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| Deposit in a I * <ft A National Bank receives ?ft States Government, is directl; ?f? thoroughly examined by go ?|t twice a year, and required by of its condition under oath < ?f+ three directors, whenever the ?|f may dictate. Your Check Ac ?ff not only has the advantages ?ft you a method most efficient -9 m hncinnco mon'a * erf i* uuonicoo man o 10 n ^ mercial account is placed in a ?ft Check Account here. + + Merchants I Nations jj OF UNIO J F. M. FARR. President. + J. I). ARTHU + CAPITAL AND SI Jc, Jr. J^ J- J^ Jj. J^ J*. J* Jj. Jr. Jj. ^ ^ T T V t T V 4*4,Hh4,rf*H|hHb4,4?4?H|r4?r|r !A Satisfied | Is the Best A 4f V\V\vw\VVVV\V\XSX^SS? | We Sati: * V\\\\\VN\N\VVVVS\m\W * | Give lis a Trial a | Union PluiuMng m. J J. E. KIRBY. <4* Phone 205-J 27 E. I + BUG New shipmen gies just arrive to your interes over if you ar ^ w .*-k ^-k ,<JI ,?"kW? -*"k yuuu unc. vvvv%\%v%\\wmmvv\^ R. R. HU | Dealer Jin Vehici Telephone Sav< One of the children an Alabama farm and was apparently lifeless. Thel the telephone and called t He told hef what to do before he arrived the chil TI10 C A uv |/iwitv,uuil U1 W IJ one of the chief values c farm. You can have this sc the nearest Bell Teleph< postal for our free bookie FARMERS' LINE SOUTHERN BELL TI AND TELEGRAPH ( S. PRYOR STREET SSSSi^SSS \ National Bank! * its charter from the United tf y under federal supervision, tf vernment officials at least +$? r law to make public reports *? of its officials and attest of 4?? comptroller of the currency tf count in this National Bank 4^ above stated, but brings to , accurate and prompt. A 4?? lcreased greatly if his com- & . National Bank. Keep your * & Planters + il Bank t N, S. C. t A. H. FOSTER, Vice-Pres. ? R r.aahipr JRPLUS $100,000. * 4?4,++4,4?4,4,++4i+X I Customer! advertisement * 4? ^V\N\\\\\S\\V\N\\VV\VV% 4. sfy Ours | * + ind Be Convinced J I & Electric Co. | JULIA!-* HUGHES. *? Vlain St. Union, S. C. +$? (ft GIES t of Hull Buged. It will be >t to look them e in need of a MPHRIES les and Harness. ed Child's Life j fell into a water tank on rescued unconscious and frantic mother rushed to ! he doctor six miles away, and started at once, but 1 d was out of danger. ? men and children is only / .1 . ? t 3 * jr ine xeiepnone oil tno ?rvice at small cost. See ] >ne Manager or send a * t. ! * * DEPARTMENT f clephone i COMPANY yy ATLANTA, GA. 5SSSSS5SS5SSS55S NEWS FROM PEA RIDGE. Kelton, July 14.?I looked in vain in last week's Union Times for a , write up of some of the Union conn- c ty delegation who attended the great < reunion of the Blues and the Grays at Gettysburg. However I was ] pleased to see a letter in the Times t from our old comrade George Buch- 1 anan, for he always has something | good to say. By your permission I will, give the readers a few dots of u'hnf T snw nnH VioarH T Ipft hnmp 1 on Sunday evening, June 29 and- * boarded the Southern train, No. 13 j at Lockhart Junction. I soon found ^ Comrade J. G. Long and Barney Wilburn and Mr. Arthur Long. We s were soon in Spartanburg, we left Spartanburg about 8 o'clock p. m., with many others on their way to the 1 reunion. Our car was transferred ' at Charlotte to the Columbia special 1 to Gettysburg. We arrived there f about 8:30 o'clock, the 30th of June, ^ and found our headquarters in a ^ short time but very few cots or blan- 1 kets and some of us pretty hungry * and too late for supper. Some of 11C Korvnn f a n lif f 1 a 1\1 nioL nnrl mo u^^ou w xwi c* iivvic uiu toil ouu you could begin to hear it whispered around "I am going to leave on the first train". I said to the boys "if . we leave let's leave in a body." But , it was soon circulated that our con- ) dition would be improved and cots * and blankets were being brought in i and everything quieted down. Our j little Union squad had some rations they had brought from home and we 1 ate supper. Next morning we began J to study the great battlefield where i two of the grandiest armies faced < each other in a bloody fight. The 1 first day I met T. M. Littlejohn and 1 Asbury Goforth. We went along in J part where they fought the first day and through Gettysburg over to the cemetery and back to camp. We ( could not get a conveyance around ? the battlefield, so the second day I } tried in vain to find some one of the | 1 CaU a. O n \r x. ?sAi_ uiu 1UU1 IC^IIIICIII o. \_/. V. VO K? Wltn I me. I decided to make the trip alone , but there were thousands all over j the battlefield searching and reading the monuments and markers. I began at Cemetery Ridge where the s Union soldiers had their strong line 1 down the edge of the valley of death J to the Devil's Den (I have heard of , the devil all may life but never was j in his den before.) Many men in 1 both armies were killed right there. { I kept right on over to the wheat field and near the old peach orchard, right there I met a Confederate who belonged to a battery in Kershaw's Brigade and an old Union 3oldier, 1 they were talking about the battle. J The Union soldier's name was Rob- . ert C. Dunlap. I think he belong^, to the 140th Pa. Infantry and was captured by the 3rd S. C. Batalion Kershaw's Brigade. He went to the spot wnere ne was captured and j close by where Capt. Wier, of Laurens, county was wounded and he, Dunlap and another Union soldier carried him to the Rose House He went in the house and showed 113 the room where he laid him down. Capt. Wier was killed after at Richmond, Va. The next morning I went down to Cemetery Ridge where they are erecting a monument to Gen. Lee near where he had his headquarters. There are hundreds of monuments and markers on this famous battleheld. A man could not take it all in in a month. I do not know who was to blame for the great blunder of our army invading the northern territory. All admit, both north and south that if Stonewall Jackson had 1? il: uccii living limits wouia nave been I different. You could readily learn from the Union veterans that Jackson ranked far above any other Gen- 3 eral as a soldier. If he had been j there he would never have carried r, his men in that bloody angle where 1 so many brave men fell. Well the 1 Yankees treated us just as nice as could be. You could see in their j faces their welcome was genuine. ( The Union soldiers said they wanted t the Southern soldiers pensioned and were willing to cut their pay in order i to pension us. The ladies in great numbers visited our camps giving us , koorfo 1? /t ? u >*. vjr uiminiiuM: * i nacj ratner shake their hands than the men.) I ^ think every one who attended this meeting was doubly paid for his sacrifice. I wish every veteran, especially those who were in the battle could have been there. G. T. G. Citation to Kindred and CreditorsState of South Carolina, County of Union. \ By Hon. W. W. Johnson, Judge of Probate. WHEREAS, J. M. Wood has made suit to me to grant him Letters of Administration on the Estate and ef- g fects of J. II. Wood, deceased. s THESE ARE, therefore, to cite t ind admonish all and singular the n cindred and creditors of the said J. FI. Wood, deceased, that they be and 1; ippear, before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Union, C. H., a South Carolina, on the 19th day of I fuly, next, after publication hereof, it 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show s ause, if any they have, why the said V \dministration should not be grantid. a Given under my hand and seal this b Ind day of July, A. D., 1913. n W. W. Johnson. A Probate Judge o Published on the 11th day of July, V 913 in The Union Times. 2 - * ' , HOWS THIS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Revanty for any case of Catarrh that :annot be cured by Hall's Catarrh ^ure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known ?. Cheney for 15 years, and >elieve him perfectly honorable in all >usiness transactions and financially ible to carry out any obligation made >y his firm. National Bank of Commerce,' Toledo, O. Sail's Catarrh is taken internally, icting directly upon the blood and nucous surfaces of the system. Testmonials sent free. Price 75 cents >er bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for con itipation. Benjamin John, a Turk, was convicted of murder at the circuit court n fliimHpn nn ThnroHow Tlio J..-.. ecommending him to mercy, he was lenteiiced to the penitentiary for life. He killed a fellow countryman named Michael Simons several weeks ago in Kershaw county.?Newberry Observsr. rhe Difference Between "The Summer Girl" and "The Summer Woman." While the former is having a "good ;ime" the latter is too often dragging iround nervous, run down, tired out, with aching back and weary limbs, sleepless and wretched. Often it is <idney trouble and Foley Kidney [Jills are a direct and positive help for the condition. The Rice Drug Co. If a substitute is offered you for Foley Kidney Pills, it means a cheapjr medicine is pressed upon you for ;he dealer's profit, not for yours. Foley Kidney Pills may cost the lealcr more than a cheap substitute Jut they give better results than iny other kidney and bladder medi:ine. Ask for Foley Kidney Pills. The Rice Drug Co. The police of Greenville seized a :ar load of beer in that city on Thursday. Three barrels had already been delivered to draymen, and ;he railroad employees tried to rush ;he car out of the reach of the offi :ers. The beer was turned over to ,he sheriff.?Newberry Observer. The agonizing discomfort and sense of suffocation that accompany lay fever andasthma may be greaty alleviated by the use of Foley's Honey and Tar Comound. It has a soothing effect on the mucus linings, md relieves the gasping and ticking sensation in the throat and bron:hial tubes. The Rice Drug Co. ) Bailey Undertaking Co. jj^neral, Jireetors ^^ind Embalmers Phone 106-J Country Calls Answered Promptly When you purchase a monument r'ou want your money to go for a )iece of work that WILL LAST? IIIAT IS BEAUTIFUL?and whose ettering will not be quickly effaced >y the elements. Our monuments will meet the tliove requirements perfectly and >ur prices will bear comparison with my. iMay we call and submit samples tnd quotations? We sell the best W. O. W. monunents in the world. We put the inents commission in value to the 'Voodman. BAILEY UNDERTAKING CO. VANTED: BOARDING PUPILS FOR CROSS KEYS HIGH SCHOOL. We are prepared to finish boys and ;irls for the various colleges in the tale, or if that is not desired, good, horough work in the subjects of nost practical value. Our plan?a few subjects vigorousy pursued. H. C. Wilburn, the principal, is graduate from the Agricultual )epartment of Clemson College. Miss Jeanette Gore, the High chool assistant is a graduate of yinthrop College. Expanses?no tuition fee charged, .small incidental fee for fuel, etc., oard at reasonable rate within a tile or less of the school, kddress: W. H. Wilburn, Secretary f the Board of Trustees, or H. G. Wilburn, Principal., Union, S. C. 7-41, 1 Stop! Lot i. jfi Is compelled to and has pla stock in Progressive i Of Birmii To sell at Next Remodei Starts Saturdi Be on hanc hour and sec Prpcprit X X V^UVXll/ JL 1 W/ We are < Others ar Look for the Pin A. A. SW Sales $ THE CLEMSON AGR ENROLLMENT OVER 800?Vj MILLION AND A THIR AND OF DEGREE COURSES: Agricul Mechanical and Electrical Engin Industry; Architectural Engineei SHORT COURSES: One-Year < ses, $10.00 SCHOLARSHIPS and ENTRA1 lege maintains 167 four-year j ships, and 61 one-year Agricultu arsnips $100.00 per session and ] attended Clemson College, or an not eligible for the Scholarships Course in Textile Industry; Fou Grading; Four Weeks Course fo COST: Cost per session of nir light water, board, laundry, ant Tuition if able to pay, $40.00 ext year Agricultural Course, $117.? applicants.) Scholarships and Entrance County Superintendent of Educa NEXT SESSION OPEN Write at once to W. Clemson College, S. C., for Cat you delay, you m WANTED YOU TO KNOW That I have reopened THE PIEDMONT Dry Steam Cleaning and Pressing .establishment and will be found at the Old Stand on Main Street, next dooi to Dunbar's Market. WORK PROMPTLY DONE GIVE US A TRIAL ORDER mrni lAitTrr r iijirivivii 1 PRESSING CLUB M. FRED, Prop. McSwain, Watson & Inman Attorneys at Law Greenville, S. C. Practice in all State and Federal Court*. == )k! Listen! IOM I vacate by Aug. 1, ced his entire l hands of Advertising Co. igham, Ma. to Nothing Prices xsxxxxxxxxsXsxxsxxsxssxx lling Sale ay, 9 A.M. Sharp I on opening ure a valuable on conditions. Originators e Imitators k Front and Signs AFFORD I 11 1CULTURAL COLLEGE \LUE OF PROPERTY OVER A D?OVER 90 TEACHERS FICERS. ture, (seven Courses). Chemistiy; leering; Civil Engineering; Textile ring. bourse in Agriculture; Two-Year *CE EXAMINATIONS: The Col\gricultural and Textile Scholariral Scholarships. Value of ScholFree Tuition. (Studen' < who have y other College or University, are unless there are no other eligible ir-Weeks Winter Course in Cotton r Farmers. te months, including all fees, heat, 1 two comnlete uniform* SISSAK ;ra. Total ^cost per session for one >5; Four-Weeks Course, all expeni Examinations will be held by the tion on July 11th, at 9 a. m. S SEPTEMBER 10, 1913 M. RIGGS, President tolog Scholarship Blanks, etc. If ay be crowded out. SHIP YOUR WHEAT TO THE PALMETTO ROLLER MILLS ^ Mr. Farmer: If your wheat is perfectr ly dry, has no smut or wild * onions in it, ship to us and j in return we will ship, prei paying freight to you 36 L lbs. flour and 14 lbs. bran per bu. Ship your wheat in I ? strong nags, as we cannot be responsible for wheat in transit. This applies to 10 bushels or more. PALMETTO ROLLER MILLS SPARTANBURG, S. C. I Dr. Virgil R. Hawkins DENTIST OFFICE OVRR1M'JTUALTTfl;rtfl C p | DRY GOODS COMPANY UIHUIIj O. \J. Nice playgrounds for children have been opened at two of the public schools in Columbia.?Newberry Observer.