshaw, Thomas D. La.
Mrs. Amelia Wicker, after an ex- shaw, D. 1. Ladshaw and Charles !
tended visit to relatives and friends Ladshaw, a]j nf tbjs cjty gbc js ajf
in Newberry county, returned to her survived by two sisters, Mrs. J. V
home in Union. McLnre and Miss Charlotte Poultoi
of Union, S. C.
Rev. D. D. Richardson will preach \jrs. Ladshaw was well known in th
a nee a month at Carlisle. He is al- city and a large number of friends an
eady pastor of the Second Baptist relatives mourn her loss. She was
church and of Hebron. woman of high Christian character ar
1 \i i c mo ~r \i??, was respected by all who knew her.Mrs.
Lawrence S. Wood, of Matoa- c a . tT . .
...... A , . A. Spartanburg Herald.
ka, West Virginia, is expected in the
city Friday night to visit her sister,
Miss Rebecca Lockwood, a* Mrs. L. Fire at Graded School.
M. Rice's.
Mrs. L. S. Wood and Miss Lockwood On Monday the Are alarm'was give
will leave Tuesday for Cartersville to and the firemen called out. The alari
\ attend the marriage of Miss Regina A. became general when it was discove
Lockwood to Dr. E. D. Tupper, of e(l that the Central school huildin
Summerville. ' was on fire- Fortunately, the schoi
had not assembled, and the tire ws
Married. Mr. Robert Hill to Miss extinguished before the tire compar
Kate Lackey, at the home of the tfnt on
1 bride's mother, on the night of Feb- The fire originated from a stove ner
ruary 28th, at Lockhart, S. C., Rev. tj,e partition wall between the thii
J. G. Farr officiating. and fourth grade rooms.
Mrs. Fred Holland, of Atlanta, is
^ visiting relatives and friends in the Jhe Government LOSeS.
'bounty and city. She is accompanied
by her friend, Mrs. Charles E. Per- 1
Icins, also of Atlanta. Washington. Mar. 5-The fert.l.z.
trust cases involving the right (
Mr. F. Gist Rriggs and son, William, United States to compel the remov
left Union Monday for Junction City, of indicted officials of fertilizer con
Oklahoma, where they go to make panics constituting the alleged tru
their future home. The l imes will from Virginia to Tennessee for tri,
follow them to their new home in were decided by the supreme com
the West. Our best wishes follow adversely to the government's conter
them. tion.
THE CONSERVATIVE
VIEW OF IMMIGRATION.
The Labor s Problem Furnishes the
Largest Justification for the Interest
Manifested in
Immigration.
The notably large attendance and the i
keen interest manifested aV the I mini 1
gration convention in Macon i.<' fully ;
justified by the vast importance of the ,
subjects under discussion.
We are passing through a transition \
period in the industrial and social life
of the South. The idleness and shiftlessness
of the negro, his steady exodus
from the fields of agriculture to
the cities, and his increasing indisposition
to manual work have upset the
entire labor system of the South.
The scarcity of labor has further been
increased by the prosperous conditions
of the working classes which have rendered
it possible for these men to live
and prosper in other lines. We are in
need, too, of better and more skillful
help in our domestic life and service.
The labor problem furnishes the largest
justification for the interest manifested
in immigration, and the necessities
of our people in this department
are so great as to tempt us to overlook
many prudential and far-seeing precautions
which ought to surround the
bringing of new peoples into this most
conservative and most American of all
C ?w?/vf A
jvvuuii.i i uui tuuiury.
Beyond the labor stringency there is
a material demand for immigration
along other lines.
Onr people desire an increase of
population, because of the general desire
to live in a populous state and to
outrank our nearest state rivals in
numbers and importance.
Our people desire an increase of
population because we have much unoccupied
territory which we desire to .
see settled and improved. C(,
We desire an increase of population -|
because more people paying taxes will
reduce the per capita of taxation to the
individual citizen.
W e desire an increase because these > .
I \ 1
new people will create a larger market to
I and an incrasing demand for our man- .
Infaetured products, for our raw mate ^
rial, tor our wholesale and retail stores, .
and f< r all the tilings which our people y
have to sell. .
has
We wish immigrants to come to ?
Georgia to establish new industries, .
and to increase our supply of all pro j (
ducts to meet the demand of our own c|u
| and other states. caJ,
To sunt it all up we are inviting new un(
people here, because, prospering and t
[prosperous as we are, we want to get
? rich faster and prosper more abundant
ly than we are today. j j
All of these are good and natural i^r
reasons tor sustaining and helping the vj?
01 ; immigration tnoveinent which is being j)0]
earnestly planned at Macon. All good to
citizens must feel an interest in the tjie
outcome of that convention. ,,1],
w' If we are looking only for today and >
,n for the immediate tomorrow, there need ,MU
L'r I he no prudent reserve and no holding Wtf
:> | hack in the fullest and most unhesi-|^0(
-? tatiug pledge of co-operation in a<l- tv
r* ! vance with everything that the iinmi- j)t,
s" gration convention may <lo. an(i
But there are questions involved
here fully as deep and in many respects
n? even more vital than the material conic
siderations which are moving the enst
thusiastic friends of immigration. ^|j
*? We are not so poor or so needy in
Georgia that we should rush unthink'y
ing and unguarded into politics that I
s may bring us trouble in the future. We firs
are growing fast enough to satisfy anyi ^ 1
r- reasonable people. We are getting j
is I rich and richer every year. Our nunt- 'I
hers are enlarging by the natural inc,
crease of a homogeneous population.
.1 >-v -
ii- uur territory is being settled whole- *
S. soniely if slowly, and every year will /en
>o multiply the increase of our own peo- ^
V. pie. who in the course of time must
n, form a population as dense as Gernia use
ny's and create a demand for every acre lam
is of our land and all our work that is to ^id
id be done. We need not fear that the ovc
a coming years will see our farms in tinj
id weeds or our workshops deserted. sf>
? We in the South are by common consent
the most representatively Aineri- an(]
can, and the most intelligently conser- aga
vative part of the American people, P'e
This is a fact of universal recognition. wjt|
It means much to us now in repute ney
n and dignity, and in the future it will tha
m mean more to us of safety and prog- ' 'j.
r- ress along high lines of civilization. ccn
ig The people of Chicago and New York Nc
ol and Cleveland and Buffalo cannot boast Sta
is of an electorate as clean and American
ly as that which holds in its hands the
nrocoitt a? ?-? 0 *'
ouiuuuu in uur souinern
ir problems. That jargon of foreign
d tongues in these great centers is not
harsher than, the discord in sentiment ^
and ideals between the natives and the 'iar
aliens who must compromise their wide s,n(
differences as best they can in public KU"
affairs. *at'
?r It is worth more than any thought- st'"
if less man can ever conceive, ,that the
al civilization of this American and rapn
idly growing South should be kept fast
st in the traditions of the native born
al who have made it and hold it today. nan
rt We say earnestly and honestly that was
t- there is no intention in these lines to
handicap or discourage in any way the [a'rj
REGISTERED
FARMI
-'i&s our c?mPet^c
iMjffl to be "just a:
jJSf original Fish
Jm3 buyers should
This is the or
p Fhf
If
4 Norfolk, Va. |
fs^& Columbia, S. C.
able novenient f?>r bringing nibrt
pie to Georgia.
his is the single suggestion we
iild m:ke.
'hat localise we are doing so well
I groving so prosperously as a pttre\meiicau
people, we can well atYord
go lowly au<i carefully in making i
el'mges in our population. W e do
n?J<l to sacrifice any principle or
policy t. > d? > thi, n?nv.
Ve can eliminate tlte ehimnts of j
te ami eagerness irom our intmi-1
tion plans. W e can well afford to i
severely select and discriminating
rmr immigrants. W'e can go slowly,
jose our new settlers with great
e and absolute independence, and
ler no circumstances should we rush
eager and undeliberate competition
the great market of men who are
iting to he brought to our shores,
l.ct .-US?go out after worthy immiuit^
for we need them, but let us
ormsly bar all the cranks and pan's
aid isms which Kuropc is glad
disiorge and which have impaired
poitical suggestions of Chicago and
ler American cities,
so (natter how long it takes to get
>d immigrants, let us remember that
cnti afford to do without any save
>d iiimigrants, and that we have plenof
t^nie to examine their fitness to
a pirt of us.?The Atlanta Georgian
I Ifews.
i
i MAY PROVE FATAL.
en Will Union People Learn the
Importance ol It.
iackache is only a simple thing at
t;
hit when you know 'tis from the
ncys;
bat serious kidnev troubles follow;1
i>. i: --
ft % v uKiwvir^, jMift^iu ^ iiiNi'asc may
the fatal end,
'on will gladly profit by the followexperience.
l is the statement of a Union citi-,
:
I. W. Marks, living on Dunkin avc-!
f Union, S. C., says: "I am pleased
add my testimonial to your list. I
d Doan's Kidney Pills for a very'
ic back. The trouble came from my j
nevs, but I did not know it. I had \
ruoiating pains in my back right !
r ntV loins. Sometimes while sit- j
j at my desk, the pain would be |
grc;\t I would have to get tip and I
k around the room. I would awakin
the night with pains in my back j
1 would be unable to go to sleep
in. I suffered that way for a cou- j
of years. The doctor prescribed jr
me and I tried several remedies,
fiout obtaining relief. Doan's Kid-1
Pills arc the first and only thing j
t helped me, and since using them ;
ave not had the backache once."
'or sale by all dealers. Price 50!
ts. ^ Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
iv York, sole agents for the United
tes.
lemember the name,?Doan's,?ami j
e no other.
?_ '
Girl Commits Suicide.
harlotte, Mar. 5.?Miss Delia F.verdt,
of Salisbury, aged 20, committed
ide l>y shooting herself with a shot
1 at daylight this morning at her
ler's house while the family were
sleeping. No reason is assigned.
Lost and Found.
,ost, between q:,}0 p. m., yesterday'
noon today, a bilious attack, with
sea and sick headache. This loss
i occasioned by finding at the drug
re a box of Dr. King's New I.ife
s. Guaranteed for biliousness, maa
and jaundice. .25c. ,
^' f t
^^^V v 'P ^ ?^S^! r l *j 11 fl ^ \
Pi CPra p j | jga w ^sT)f^ ti?^sw/ \ h, s...; A
" - !'Z^l
?f "Imitation :
is tlie *j*
Incerest Flattery" |
The unprecedented popularity of Royster's
iRS' BONE fertilizer has induced some of*'
>rs to advertise Fish Guano, claiming theirs |$j
s good." FARMERS' BONE is the ||
Guano, and, to prevent being imposed upon,
I be sure that our trade-mark is on every bag. g|
lly guarantee that you are getting the genuine t S
Titers' Bone-S?r*
Made with F"ish .If
. S. ROYSTER GUANO CO. 1
mmwwmiamammaer
HHraasBn&zasosxssssosssssgESB
1 HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS I
n
m S*3
|j|j| Are now lying idle, in trunks, bureau p|
drawers, old pocket books and cracks ?
&jj of the house, where it is liable to be ^
burned up or stolen by thieves and
gj?j burglars, who are ever ready to attack
gti the lives of the owners In order to
||j steal the money. H v
m Don't Take Chances! \
Deposit this money in our Bank, 8$ \
where it draws 4 percent, interest grit \
while vou sleen. and is safe fmm fire Ha
13 and thieves. li
8 THE PEOPLES BANK, ?
|| Resources Over $200,000. Liability to Depositors $150,000. jH
H B. F. Arthur, Fres't. J. M. Greer, Cash. H. B. (/'Shields, Asst. Cash. |gj|
SH8flBnassHHiBasrasBaB?asH
|| BARGAINS IN GENTS AND BOYS WEAR g
|E MENS BOYS %
Caps Beautiers 50c only Caps, Home very fancy 10 to 25c.
JjL " would surprise yon 25c. Jj?
SL Hats, uncqualed for price. SPc to $2. ' Hats, 10c up, World Beater 25c. $
3| Dress Shirts, none better for 50c. Bargain in Men's I'ants, $1 to >1 50.
ST The Best and I'rettiest I.ine of Ties you have seen for the money 15 to
50c. A very strong line of Su.-iH-nders, 55c. BU V TH KSE AND SAVE |jj^
A 4 ??t?/*//?r mr.r. ? ?
tv/. f\. oniuLKi ^ 5 and lUc Store.
vkxxvxw
S SEE WHAT CASH WILL DO. S ^
J We have CUT OUT the installment business and g \(
? hereafter will confine our Sales on Cash Bask, hv u
Qj doing this we save cash buyers from One Fourth &
S to One Third ofjthe price of every article they buy ?
5 from us, and ourselves the enormous expense that &
6 it takes to run an installment business, to-say noth- &
& ing of the loss in bad accounts. 5
g We have sold all our old out-of-date goods, that had g
S been accumulating for years and will start up with a g
clean stock of bright new up-to-date goods.
3 TO ARRIVE IN THE NEXT FEW t>AYS. 3
2 A line of Mattings, Linoleum, Oil Cloth, Window R
B Shades, Lace Curtains, Portiers, Table Covers, Reed
?5 and Rattan Rockers, Go-Carts, .Baby Carriages, the jB
jK best that can be||had at a reasonable price. Cash 8
WII i no TUP PPCT
| BAILEY FURNITURE CO. I
tX<X<XiXiX4VXAM^*mX<XiXiX<X&X*
Mary?Dark circles under the eyes in-! MMniniy - uaPKFP'q
'dicate a sluggish circulation, torpid HAIR BALSAM
liver and kidneys. Exercise and H..1- ?n<i bWikTth.
lister's Rockv Mountain lea will make ,n*urii,'? r?>wti.
II II .-r i -I- Dkrw JBtJrvar Pall* to Beators Urn
you well and beautiful. 3s cents, 1 ea 3$/." -.Mai Katr to its Youtbftii coiorT
or Tablets. The Rice Drug Co. j