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if vi h mum* ^vwjvrnivi/^shyniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiivifvfvvvimi ! a m under 1 aa /&f\covernment | msnnnziSMSUPERVISION WflffiTfW MEMBER BANK UNDER j : VEACT i ; ?THE? : Merchants & Planters Nat'l Bank i "The Old Reliable" I The Oldest and Largest Bank in Union County \ ^ w ; On Jan. 1, 1015, we paid our 5 per cent, semi-annual ^ | Dividend No. 81, making a total of $201,600 paid to our > ; stockholders in Cash Dividends since organization. . ; While the chief object of this bank is to accumulate J ; profits for its shareholders, it is ever mindful of the rights > of its customers, and its constant aim is for the advance ! mcnt of the community in which it is located. Its manage- ! S ment is liberal, pursues a progressive Dolicy, and adheres ; ; strictly to legitimate lines of banking. ! If this appeals to you J i LOOK FOR THE BANK WITH THE CHIME CLOCK j : : And deposit your money where it will be absolutely sate ; I i | F. M. FARR, W. F. GILLIAM, J. D. ARTHUR, ? ? President, Vice-President, Cashier, i ? a ? e : : * iiM?iniiiinnniaiMaaiuiimiimrnanMMiiiiMfttwiiafiiin^ |SUMMER'S BUGGIESf V V\NSSV\S\VV\\\\\V\VV\N\\VVN\\\VV\\VS\\S\\\V X v t These Buggies are Guaranteed f X X \ With fair and reasonable use FOR ONE YEAR. X f _, vi ?? It any part of the vehicles fail, by reason of ?|> Y imperfect material or workmanship, and said V % ^ parts are returned to us, we will replace same ?? without charge. ?|? Y Y Y ^ Come* and Look at Them! f X X i The Peoples Supply Co. I i j TO CHICAGO ": Through Slopping Car Daily Reginning November 22, 1914. ] FROM Charleston, Columbia, Spartanburg Tryon Hendersonvillo, Ashevillo, i Hot Springs, Knoxville.?"Queen & Crescent Route," "Rig Four Route?." CAROLINA SPECIAL Greatly improved Service from the Carolinas and Georgia to ( ?Chicago and the West.? SOUTHERN RAILWAY Premier Carrier of the South Leave Charleston __ __ __ 8:00 a.m Arrive __ ? 9:40 p.m. 1 Leave Columbia __ __ __ __12:55 p.m. Arrive ? ? 4:45 p.m. Leave Spartanburg __ __ __ 4:110 p.m. Arrive ? ? 1:45 p.m. Leave Tryon __ __ ... __ __ 5:40 p.m. Arrive 12:25 p.m. Leave Hendersonvillo __ __ 6:55 p.m. Arrive ? ? 11 :R0 a.m. Leave Asheville -- -- -- 7:80 p.m. Arrive __9:20 a.m. ! Leave Knoxville -- -- -- _-12:05 a.m. Leave ? 5:10 a.m. Arrive Cincinnati __ __ -- 10:55 a.m. Leave ? 6:85 p. m. 1 Arrive Indianapolis __ __ 3:20 p. m. Leave -- ? -- 2:55 p. m. Arrive Chicago __ __ 9:00 p.m. Leave ? ? 8:55 a.m. Excellent connections made from and for Aiken, Augusta, Charlotte, Salis-i bury, Greenville, Greensboro, Goldsboro, Raleigh and Intermediate Points. EQUIPMENT?Observation Drawing-room, open section sleeping Cars Charleston-Cincinnati, Drawing-room Sleping Car CharlestonChicago, Coaches Charleston-Cincinnati, Dining Car Service. It. C. COTNER, Traveling Passenger S. H. McLEAN, District Pass. Agent, Agent, 113 W. Main St., Spartanburg, 1513 Main St., Columbia, S. C. S. C. STORE YOUR COTTON -WITHFarmers' Bonded Warehouse Co. Home Enterprise Bonded Custodian. Cotton fully insured, and when you get ready to sell you get your own cotton and sell to whom you please. R. F?. HARRY, - Custodian Lawrence G. flouthard BARRON & BARRON ATTORNEY AT LAW Attorneys at Law UNION, S. C. Practice in all Courts. Monwiii practice in ail Courts ey to loan on City and Farm Office Opposite Post Office Property. EMANCIPATION HAS BEEN THE NEGRO'S WORST FOE So Says Negro Leader Who Declares It Alienated the Southern White Man In a notable address delivered in Little Rock, Ark., last Sunday to negroes, Dr. Wilkins, a negro leader, told them that in the matter of alienating the Southern white man from the negro emancipation had been the negro's worst foe. His address is "going the rounds" of the country. Among other things, he said: "I say hero now, once for all, if we are to celebrate this occasion (Emancipation day), we cannot in any conscience forget those who, in anguish and pain, still held out to us a hand without which we must have perished from the earth?our freedom a travesty, and Lincoln's proclamation would have had no place except as an epitaph of what might have been. Celebrate White Man's Kindness "Let us then celebrate this day in memory of their helpful friendship and in memory that we had the good sense to prove our worthiness of their benefactions by not resorting to torch or anarchy. And with a blush of shame that anywhere in our beloved Southland any negro's pretended friends supposed that Lincoln's proclamation ever comtemplated the immediate elevation of the ex-slave to place and power that meant the humiliation,. not only of the negro's best friends, but the destruction of that reliance which was the most important element in the remaking of this Southland. "Does anyone believe that Lincoln would ever have signed a paper in which ho could have foreseen such a saturnalia of wickedness as reigned over the South during the days of roconstructi'on ? A period of our history that every man who remembers it would gladly blot out if he could. No it would have been better for that great heart to be still in that noble breast than know that an instrument of his making could be so construed as to produce such a condition in the land of his birth. Clod was merci'fu* in litiMiiK nim irom sucn a scene, He never intended it. Xo! Not that man whoso tender heart held no malice And, like the Master of Galilee, ho taught love of one's enemies. A Touching Incident "Please excuse this seeming digression. I remember well, as if it was hut yesterday, when old mistress came in to the kitchen and told my motliei: " 'Aunt Jane, you are free. As free as I am. And you can go.' "She wore a large gray shawl, ana as she turned to go I saw tears on her pale cheeks. My mother caught hold of her shawl and with streaming eyes said: "'Miss Jennie, where shall I go? What shall I do? T have nine children, and I know no one but you. Why luunh I lCt?*v HI . . % "We were all crying now. ' " 'Oh, no, Aunt Jane', she said, :you need go nowhere. You can stay right here if you wish, and as long as I have a crust of bread you and your children shall eat. I will pay you what wages I can. And as long as r live and you stay, if you suffer I will suffer too'. "We stayed and she did suffer much more than we. This scene was at th?' moment being enacted in thousands r>f homes all over this broad land. Those words were as the star of Beth lohem on that dark night to every negro then on the plantations of the South, as he stood dumfounded at seeing old mistress in tears. Denounces Carpetbagger "And when old master came to his ililapidated home from the war, he said 'amen' to every word that old mistress had said. And all was well, until the carpetbagger came and, with his damnable practices, preaching and promises, hatched the hell into which the South was plunged from '(>5 to '7f> and out of which the negro came reft of the friendship and help of those whom he knew and who knew him those whom he loved and who loved him. And the scamp fled with his ill gotten gains to safer quarters and left us to shift the best we could and meet the storm of an outraged manhood. Today I wish you to celebrate the release of our friends from a worse slavery, a more galling yoke, than we ever wore. And let us celebrate by returning to our first and best love, and let us join hearts ami hands with them and sing with all the soul: "'1 never will leave or forsake thee. Where you live I will live, your Cod shall be my God, And where you die there will I b buried'. The Real Freedom "If this celebration shall mean this to us, then long we shall have occasion to shout 'free at last'. This i. the only kind of blow that we may strike which will mean liberty and freedom. It is in "this way, and in this way only, will the negro in America, ever be free. Let us first free the white man from the impressions we made on him under vicious leadership of false friends,and then we may hope for him to free us from the bonds which our own hands have welded about our feet. And not until that day arrives can we have an emancipation celebration that will mean anything. "Let us regain the love which we forfeited for the few political husks on which we fed, and that love will make us free. At present I think \?? are foolish for celebrating an event which has meant nothing to us but humiliation, persecution and alienation, degredation, obloquy, scorn and contempt. We are celebrating an event that has never taken place, and you know it as well as I. But some things did take place on that memorable first day of January. The ruined Southern white man gave us homes and food. He fed us when hungry, f~ _ & fJervous? f< mjMrs. Walter Vincent, ^ Pleasant Hill, N. C., FriSt jSJrites: "For three sumy^ers, I suifered from pS (SJ-rvousness, dreadful 1*^ &)Ains in my back and /s\fldes, and weak sinking |@ j^^ells. Three bottles of 5r*Jardui, the woman's ^J?nic, relieved me entire1 feel like another (g)|erson, now." |@ TAKE iCardui | $THe Woman's Tonic % ? for over 50 years, Cardui has been helping pQs (S to relieve women's un- |@ K necessary pains and building weak women up I/sj? J to health and strength. "j* 9 It will do the same for r^ji 0 you, if given a fair trial. 1^^ ^ So, don't wait, but begin ^ taking Cardui today, for |@ *f its use cannot harm you, 9 and should surely do you J good. E-72 ??L ched us when naked, administered ui us when sick and visited us when i'ftrison. And our Lord says for one to<> that is to do it for Him. Let us ' nc forget it, but celebrate it. lve miber all ye who think that Liner's proclamation set you free, that Tft is so, our white friends were oi saviors". Jst to Remind You tat we are determined that n concern in business shall gve you as good values and a reasonable prices, quality aid service considered, as \V3 will, every- day of 1915. We mean to make every ddlar you spend with us this year purchase for you a full dollars worth, and to lot you know that we appreciate vnur business more tnan any other concern that you could spend it with. Don't forget that we are headquarters for the fullest lines of Cakes, Crackers, Wafers, Breads, and Tidbits; we carry plain, assorted Fruit Cakes, the full National Line, and the famous Sunshine Lines, package and bulk Cakes, and out famous Golden Loaf, White Loaf, Marble Loaf, Jelly Loaf, Spicedt Loaf, Raisin Loaf Cakes for 10c each are the greatest ever sole for the money. When it comes to Teas and Coffees, we challenge South Carolina for value quality and price. If you know what you want we wil supply it. If you don'1 know what you want, tr> our line through and we guarantee to suit you ir taste, quality and price, ane when you find out what yoi want you can always ge the same kind. For w< keep up the quality ane grades that have made us famous for the best Tea: and Coffees. Still selling the best Flou ever brought to South Caro lina, at from 50c to $1.00 pe .barrel less than any mil will sell you a car load o the same brand. You can safely buy ever, pound of Flour you can us between now and the nex wheat harvest from us an< save a dollar or more pe barrel on the purchase a soon as made. Listen, our supply is lim ited, we have saved the buj ers of Flour hundreds o dollars, and will as long a we can, but it is up to yo to buy now. THE UNION 6R0CERY GO. L. L. Wagnon, Manager Phones 100 and 80 i I i A^lfci j^k A^A A^l i^l i^A 1^(1 iftk | RnrkprQ H Comfortable % i ItUulxulo IMiUll^I TURMTUKE,, iIand Arm ^Sfl~~ I j Chairs i i PRICES A are conducive to restful satisfaction?especially ? V the lovely and cosy ones we are now offering at V most tempting prices. Summer Rockers and Arm A Chairs in great variety for indoors or for porch A A or piazza. We are showing a full line of House- A A hold Furniture, Rugs and Carpets, Mattings and <|> V Oil-Cloths, at attractive prices. V I Bradley-Estes Co. f WIRED AT A PROFIT TO YOU j) The cost of wiring your home for electric lights will return to you many times over in convenience, ^ cheer, cleanliness and increased illumination. We are making a special effort to get Electric Lights in every home and the cost of the installa- | lion varies from $10.00 up including all labor and motawol flail nnH lpf ns ffivfi vnn fnvthpv infnr- I ? mation. MUNICIPAL ELECTRIC LIGHT AND WATER WORKS R. A. Easterling, Supt. INSPECTION ORDER Rock Hill, March 25?Company H, had UUDM IBQUIUi J.'irsu infantry. ?* Columbia, February 23?Sanitary General orders for the annual in- detachment, Second infuntry; field spection of the National Guard of hospital; State armory.?The State. South Carolina have been sent out to ' all company commanders from the oflice of W. W. Moore, adjutant gen- SEND FOR FREE Catalog-Circular eral. The order for the inspection I F2 ,!?VUte il?,\ *' copynghted, B ., , , , ,, ?nd the 90 Day* 1 realment and has been signed by Gov. Manning. mcKISSICK'S method I ' The inspection will begin at Edge- I of treating the Scalp/Hair and Skin with No. I [ field, February 8. H VScK^ssick Tea I Following is the itinerary of inspec- P. o.Bn* 102. Wilmington. D?l. I Edgefield, February 8?Company F, ROOSEVELT'S BR AG A DOC IO Second Infantry. . ? Orangeburg, February <>, 10?Com- rhe eynical London Outlook says: ' pany II, Second Infantiy; Company Mr. Roosevelt declares that if the r L, Third Infantry. United States had had an intelligent Elloree, February 11?Company G and res?lute president and secretary Third infantry ' State they would have protested , Sumter, February 12?Company L, against the German invasion of BelI Second infantry. the Japanese capure of KiaoGeorgetown, February 15?Com- chow, the sinking of the Kaiser Wil1? 'ruiwi helm der Grosse and the sowine of J * 9 * ?*?-* Iiuaiin^ , lu^iinuiatti . ' > and battallion field officers, chaplain mii1,os 'J? open sea. > and assistant I. S. A. P.; headquarters Mr. Roosevelt, owing to his native company and supply company, Third ifodesty, does not exactly say where , infantry. the States could find this hypothe, Charleston, February 1G, 17, 18, 19, tical intelligent and resolute person, 20?Companies A, B, C and D, Third ut one 18 permitted to guess and to 1 infantry. sure that were he in office and a t Timmonsville, February 22?Com- vote could be caught thereby he pany I, Second infantry. would denounce the transit of MerHartsville, February* 23?Company cury or the procession of the equinox3 G, Second infantry. e8 Wlta ?Qual intelligence and resolui Darlington, February 23?Company tl0"* , , K, Second infantry. If. M.r* Roosevelt were president Bennettsville, February 23?Com- ft this time it is sate to guess that i pany E, Second infantry. hls discretion, which has always been Cheraw. Februarv 26?Company I. tbe better Part of hls va,or? despite ^ Third infantry. "IS thrasonic reputation, would B Camden, March 1?Company A, Pror*>pt him to reflect that he was i Second infantry not dealing with weak and helpless 1 Columbia, March 2, 3, 4, 6, X, 9- J/"1"!"1 when his bristles began to 3 Companies H, C and 1), Second in- as f" ' Senator Bourne 3 fantry; State headquarters; State would f?- gainst the lug Powers armory; State ride range; First hri- ln 'he European war-Colgade headquarters; regimental and 111 )la ecort. ^ 1' battallion field officers, chaplain and To be broadminded is simply to be ( _ assistant I. S. A. P.; headquarters patient with those who do not think company (less band section) and sup- ag we dQ# ) '* ply company, Second infantry. 1 New Brookland, Mar*-h 10?Comf sirtr;1 infanlry CLUBBING OFFER! Anderson, March 11, 12?Company WLWMUIIIU VI kill ir Ft! TOi raf infantrtr anrl liun/l unntinn y Second infantry. Wc Will fllVC a years' 0 wiiiiamston, March 15?Band sec- subscription or a years' t tion, First infantry. renewal to The Times ci Peizer, March 16?Company g, aiMj The Progressive First infantry. Farmer for $1.50. You 1 FirsT'irifant'ry 17-c?mP'?'y saVC 50c In the COmbina Laurens, March 18?Company D, tion. First infantry. [. Woodruff, March 19?Company F, HT |J f T| WkM C ^ First infantry. I il KL I I VYI K19 ~ Union, March 22?Company M, f First infantry. g Spartanburg, March 23?Company I, First infantry. ~ u and battau'lon* fleM^offlc^^pT.'Tn' Dr. Virgil R. Hawkins and assistant I. S. A. P.jheadquarters _ _ _ _ company (less band section) supply DENTIST company and Company L, First infantry. office over mutual itn:ftn q p Fort Mill, March 26?Company K, dry goods company UIUUI1, O. Kj. First infantry. ?????i? ?