University of South Carolina Libraries
Next 1 Saturday, Monday ? th< and Tuesday j thi AT st) ** as th< THE UNION I fir ev< GKUUtKY CD. I Nc in* Best $7.00 He Flour ftei For $6.00 Barrel^ is BEST 12'Asc SNOW WHITE ata se> Lard 2 For He Pound Bulk ? shi am Gold Band Soap, Best 5c Cake >n tol For 34/2C Cake 5? we Grand Mas Washing r? Powder, the 5c kind we For 3^c Z we Hero Coffee sP the 30c package set For 25c & two cans for 45c anj liK Luzianne Coffee ^ am the $1.10 pails For 99e thi 35c Tins 0 Allagha Syrup isi For 25c per can ter Whs Mother Oats For 7c per package be< inj Senator 5c Box S Matches ??< ret For 3c Per Box }eJ fn Quaker 10c Corn Flakes For 8c Package Just Received let All the New Cereals, Canned jf an Meats, Canned Fruits, Canned ^ Fish, Gelatines, Macaronies, $ Chocolates, Cocoas, Cocoas, Teas and Cottees. let foi wt tic SAVE MONEY | rai And Have the Best S ea Service By Trading. ? With The 5 res on UNION I sio GROCERY 1 mc CO. I ejt Main Street s Union, S. C. g Phone 100. I';, cei iOCKHART JUNCTION Lockhart Junction. Sent. 8.?Ruin much needed in this section for all -e crops. The war talk and low ice of cotton is the talk these days politics is about over. It seems i greatest rally is past and today 11 settle it for the next two years. The cotton question is the greatest any of these with us for we don't ink that we people of the United ates will have to go to war as long Wilson is president. We hope ire will turn up a way for the farmi to get a good price for his cotton, vill suggest that every farmer keep t cotton in his own warehouse, by at I mean in his own cotton house long as he can. There is no one t who could keep his cotton till the st of November. I do believe if eryone would get a higher price- ep the cotton off the market for a lile anyway. We are getting noth? anyway when we take 7 l-2c. It es not look like it would go ur.y ver if we wait and let us risk it. >w keep it at home is what I am gor to do for a few months anyway d risk chances. Mr. W. H. Page and Miss Evelyn ilman were married in Charlotte, C. at the home of the bride's ris , Mrs. Danner, on Wednesday, Sepnber 2. Mr. Page is a well known izen and progressive farmer of nesville township. Mrs. Page is a ung lady of sterling qualities. She known here and throughout the ite, as she has been teaching for reral years. They have many ends who wish them much happi3S through life. t stopped at the home of Mr. Ches Garner, a well known and proessive farmer of Pinckney townip, last week. I met Mrs. Garner d daughter canning vegetables out the cannery in the shade. They d me they had canned 358 cans of aches, 125 cans of beans, 105 cans tomatoes, 18 cans of damsons and re not aone canning yet. inis was lat I like to see?laying up for win use. Miss Corrie Haney is spending this ek in Spartanburg with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Lancaster of est Springs were visiting at the me of Mr. A. J. Gallman for the ek-end. Mr. Ralph Mayes of Sulphur rings was visiting in this section Sunday and attended Sunday 100I. Miss Lois Gallman has returned >m Sulphur Springs where she has en spending a week with relatives d friends. Miss Emmie Hames gave a moonht nicnic at the close of her school t Thursday night at Mr. T. M. reed's and all enjoyed a nice time d had plenty to eat. Mr. J. J. Garner celebrated his 70th thday last Thursday .September 3, giving his many friends and relaes a picnic with hash and everyng good to eat. Mr. Garner reved several presents. We wish for n many more days like this .for he enjoying good health for his age. Mrs. Nancy White died at the home Mr. D. C. White Saturday. Sepnber B. She died very suddenly af she was stricken with paralysis d only lived a ?hort time. This od woman was one of our oldest izens, being 88 years old and had jn in very good health except fallf a few years ago and broke her She had to use her cane and itches to walk with but she had a od'mind up till her death. In her ibleness and old ape she seemed to ilize more fully that God was her Iper. She has many relatives and ends who mourn over her loss. The daughters and sons of Mr. John d Camillus Little of Kelton and ss Mabel Kelly passed through re yesterday on their way to Spari academy. Miss Jessie Gallman es to Spartanburg Business college. Moxy. WILKIN S VILLE Wilkinsville. Sept. 7.?It has been me time since I have written a ter to The Times and its about ne I ventured another. The Times our old family newspaper, in fact, is one of our household necessities d its bright face and newsy colms always has a cordial welcome th us and our family. I always ad, besides its splendid editorial, e newsy letters from various corresndenls in different parts of the unty, and appreciate both of these r they are clean, clear and well goti up and this is what makes a par popular, always. I have been mck with Comrade G. T. Gault's ters in the last issues, that of the iirth especially; that paragraph in lich the writer deals with the situa>n politically on the Ridge. It is good, and covers so much ground this particular time that we feel e passing it on to others. Comtle Gault is one of the connecting ks between the past and present neration and what he says is well ?rth remembering. He is no "fire ter," and no bushwhacker to strike low the belt. He has already tasted s bitter pill of war and knows how express the horrors of its calamis and in his appeal in behalf of his reak and erring" brethren he jches a chord that finds a ready iponse in every patriotic heart? e that is filled with love for our low men and the fear of God. Wilm T. Sherman of incendiarv notory said: "War is hell." Yes, and might have emphasized its expresin by saying "War is hell turned >se." No matter whether it is beeen armed soldiers in the field of ttle contending for the mastery, or tween citizens of the same- cominwealth at the ballot box contendr for what they think is right?the ue is the same. It is true neveraless, that a good war is better an ignoble peace, however costly her may be. Miss Myrtice Fowler, the beautiful d attractive daughter of Mr. and rs. Wm. G. Fowler, was married to r. Arthur Wilkerson at the home of r parents last Wednesday evening, tne bride's uncle, Rev. J. T. Fow\ of McColl. The happy couple afr the consumation of the marriage remony took their departure for a bridal trip through several states and TP cities of our beloved Southland. We wish for them all the pleasure that a happy married life can afford. Ch The people of Salem are making ready for the meeting of the Bethel Presbytery which is to take place at 8:30 o'clock next Tuesday evening ) the 15th. Immediately after the ad- one joumment of the presbytery, prepa- tod tory services for the full communion the will begin and on the following Sab- pri bath the Lord's supper will be cele- vel brated. Rev. E. E. Gillespie of York- por ville will assist Rev. W. B. Arrow- the wood, the pastor, in the preaching agt service. We are authorized to say to that the public is cordially invited to wa attend any and all of these services, of Your correspondent is looking for- Iocj ward with much interest to the meet- me ing of synod at Union this fall which wai I hope to attend, not as a delegate / but as a quiet looker-ori. sai< Prof, and Mrs. L. B. Hames, who ma have been spending their vacation ing in the mountains of North Cai*olina, soo have returned and will open Sunny- the side school on the first of October. P Vox. Uni thr KELTON of owt Kelton, S. C., Sept. 7.?We are hay- of ing some hot weather now. Cotton is cull opening very fast and picking will be- con gin in earnest as soon as most of the ?rn fodder will be gathered. Politics is irnP very quiet on the Ridge and' tomor- reni row will decide the second primary. The) newspapers boosting Manning _ just as they did Smith and 1 guess he inst will be the next governor. mer The newspapers are full of resolu- to j tions, etc., concerning the cotton situ- com ation; almost all kinds of plans are tent suggested and it wont amount to a "1 row of pins unless there is some con- that certed action. With all the cotton bia growing states resolutions are like bini pie crust, easy broken and for all the stat cotton growing states to pass a law to reat cut their acreage 50 or 75' per cent stat of last years crop, I don't believe it T would stand the test of the courts, chai Yes, there are many that would join ball together to carry it into the courts to agr test the constitutionality of the law. pric I am no lawyer and never have had a ed case in court and don't want one but Tha I believe if all the cotton states were stra to get together and all pass a law man that every farmer could plant all the and land he wanted to in cotton but all on the bales he made to every plow, say men two to five hundred pound bales to B< the plow and all over that he made to the tax it $5.00 per hundred pounds lint for \ or $25.00 per bale and this tax money used to run each government. I believe such a law would stand in the courts as good as the road tax law 1. of our State; such a law would not de- in? prive any man from planting all his ning land in cotton if he chose to do so. 2. This idea of planting half the acre the in cotton next year that he planted ning this year is not a fair proposition for the < many reasons. First, many cotton 3. farmers have already cut their acre- the s age 50 per cent. It would not be ning fair for that poor farmer who only conta makes 4 to 6 bales to the plow and 4.' the other fellow who never has re- ^herduced his crop but rather increased it and is making from 15 to 20 bales to the plow and sometimes more and f^ft if every man was to reduce his acre- ( age 50 to 75 per cent, the farmers then would try to make as much cotton on char 7 1-2 acres as they were making on 5. 15 acres this year and and what that would be benefited. After all there is on 1 over one million bales old cotton whei on hand, a 15,500,000 crop making not < this year and nearly all of Europe or f now and soon will be engaged in one frorr of the greatest wars the world has ever known and no one known how 'hat long it will last, the hundreds of that thousands and likely millions of men hum killed and disabled in this greatest of and wars and the tens of millions of their use families unable to buy the cotton i requ goods that can be made out of co 'on " we had on hand and vet the l.'nited OUts States may be drawn into this war ''u! before it is ended. There are men in ?)nCl the United States who want to crown keep themselves with priory as generals and duct colonels, etc., little caring how many * privates there are to do the fighting. ''oa'1 We have a wise president and a wise load cabinet whom I believe will do .ill ^'ou they can to keep this country out of (1ors the struggle. Some who want to vet 'lls* some honor will cry our flag has heen insulted or our nation's honor is at P'p" stake. Well just let them tackle on: w'u< country and we will give them the best we have. Well, I will get. back "rol to the cotton situation?unless we can get some kind of law on the cotton question that I have outlined, we had just as well drop the matter and !? * j, . every man exercise his own judgment. . ^ granting that we can get all the moil- ds ey we want and can get storage for Per< it for one year and then raise another ls crop. It all would be put on the mar- P0*?! ket and little demand for it and w< . 1 would be glad to get five cents for it in should the war continue a few months. ^a;vs The best thing the South should do t"'3 should the war continue until next March would be for us to plant not a seed of cotton. The best piece I have seen on the cotton question was that , dictated by J. W. Norwood, of Green- .0 . ville, in The Columbia State. Mrs. Gibson, wife of Rev. Gibson, 1' " who has been in a hospital in Spar- J? : tanburg, has returned home. Sunday night closed a very inter- .! . esting meeting at Mt. Joy Baptist '"'J church. Rev. Wren did the preaching. , He is a very forceful speaker. The . result was several joined the church. . Misses Elizabeth and Mary Little and Mabel Kelly, Messrs Fondren and Bill Little, and Charley Garner left this week for Landrum to attend school. G. T. G. gay| Caterpillar Has Reached Greenwood County. an;i The cotton caterpillar has reached brie Greenwood county. Messrs O. A. Kth- Seni eridge, Payne Henderson, James Stal- ed 1 worth and James Rodgers of the pat< Phoenix section, have found the pest that on their farms and with the assist- fore ance of Demonstration Agent Paris, Stat are at work to get rid of it. Cotton rece where the worm has been found will be destroyed. No reports of the cat- ton erpillar's appearance in any other star part of the county have been made.? Till] j Greenwood Journal. wou 1 urty-one food dealers Now under indictment arK?d Under Sherman Law With "rice Fixing?Others To Be Indicted. ^ashington, September 4.?Thirtyi food dealers were indicted here aV by a Federal grand jury under Sherman law on counts charging fixing. It was the first big de?pnient in the investigation the detment of justice is conducting at . direction of President Wilson, "nst food dealers who are alleged have seized upon the European r..a:s a pretext to increase the cost 'lv>ng. All the indicted men are al produce dealers or commission chants. No nationally known firm I 5 indicted. tt the department of justice it was 1 government agents working in ny States for evidence of price fix, were expected to make reports n, which officials hoped would be basis of other indictments, attorney Cleneral Gregory said; der conditions now existing "ughout the world, capitali/ tion misfortune and oppression of our > people by the arbitrary increase Ibe prices of foodstuffs are so pearly reprehensible that, whenever victions can lie obtained, the govment will insist upon sentence of 'risor.inent?no fine or no civil ledv will i>e deemed adequate. To Ask for Indictments. United States attorneys are being meted promptly to ask for indict- ' its whenever the facts will permit, >ush these to early trial, and upon I'iftiAnu *~ ? iu iiisi.ii, upon prison sen es. It must, of course, be remembered without the District of Columonly those argreements and comitions which affect directly intere or foreign commerce can be hed. As to other matters, State utes must be relied upon." he men indieteif- here today are 'Red with having fixed nrices "by ots," "suggestions" or verbal cement, and to have circulated e lists which completely eliminata comparative market for food, t is alleged to be an unlawful reint of trade prohibited by Shcranti-trust law between the states, in federal districts. The penalty ' conviction is a year's imprisont or a $5,000 fine, or both, mch warrants were issued for all indicted men and bail was given their appearance in court. Farm Folks are Learning. Thev are beginning to quit farmby signs of the moon and beginto farm by sense of the earth. They have quit "laying by" b^ time of the year and are beginto 'lay by" by the condition of :rop. They no longer buy fertilizer by mell of the goods, but are beginKuir if f Ar fVlA nlonf '* ' VU UUJ *V v.x. J'?uia lUUU 11 ins. They are begining to realize that is no sense in killing Southern < I all summer and buying West- . Siss all winter; nor in paving and brokers' charges on West*or* and meat when we can raise ? Here without these extra ges. And especially do they realize it doesn't pay both to pay freight lay and buy nitrogen in sacks, l clover, vetch, and cowpeas wi?l , inly furnish cheap feed, hut gatliortunes in nitrogen "free-gratis" ( i the air above us. , Thov are beginning also f?> see it is cheaner to use horse-labor needs food but not clothing than an labor which needs both food clothing?and cheapest of all to a maximum of machinery which ires neither food nor clothing. , They see. too. that the main I tion is not how much we make.: how much we keep, and that tinie; es and /foolish marketing may ? men poor in spite of wise pro- I ion. And finally they are heginnig to ( ize that just as there is many ;? 1 which one horse working alone! ij 1-- 1 ? . t . iu never midge i?ui wmvn sevcra' :es hitched together null easily, so there is many a nlan for the| tier's benefit which farmers sin-1 handed can do nothinp with, hut : ;h a group of farmers hitched to-1 ler can easily accomplish. The | fressive Farmer. Can't Lay it on the Negro, he Pensacola News is an advocate i educational procrress in Florida, | is inclined to excuse the State for present bad showing. "Florida' tentage of illiteracy," it remarkdoubtless largely due to its netrre ulation." his is a common failinp with e-; ; the South. Whenever some one ? "The percentape of illiteracy in State is twice the American avte," some one is likely to answer. ?that's just because so main nets can't read and write." ttrtunately for the sake of truth, ever, the census shows separatehe figures for white and colored iracv. and we can favor the Pen-! >la News with the fijrures for ida's white illiteracy entirely ft from that of the neproes. Klor' illiteracy for native whites of ve parentage exceeds "> per cent, reas in twenty states of the union illiteracy for such native whites than 1 per cent.?The Progres- ' Parmer. Tillman is at iio.mk. * Blease is Dead and That State is Emancipated. ut?usta, Sept. 5.?"Blease is dead. we should say little of the dead i pood," was the prelude to a ' interview here today, in which ^ *tor Renjamin R. Tillman deelar"South Carolina has emanci^ herself from Rlear.eism and ; Governor Cole Blease has been v?r eliminated as a factor in the es politics by his defeat in the it senatorial primary." , Wl not going hack to Washinir- ( before December, unless they ] * to dock my pay," said Senator j when asked how long he 'd remain south. iflHfe, jTA ATA ATA jTa JTA JTA A^A A^A ATA ^HF IMBP f^T f^r^r^r^r^r Ty llNSUR FIRE y automoi Y TORNADO X PLATE GL A BURGLAR A ACCIDEN1 HEALTH f EMPLOYE X BONDS X "Ask the Man VYhc Y X SEE, PHONI | E. M. G At The Union Y UNIO!> A^A A^A A^A -t .?,^A ta" "A" I Just Re |A FRESH SHIPMENT ( ? FINE CA Y VNunnaily's, Mary Gar< v A Queen Victoria, \ And We Give Tickets f. y > ?TRADE W and get votes for tti & given at the I'MILHOUS I y y THE REXAL > WRIGHTSVILLEj ?BEACH? AND RETURN ST.50-GOOD 10 DAYS-$7,501 EVERY THURSDAY I). & G. S. RAILROAD AND SEABOARD "Tlu? Progressive Railway of South." For further information apply to Ticket Agent, U. (?. S., Union, or write Fred Geissler, A. G. 1*. A., Atlanta, Ga. Hi ->t OYSTERS! I We will begin serving our patrons with Oysters on Sept. 4th. You can find the finest Oysters and best service in the city. Served in all styles at ( popular prices. Bulk Oys- j ters on sale throughout 1 season. ' t SPENCER'S CAFE , Next Door to Fant Bros. Co. 1 i t.h.munro 1 Attorney at Law union, s. c. j 3fficje opposite fostoff1ce j RUB-MY-TISM ] Will cure your Rheumatism Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Jolic, Sprains. Bruises, Cuts and tturns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Etc." Antiseptic Anodyne, used in- j ernally and externally. Price 25c. J - ~ j .ANCEl I iile y i y ASS * y a r f y ;rs' liability y T X > Insures With Me" y j or write % ARNER | Hardware Co. Y i, s. c. <? * ! ; * ceivcd | Y )F THE FOLLOWING | vNDIES | Y totes for Women I Crane's Chocolates V T Y to the Airdome f t ITH US? ^ ie 5 Grand Prizes % Airdome ^ 3RUG CO. | ,L STORE f T It Makes a Great Difference which undertaker you call into your ho m?the careless and haphazard or the capable and proficient. We have not only had years of experience, but have coupled with it years of actual study. BAILEY UNDERTAKING CO. Undertakers Main Street at Railroad Crossing. Rhone 106. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Your druggist will rcfunil money if P \Z(1 Ol.VI Mi-.NT fails to cure any case of Itching ltliiiil. I'deeding or Protruding Piles in fit <> 14 days. The iirsl t-.|ihiutioii gives Ease ami Rest. 60c. Having us submit our designs and prices assures you if a wide assortment to seect from, prices that are >ased on finest quality mar)le and granite and unbiased advice. Allow us to draw your at.ention to the fact that we ire a local concern with a eputation for excellent vork and are able to refer /on to many examples of >ur work in this section. Air_ ? 11 we win appreciate an oj)n xirtunity to submit data md samples in your home >r at your establishment. BAILEY UNDERTAKING CO. Only One "BROMO QUININE" 'o get the genuine, cnll for full name, LATTATVK HROMO QUININE. Look for signature of t. W. GROVE. Cures a Cold in One Day. Stops ougb and headache, and works off -old. 25c.