The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, August 15, 1913, Page PAGE 2, Image 2
| Deposit in a
?l?
4* A National Bank receive:
?ft States Government, is direc
4 thoroughly examined by i
ft twice a year, and required 1
4* of its condition under oath
4* three directors, whenever tl
4* may dictate. Your Check /
ft not only has the advantage
4* you a method most efficiei
4* business man's prestige is
4* mercial account is placed in
4* Check Account here.
*
* Merchants
* Nation
+ OF UNI(
J* F. M. FARR. President.
"F J. D. ARTH1
* CAPITAL AND S
+
X 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* *1
4* 4? 4? 4 Hi? Hi? 4* 4? Hi? 4? 4? 4 rl
* DON'T FAII
4
| BEFORE
* Plumbing, Tin ]
^ tering, Tin Shin
* Roofing, Rubber
| Roofing, Well Ci
+ Piping, all size;
^ Paints and Oils
* Stains. See our
^ Horse Trough.
+ money on every
m.
| Union Plumbini
?|f J. E. KIRBY.
+ Phone 205-J 27 E.
BUG
i New shipmer
i gies just arriv
to your interei
] nvpr if vnn ai
good one.
R. R. HI
i Dealer in Vehic
=il!tl<^7'<>rS&J 11 tl
| v
Helps With
At night when the
the sitting-room table s
the next day, the teleph
neighbor a mile down t
his school-mates. Chile
get pleasure and profit
Do you know how little
1 fi . >
vaiuaDie it is r
See the nearest Bel
write for our free hookl
FARMERS' LIN]
SOUTHERN BELL 1
AND TELEGRAPH
S. FkYOR STREET
3
National Bank!
*
*
a its charter from the United 4*
tly under federal supervision, 4*
government officials at least 4*
by law to make public reports 4*
i of its officials and attest of 4*
le comptroller of the currency 4*
Account in this National Bank 4*
is above stated, but brings to ^
it nAnnvtntA n rtrl A
1i, a^v.uiaic auu XX
increased greatly if his com- 4*
a National Bank. Keep your
*
*
& Planters +
al Bank *
)N, S. C. *
A. H. FOSTER, Vice-Pres. J*
LTR, Cashier.
1URPLUS $100,000. *
vC
?? "A" *A* V "A" -A* "A* Nk 4* ?li>
Ht"T*
? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? Hi* 4? 4? 4? X
, TO SEE US |
1 BUYING +
tf
Roofing and Gut- *
Lgles, V Crimped *
and Composition *
urbing and Drain *
s, Garden Hose,
, Varnishes and ?
new kind of Iron *
WTor?f r/> tT/M 1
TTC oavu yvu. ^
purchase. +
I & Electric Co. |
JULIAN HUGHSSK 4??
Main St. Union, S. C. J
GIES
it of Hull Staged.
It will be
st to look them
*e in need of a
MPHRIES
des and Harness.
?
the Lessons
i children gather around
studying their lessons for
one often rings. A little
he road wants help from I
Ireri as well as grown-ups
from the farm telephone,
this service costs and how
^ ?
1 Telephone Manager or ^
et. A postal will do.
E DEPARTMENT
ELEPHONE
COMPANY
ATLANTA. CA.
STONEWALL JACKSON
____ (
Tragic End of Confederate Leader, I
Slain by His Own Men. <
i
(From the Long Roll.) i
The moon was coming up. She sil- i
vered the Wilderness about Dowall's
Tavern. She made a pallor around the i
group of staff and field officers gathered
beside the road. Her light glinted
on Stonewall Jackson's sabre and
on the worn braid of the forage cap.
The clamor about Chancellorsville,
where, in not haste, Hooker made
dispositions, streamed east and west,
meeting and blending with westward
a like distraction of forming commands,
of battle lines made in the
darkness, among thickets. The moon
was high, but not observed. Behind
him Capt. Wilbourne, of the Signal
Corns, two aides and several couriers.
Jackson rode along the plank road.
There was a regiment drawn
across this way through the Wilderness,
on the road and in the woods
on either hand. In place in the Wilderness
the scrub that fearfully burned
the next day and the next was
even now afire, and gave though uncertainly
and dimly, a certain illumination.
By it the regiment was perceived.
It seemed composed of tall
and shadowy men. "What troops are
these?" asked the general.
"Lane's North Carolinians, sir, the
18th." rf - a
As he passed the regiment started
to cheer. He shook his head.
"Don't, men We want quiet now." 1
A very few hundred yards from
Chancellorsville he checked Little i
Sort-el. The horse stood, fore feet '
planted. Horse and rider they stood 1
and listened. Hooker's reserves were 1
up. About the Chancellor House, on f
the Chancellorsville Ridge, they were
throwing up intrenchments. They
were digging the earth with bayonets i
and heaping it up with their hands.
Turning Little Sorrel, he rode back
along the plank road toward his own t
lines. The light of the burning brush
had sunken. The cannon smoke flout- ;
ing in the air, the very thick woods, 1
made all things obscure. 1
Stonewall Jackson came toward '
the Carolinians. He rode quickly
past the dark shell of a house sunken
amonk the pines. There were with
him seven or eight persons. T^he
horses' hoofs made a trampling on j
the plank road. The woods wanM
deep, the obscurity great. Sud^^^H
out of the brush rang a shot,
cidentally discharged rifle.
gray soldier among Lane's^^^^^H
awaiting ranks spoke from^HR^H
of earful diuaahr"
"Fire." called an officer of the 18th i
North Carolina.
The volley striking diagonally :
across the road, emptied several saddles.
Stonewall Jackson, the aids
nnrl Wilhnnrnp whsnlsH tn tka luff
dug spur and would have plunged in- J
to the road. "Fire!" said the Caro- i
linians, dressed to the left of the
road, and fired.
Little Sorrel, maddened, dashed into
the wood. An oak bow struck his
rider, almost bearing him from the
saddle. With his right, from which
a bullet was imbedded, he caught the
bridle, managed to turn the agonized
brute ino the road again. There
seemed a wild sound, a confusion of
voices. Some one had stopped the
firing. "My God, men! You are firing
into us!" In the road were the aides.
Thev t-auirht thp rpin stnnTUMf tho I
horse. Wilbourne put up his arms. I
"General! General! You are not
hurt? Hold there! Morrison?
Leigh!"
They laid him on the ground Ipeneath
the pines and they fired the
brushwood for a light. One rode off
for I)r. McGuire and another with a
penknife cut away the sleeve from
the left arm, through which had gone
two bullets. A mounted man came
at a gallop and threw himself from
his horse. It was A. P. Hill.
"General, General! You are not
much hurt?" ,
"Yes, I think I am," said Stonewall
Jackson. "And my wounds are from
my own men."
Wood's High-Grade Seeds.
/~i /^i
crimson plover
The King of Soil Improvers,
also makes splendid fall,
winter and spring grazing,
the earliest green feed, or
a good hay crop.
CRIMSON CLOVER will increase I
the productiveness of the land more
than twenty times as much as the same
amount spent in commercial fertilizers.
Can be sown by itself or at the last
working of corn, cotton or other cultiva.
rrnna
Wo are headquarters for
Crimson Clover, Alfalfa,
Winter Vetch, and all
farm Seeds,
Write for prices and DCSCrlptlvCf
Fall Catalog, giving information
about all aoeds for fall sowing.
T. W. WOOD ?> SONS.
Seodsmen, - Richmond, Va.
J-lv-1.
xhe aides lifted the wounded General.
"No one," said Hill, "must tell
the troops who was wounded." The
other opened his eyes. "Tell them
simply that y<j>u have a wounded officer.
Gen. Hill, you are in command
now. Press right on."
A litter was found and brought
and Stonewall Jackson was laid upon
it. The little procession moved
toward Dowall's Tavern. A shot
pierced the arm of one of the bearers,
loosening his hold of the litter. It
tilted. The General fell heavily to
the ground, injuring afresh the
wounded limb, striking and bruising
the side. They raised him, pale now
and silent, and at last tjiey struggled
through the wood to a little clearing.
On May 5 Stonewall Jackson was
carefully moved from the Wilderness
to Guiney's Station. Here was a
large o!d residence?the Chandler
house?wiuin a sweep of grass and
trees; about it one or two small
buildings. Tie great house was
filled, crowded to its doors with
wounded soldiers, so they laid Stonewall
Jackson in a rude cabin among
the trees. The left arm had been amputated
in the field hospital. He was
thought to be doing well. At daylight
on Thursday he had his physician-called.
"I am suffering great
pain," he said. "See what is the matter
with me." And presently, "Is it
pntfimonia?"
That afternoon his wife came. He
was aroused to speak to her, greet
her with love, then sank into something
like stupor. There were times
when he was slightly delirious. He
gave orders in a shadow of the old
voice. "You must hold out a little
longer, men; you must hold out a
little longer! Press forward?press
forward?press forward! Give them
canister, Major Pelham!"
Sunday, the 10th, dawned. It was
sunny weather, fair and sweet, with
all^ie bloom of May, the bright trees
waring, the lone erass rinnline. wa
tars* flowing, the sky azure, bees
about the flowesr, the birds singing
piercingly sweet, Mother Earth so
beautiful, the sky down-bending, the
light of the sun so gracious, warm
and vital! r v ... < '*
A little befox* noon, kneeling be ida
him, hfs wife told Stonewall
Jaefcam that he would die. He
gnad end laid his hand upon her
^^^Bare frightened, my child.
not so near. I may yet get
^ doctor came to hidi. "Doctor,
jj^IU me that I anL to die tojs
-Q n
silent inoni6^t| (iicti
""'tyery good, very good! v It is all
right." >
Throughout the day his mind was
now cloudedi. now clear. The alter
nate clear moments and the lapses
in^ stupor or delirium were like the
sinking or rising of a strong swimmer,
exhausted at last, the prey of
a shoreless sea;. At times he came
head and shoulders out of the sea,
opened his gray blue eyes upon his
staff. The sea drew him under again.
The day grew on to afternoon. He
lay straight upon the bed, silent for
the most part^but now and then wandering
a little. His wife bowed herself
beside him;: ih> a corner wept the
old man, Jim. Outside the windows
there seemed a hush as of death.
"Pass the infantry to the front!"
ordered Stonewall Jackson. "Tell A.
P. Hill to prepare for action!" the
voice sank; there came a long silence;
there was only heard the old
man crying in the corner. Then for
the last time in this phase of being
the great soldier opened his eyes. In
a moment he spoke, in a very sweet
and calm voice, "Let us cross over
the river and rest under the shade of
the trees." He died.
Forty-two dogs have been killed in
Greenwood within the past week for
not having muzzles on. The police
are instructed to kill all dogs found
on the streets \/ithout muzzles.?
Newberry Observer. ,
Postmaster Antoine Deloria, Gardner.
Mich., sneaks for the miMancp
of those troubled with kidney and
bladder irregularities, and says
"From my own experience I can recommend
Foley Kidney' Pills. My father
also was cured of kidney disease,
and many neighbors were cured
by Foley Kidney Pills." At The Rice
Drug Co.
Ross M. McAdams of the Antreville
section of Anderson county lost,
according to his estimate, about
forty-live bales of cotton by hail on
Tuesday. His neighbors also suffered
severely.?Newberry Observer.
THE BEST PAIN KILLER.
Hnrklin'a Arnica fialvo ""
plied to a cut, bruise, sprain, burn or
scald, or other injury of the skin will
immediately remove all pain. E. E.
Chamberlain of Clinton, Me., says:?
"It robs cuts and other injuries of
their terrors. As a healing remedy
its aqual doesn't exist." Will do you
good. Only 25c at The Rice Drug
The Beet Hot Weather Tonic
GROVE'S TASTELESSchiU TONIC enriches the
blood, builds up the whole system sad will wonderfully
strengthen sad fortify you to withstand
Um depressing eSect of the bet snmmer. 30c.
AJiMt
?
easily
ADJUSTABLE ? pW?
TO VARIOUS ^
SLEEVE LENGTHS
| Shirtsa
X
V All Panama, Bangfc
V 0?infl at half price.
V Hafts going at $2.50.
X
The Olus Shirtslaiu
A 1 ^ $1.50^Suits"fi
V 2.00 Suits g
Y
The adjustable
1 going at $1.15. The S
> One lot of Fane;
f Brown going at alm<
I J. C<
^ "The House o
$ioo ' *"*
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there m at least
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure in all its stages,
and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now
known to the medical frm^arnitj,
Catarrh being a constitutional disease,
requires a constitutional treatment.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken
internally, acting directly upon the
blood and mucous surfaces of the
system, thereby destroying the foundation
of the disease, and. giving the
patient strength by building up the
constitution and assisting nature in
doing its work. The proprietors
have so much faith in its curative
powers that they offer One- Hundred
Dollars for any case that it fails to
cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address: F. J. Chenney & Co., To1
~ j _ rvu: _
i?uu, vjmo.
Sold by all Druggists, 76c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Mrs. P. V. Miller, four children and
a grandchild, of Saluda county, near
Fairview schoolhouse were bitten on
Thursday by a dog supposed to be
mad. The entire party went to Columbia
at once to take the pasteur
treatment.?Newberry Observer.
CHICHESTER S PILLS i
THE DIAMOND II BAND. *
/Ov\ Udltal Ask jmr Draniai (or A
yS\ O-dM Diuiu<DniaA/A\
iW. I'llle In Red and il.ld n.rt?lllc\V/
?rwW bom, sealed with Blue Ribbon. V/
W Sh Wf Take other. Bay of year V
K J RK'BSS.'Bi'iSffiSRfel
V~ W years k nowa as Best, Safest. Always Reliable
r SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
WANTED
YOU TO KNOW
That I have reopened
THE PIEDMONT
Dry Steam Cleaning
and Pressing lestablish
4. J .Tn T r i
111C111 cillU Will UC 1UUI1U
at the Old Stand on
Main Street, next door
to Dunbar's Market.
WORK PROMPTLY
DONE
GIVE US ATRIAL ORDER
PIEDMONT
PRESSING CLUB
if. FRED, Prop.
^ SHIRTS
/
WITH THE NEW
i ADJUST?
I SLEEVE
PAT N0V 20 ,9,2
md Hats !
i
[ok and] Straw Hats Y
A tew Fancy Stetson ^
J
l Drawers Attached ?
[oftng at |1.38 ^
Eclipse ?$1.50 Shirts V
F2.00 Shirts at $1.38. X *
V Suits 1 In fippv and X
>st half price. ^
)hen. I
f Satisfaction." Y
V V V V VWV V V V V
"Minister praises "
this laxative
Rev. H. Stubenvoll of Allison, la.,
in praising Dr. King's New Life
Pills for constipation, writes:?"Dr.
King's New Life Pills are such perfect
pills no home should be without
them." No bettet regulator far th?
liver and bowels. Every pill guaranteed.
Try them. Price 25c at Th?
Rice Drug Co.
A Kind Letter.
Greenville, S. C. July 11. 1913
Union Times, Union, S. C.?Dear
Sirs: Please find enclosed check for
$1.00 to pay my subscription to the
Times. I could not do without the
Times and thank you for our good
paper.
Sincerely,
J. Arthur Adams^
One night last week a storm passed
through a portion of Barnwell county,
killing a valuable horse and seven
hogs belonging to Farmer R. L.
Creech and a $250 horse beloneine to
Farmer J. O. Sanders.?Newberry
Observer.
To Prevent Blood Poisoning
apply at once the wonderful old reliable DB
PORTER S A NTI8BPTIC1H BALING OIL, asut
gical dressing that relieves pain and heata a
the same time. Not a liniment. 25c. SOc. $1.00.
\
SHIP YOUR WHEAT TO
THE PALMETTO
ROLLER MILLS
Mr. Farmer:
If your wheat is perfectly
dry, has no smut or wild
onions in it, ship to us and
in return we will ship, prepaying
freight to you 36
lbs. flour and 14 lbs. bran
per bu. Ship your wheat in
strong bags, as we cannot
be responsible for wheat in
transit This applies to Id
bushels or more.
PALMETTO ROLLER MILLS
SPARTANBURG, S. C.
Dr. Virgil R. Hawkins
DENTIST
OFFICE OVER MUTUAL lTn*/\ri C P
DRY GOODS COMPANY W. \J*
I