The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, March 13, 1908, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

1^ JNION TIMES (JBLISHEO EVERY ERIOAY ' BY THE ^^^HBbTIJNION times company ' BACHELOR STREET, OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE. I BELL PHONE NO. r. I *! II L. M. KICK ) ..,.,TA,N J I F. C. HICKSON \ ' EDIT OR. I Registered at the Postoflice in Un H ion, S. C., as second-class mail matter SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One year $i.? ft j months 5< H m Three months 2\ mf ADVERTISEMENTS: H It One square, first insertion $i.o< I Every subsequent insertion 5' Contracts for three months or longei . will be made at reduced rates. M Locals inserted at 8 1-3 cents a line H ^ Rejected manuscripts will not be re lifl turned. Obituaries and tributes o respect will be charged for at hal K. UNION, s. C., MARCH i::,;iOOs. \ ^ Why didn't you go to churcl: Do your best, for the great con( vention in April, angels can do nt more. f " One young man in Union has reiceived a proposal. He has promised to be a brother to her. I Union never does anything hj halves, so the delegates to the Convention may expect a glorious time, | The "Merry Widow" sailor will l>e the popular head dress this summer. so savs the Fashion Book. What next? AlfSouth Carolina girls are peaches and they bloom all the yeai round.?Daily Mail. It's the gospel truth. The Augusta Herald wants to know where the garden of Eden was located? Why, in Charleston, ol course. t " The Daily Mail calls attention to the fact that there will l)e a full moon on the night of St. Patrick's Day. Also several full sons. f. . The governor will act wisely to leave the legislature at home. They f are not on the side of South Carolina, and would do him and our vcause harm. i ~ r- "4I would rather see my daughter marry a good live newspaper man than any duke on earth," says Mrs. Hetty Green. We know the very man for her. _ Mr. Joseph McCollough will find it difiicult to convince South Caro |s? linian (now that he has lent himK self an instrument of a narrow federal judge to humiliate his native HP State) that he is a tit man to repreHH sent us in the Senate. Between the disloyalty of the sen M ate and a position of the press of the state Governor Ansel and Attorney General Lyon are having to BBS' fight under great disadvantage. So rSbSS far as we can discern the senate is flflW against the administration hecause they are in sympathy with the forfflH mer oflicials of the dispensary or are HSH' paid hy the whiskey dealers, and the press is disloyal partly from BraH force of habit, and partly from preNBRgS judice against the dispensary and its authors. They seem willing to sec B H the state humiliated in order t< WBmr* k..n,a:A?? .i>? ? 1 Ii i u 111 i i i<i trr nir ^ riu?U. We have neither time nor space to argue with The State now. A? to his paragraph structure. II* must remember that we cried shade* of every body and everything against the dispensary from the first. But it is not a question of the right 01 wrong of the dispensary hut of Judge Pritchard's right to step in and take charge of the funds the state mad* out of it. He would have just at much right to take charge of the crops made on the state farms, if he chose to say the state had no right to run a farm. So long as we don't ^ violate the federal cemfetitution, we are entitled to let alone by the fed What connection has the location j of the garden of Eden with dispeni sary affairs in South Carolina? If all the judges would pursue the course of Judge Robt. Aldrich and ' sentence violators of the whiskey laws to chain gang or penitentiary instead of to pay a fine the business I of blind tigeristn would soon play i! out. ljA TALK WITH THE BLIND TIGERS. We would like to catch the ear ol the blind tiger just a minute. You 5!are engaged in violating the law. . One of two things must happen. You or the law must go down. H j there should remain enough moral 3 force in the community to enforce 31 the law, not only your business but you must suffer. If tin; law fails | what becomes of you? Can you - long survive in a community where f i there isn't enough moral force to f j enforce law? Don't you see that for a paltry sum you are not only "(overthrowing the law, but under| mining yourself. 1 THE SENATE AND THE GOVERNOR. We read with great care and real "! satisfaction the first message of Cov. 3 i Ansel to the legislature. It was a | sensible transparent all round good paper. I We have watched closely the proceedings of the legislature. It very early developed that a majority of . the senate and some of the lower . j house were not of the mind of tin governor. Before the session closed it was clear that the senate was anI tagonizing the governor and annoy ing him in every way they could. The same body was even more antagonistic to the attorney general, and especially so in his efforts in connection with the dispensary comI mission. As we view the situation j now it seems to us clear that either | Ansel and Lyon are engaged in a : plot to injure some good men or we ' had some very bad men in the last | session of the senate. Our own opinion is that Ansel .and Lyon are all right and if the j latter could learn a little more self| control. We could not find any i better men for their places, and we j heartily wish them success in their work. Indeed their work is our work, every good citizen's work, and we ought all to feel bound to aid , them in every way possible, i Long live Gov. Ansel and Gen'l. Lyon. GET BUSY FOR THE FINISH Sixty Days More and Our Contest Closes?Do not Hold Back Your Votes. The following is the vote up to noon Thursday: Miss May Robinson 10700 Eflie Gallman 88(XJ " Fannie M. Bolx> 7200 " Ora V. Page 6500 Orrie. Farr 5700 Bessie Davis 2900 " (I race W'ilburn #XX) " Susie E. Black 2400 " Lula Belle Mitchell... 1000 Kittie M. Alman 8(KJ Maggie Bishop (>00 Death of Mr. Owen Priester. Owen Priester, of the Getsinger [neighborhood, died at his home last Thursday at the age of 10") years. Mr. Priester has seen service in three wars, the Mexican War, the Seminole War, the Civil War. He was in many respects a remarkable j man. He continued active up to | the week of his death. He leaves a I great number of children, grand([children, and great-grand-children. "The Clansman," which was I presented at the Harris theatre in Spartanburg Saturday night, drew immense crowds from the neighhori ing towns and cities and the Onion , people who attended thorougly en, joyed the play and speak in very complimentary terms of the music, ' which was furnisher! by the SparCtanburg band. Among those who U went from Union were Misses Alba . I unil [vil W'llUi'r T.iliati un/1 Mnu/I , ? - .v. ?? W..UV* | lilliUII UIM4 KiaUM Goforth, Mr. and Mrs. Milton McNeace, Messrs. J. G. Ixmg, M. H. Summer, Giles Crawford, Ben Walker, Tony Lancaster, Robert O. i Glover, Chas. B. 0>unts, A. B. , Brannon and I)r. T. F. Littlejohn. ; Thomas B. Wanamaker, of Pliil adelphia, son of former Postmaster General John Wanamaker, died suddenly at the Hotel Liverpool in 1 Paris, France, Monday. Mr. Wan! amaker had been traveling in Egypt J in search of health. / Special Advertisements i . Notlcoswtll be Inserted In this column at the rato of 85 words or less for 85c* one issilc, fourissuus for 75c. Additional lines over tweuty live words 5c * line. ' BOOK Bargains?Big selection l?y well known authors, regular price $1.50. I Your choice while tlu*y la*<t for oOc. C. B. Sparks. ' WHEN you want drugs in a hurry, just ring the I'ahnetto Drug Co. That is | enough saiil. - FOB SALE?One scholarship in two of the best business colleges in the coun ! try Call on or address the Times, Union, S. C. 5 1 -tf | TWO things to lie rcinemlicrcd. Dr. II. B. Ilair and ltuoin 2 in Nicholson | Building. siii r .a....... ...i you ?ret anything that is u?>t satisfactory, Ih* sure ami let us know at once. ! Mi. II. 15. IIAI It has moved to Nicholson I>ilil< 1 iityr, Room No. 2. ! IF YOU want the In st suit of clothes(all 1 wool) that you ever won? in all your . j life at a price less than you pay for mercerized cotton and shoddy stuff, he 1 on the lookout for the man with the , j l>rown ease marked It. 15. Henry. . J Holler at him, he won't jret mad, hut stop and take your measure with a | smile on your face as loiijt as his arm. in Union March L!th and 14th. j ITCH cured in *50 minutes hy Woolford'a Sanitary Lotion, tvever fails. Sold hy Union Drug Co. 44-hm WANTKD?Hens, not over years nor under I year old. Ulyniouth Itock preferred. Apply at Union Times. 8-tf (iF.T your system in good shajk- for the Spring and Summer hy taking Huiet's ; r.lood and Liver I'ills at the I'alt net to Drug Co. ; HKWAHU of $:'>.nn will U- paid for the recovery to me, of one Kinglet I5arred Plymouth Hock hen, taken or strayed | from my yard. j It Ilenry M. Holmes, Union, S. C. [MILCH cows for sale. All prices. Ad| dress or call on M. II. Sums, Jonesville, S. ('. 3-tf DII. II. 15. IIAIII. after 1-Vh. 1st, will lie found in llootn 2, Nicholson building. j I5UFF OltPINtiTON?The l?cst all round chicken known. Kggs *l."?0 jier lo. J. Lewis < Milium, at The Peoples Supply Co. 8-tf I I5K SU1IE and reineinlicr that our speeialty is prescription work and the sell- , itivr of pura drills. The Palmetto Drug j i ompaiiy. ! | FOR SALK?I Knterprise Stereoptieon ; 5 with ealeium liy;ht oiittiit, ~y2 colored ; j r^li? 1?'~? ?;ivinjr the Life of Christ; ~2'1 rol- I Q <>red slides illustrated hymns. KO slides! |j Around the Word in so Minutes; part j g eolored and part plain. "><)0 feet tnov- j b injr picture tihns. will_?;ct the; 5 whole outfit. Perfect condition. <i(N>d f money maker. Address Rev. T. II. j c Owen. Wilkinsville, S. ('., II. F. I>. 1. ! j l**< it IS FOR SALK?I hire Stock Rhode Island Reds SI. "? ? per set tint;, fifteen esrjrs. Address Mrs. J. J. Littlejolm, Joncsville, S. ('. 11 -lit ' FOR SALR?Broadcast Commercial For' tili/er Distributors. Man and horse j-, can do the work of three or four I [>, hands, and more satisfactory. Any I i width row. The thimr for second an-1 | plication Write W. M. Patrick, j Woodward, S. C. IO-4tpd | da 10,000! ! D Agents wanted at once, previous ex- ' I perience is not essential, territory is go| ing fast, write soon if you wish to make money faster than you ever did IWore in I all your life. Write today. Address J. dt F. Clark, Conway, Ark. to pi * Advertised Letters. Advertised letters remaining in I'nion | postotliii' for week ending March l:>. f? A?Maud Alexander < _'.) *1' 1 B?Lillie V. Brown, Walters Burgess, Ben Brownlee. ,, C?Mary Cromwell, Barbara Cooker, Freddy Carter. I)?John Deen, Lucy Dunhar. fo F?Billy Fleming' ('. i II?Noah Hendrieks, Wash Iliggins. pi J?James JeteJ, I/>velaee Johnson. K?Lula Kelly, Joe T Kirk, Mattie i L.' ,.11..- 1 - I 1-1 I M?.Mr M?*rritt, I S Morrow. S?J I) Syrli-s, Willie Simpson, hula' Smith. Mamie Shuler. fo V?Carrie Vinson. 111 \V?Mrs Kalis Warton, Mattie Worthy D Persons culling for these letters will please say if advertised, and if so will tie j reipiire-l to pay one cnit for delivery. J. ('. 11 t'NTK.H, P. M. West Springs Locals. ^ West Springs, March 10. ? We j? , are having a lot of wind these days, j ( It was hoped hy every one that, , owing to the fact that there had heen ti great deal of wind during! ^ I the winter, we wouldn't have any j during the spring hut it seems that j ' I we are going to have just as much | {as usual. i Mrs. M. W. Lancaster visited u( her daughter. Mrs. I/eon West, at ?t I Glenn Spring the past week. m j Mrs. W. T. Harnett has heen [' (quite sick the past week with grippe * ' hut is now much better, j Mrs. Addie Hames, of Jonesville, ; 11 visited friends here Sunday. Mr. Oscar Lancaster, of Union, is visiting relatives here this week. Mr. JMHMA Wpat W iillifj> ill of lliia ( . .. ... V...O tT writing. (I, Mr. R. P. West, of Pacolet, J visited relatives here Saturday and ?' ; Sunday. ' a< j Rev. E. P. Taylor filled his ap- a pointment at Bogansville Sunday p? afternoon. 68 Mr. Thos. Smith, of Glenn Springs, attended sevice at Bogans- ? ville Sunday afterdoon. 1 1 > ??? ??i?I? fin All 1 Rut Prir Ift^U I I l\. We haven't the ne to charge the t or's price. But w jg give you all ( m that he can ? B y?u ,n 1 SENIOR SMART I COLLEGE CLOTH || Cut to the king's Jg swagger in ever) H elsewhere. Getl H it here. I IMutua 1 UN,? CITY CANDIDATES. FOR MAYOR I hereby announce myself sis a candiite for tiie office of Mayor of tin* city of nion. subject to the decision of City mocrratic Primary. J AS. l?. b)X(if JK. I hereby announce myself as a eandiite for the office of Mayor of Cnion, subject to the decision of the City I'liiocratie Primary. J. F. MC-Lckb. FOIt WARDKN FROM WARI) I. I hereby announce myself sis a eandiite for Warden from Ward One. subiect tl?c rules governing the Democratic riniary election. J. K. Kirhy. I hereby announce inyseR a candidate r Aldcnnan in Want One, subject to e rules of the Democratic Primary lection. II. B. O'Siiiki.im. >R WARDEN FROM WAHI) TIIUKK I hereby announce myself a candidate r alilcrman for ward three, Union, S. ., subject to the decision of the ap'oaching democratic primary. O. E. Smith. >R WARDEN FROM WARD FOUR. I hereby announce myself a candidate r Warden from Ward 4, and pledge yself to abide by the decision of the emocratic Primary Election. Joif.v W. Avc<x k. I)M.MISSIONKR OF PUBLIC WORKS. The friends of ('apt. .1. T. Douglass re by announce him a candidate for the lice of Commissioner of Public Works, ibject to the rules of the Democratic rimary Election. NOTICE. The annual meeting of the stockhold s of the Union Building and Loan AsN'iation will Is- held at the Court House arch 24th, at HrdO p. in. J. D. Arthur. I -2t Sec. and Treas. NOTICE! The hook of registration for the town : Union arc now often at my office in the ore of J. Cohen and will remain open ntil one week before the regular election une 2, ltH)8. All qualified electors are ititled to register. I). \V. Mnllinax, Supervisor of Registration. l-4t FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that Mrs. Sue . Beaty (formerly Crawford) adminis atrix of the estate of S. R. Crawford, eeeaacd, has applied to \V. W. Johnson, ndge of Probate, in ami for the county F Union, for a final discharge as such iininistratrix. It is ordered, that tho 13th day of pril, A. D. 1908, be fixed forbearing of tition, and a final Settlement of said itate. W. W. Johnson, ,, Probate Judge, Union County, I I i Do it now! ( e'll ^ ;ise S| m, live Y&MJ' y \ ES^ taste, fashioned to a ' detail than twice the ting double is saving 1 il Dry Got N, SOUTH CAROL ft H A I L E' S S 11 1: For Out Do 4? _ I Or In Door || The Lov (proper v both st A pretty for in d< delight 1 friends. j* tains m | J these re I OXFORDS-S4.00, $ 1 suppfrs=?SI (in s 3 ? - Y?*ww? y -5" ! |1 Satisfaction or, jiliaile S |; THE LEADING ?49 East Main Street ' * ' ! n 'lJi't. . ' ir y >< > ri - / /. .A . ..'.4* vtV,": I I \ ?1?? If Kid 1 JUS 1>U. | P H A I L E'S I I "5"l l H" ors I ?f / Shoe is the only 11 vear nowadays for '| yle and comfort. || Low Cut Slipper >ors is a constant! I to one's self and Our stock con- & lany examples of 4 iquirements. '| 3.00, $2.00, $1.50. :| 1.50, $2.00. /our Money Back. if" hoe Co.:[ j > SHOt HOUSE, | j; I ? 1 Union, South Carolina i M A* I m