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I A ($TUNDER 1 ' hAk ?\COVERNMENT i (SL^supervisiok tewftnnfw member bank under \ JIlinULiiJlM J "Ktf eederal re5er ve act . : ?thh^? : ! ii i o. 11.4I1 n 1. Mcrundms 06 ridmers ndii Ddiiiv "The Old Reliable" j 3 The Oldest and Largest Bank in Union County ! i | "SAFETY FIRST" is a fundamental principle with j this bank. The safety of your money is the first con- ? ; sideration in opening a bank account, and we will be ; pleased to have you call and let us show you the many ! | safeguards we place around your money. J ; You can teach your DOLLARS to have more Cents ! by depositing them in our SAVINGS DEPARTMENT, I ' where we pay the highest rate of interest, consistent i ? with safe and sound banking methods. J LOOK FOR THE BANK WITH THE CHIME CLOCK ! | And deposit your money where it will be absolutely sale n ; F. M. FARR, W. F. GILLIAM, J. D. ARTHUR, ! ! President. Vice-President. Cashier. ? a * i a ? L"1 rf IIIHimHiniMiiiU : ICoai Coaili WW A y We are prepared to sell you Coal at y y prices as low as any?quality the best. V We handle Egg Coal, Nut Coal and Soft % A Coal. Your orders entrusted to us will A A receive careful attention. We give our A y customers lump coal and use dust for y y making ice. y A if^We make one delivery of Ice every A V morning. ? < I Union Ice & Fuel Co. | % Phonc103 % 4T| 4^* ATfc ATA ATA AT4 AT^ A^A ATA AT4 AT4. A^A ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA ATa ATA A^A ATA ATA A^A A^A ATA A#W ^ # y + ?6> #> "y ^ | THE | i"Old Hiclcorv"! I Wagon 1 Y T | Has Led Them All For More X f Than FORTY YEARS | Y Y | And Still Leads X f * Y For sale by y X X | The Peoples Supply Co. I ~ ? I IIIWIWIIII..IM1IMIIW ?UJ11HW, A Visitor to This Market I cannot fail to be impressed with the perfect clean liness apparent. No housewife could be more par- | ticular than we are to exclude dirt of any kind. Come and select your meat in person and you will better appreciate our care in this respect. That's only one of our ways of making this market the very best place at which to buy your meat. We have an experienced meat cutter. City Market and Cattle Co. E. R. GODSHALL. Mgr. Superstitution may restrain us from Dimples in the cheeks often denote evil, when morals do not deter. roguery; but in the chin they are a Indigestion is often only indignant mark of determination and strength love. of character. ? ' ill" MANNING'S PROMPTNESS 1 PROBABLY SAVED NJfiGRO. E Governor Promised Quick Trial an4 Pickens County Crowd Disperse. "fee Columbia, Nov. 29.?Prompt action Y on the part of Governor Manning in In promising to order a special term of court to try the case probably savad m a lynching in Pickens county thia morning, for the crowd of men who gi had assembled with the declared ih- tu tention 01 dealing out summary jus- 01 tice to Pete Hamilton ,a negro, alleged to have attempted assault on tli a white woman, dispersed when as- Jii sured that the governor would order a special term of court to try the case; ds Sheriff Roark, of Pickens county, got ti' hold of the negro and got him out of H the way, and is thought to be on his way. here to the penitentiary with prisoner. | n Long distance telephone reports from the scene stated that this <morp.? I ing a crowd of determined white mpn I gathered at Easley, in Pickens coun- I ty, with the deel .ation of getting? a-B negro who was said to have attemptweh I assault on a prominent white woman there last Saturday night. Citizens of si Easley pleaded with the crowd to al- gl low the law to take its course, ac- bj cording to the information, and fin- jJ ally this the crowd agreed to do on the condition that a special term of court be ordered immediately by Gov- w ernor Manning. The Easley citizei! who was trying to quiet the crowd telephoned the governor and he prompt- jYi ly agreed to call the special term of of court. This being communicated to th the crowd they dispersed. ??8 i\f i-:i - _ i I? i ? I lueanwiuie a long distance tele* I phone message from Pickens stated |p] that Sheriff Roark, of that countyjca , had secured the negro and was takinMpi him to a place of safety. Columbia. Nov. 29.?Pete Hamilton, a negro, charged with attempted ? criminal assault, was brought to the to penitentiary tonight at 10:20 o'clocjc by Sheriff Roark, of Pickens. TheRti crime is alleged to have been com-1 so mitted at Easley, in Pickens county, |w< "We just outwitted the crowd and lit rushed the negro to Columbia," saidflhi the sheriff. gr JONESVILLE 5 Jonesville, Nov. 30.?Our people are Hi enjoying clear, crisp weather, fine for Si killing hogs and rounding up the crop se for the year. th A daughter of Mr. John Garner, nn who died yesterday at his home near th Lockhart Junction, was buried Monday at Gilead. Miss Garner was 37 years of of age. She had not been well for th many years. Rev. Lewis M. Rice re conducted the funeral services^at the th grave. I Mr. D., L. McLaughlinof^^HjflfcL ^ Jone^Ttf?iSr Mr. F. G. Austell lives and known, ss ho the T. L. Hames place. Mr. Mc- up Laughlin has also purcased the store house of D. B. Freeji'n on Pacolet po street. This means that Mr. McLaugh- or lin will move to Jonesville. pe Mrs. Hattie McWhirter, of our town, fo was elected president of the State wl chapter of the D. A. R.'s at Aiken at la< their last session there. Mrs. McWhirter has taken great interest in the work of the U. D. C.'s, both in her local chapter and the State chapter, hence her promotion to the high office and now her local chapter is planning to give her a grand reception in the near future, which will no doubt be a brilliant occasion. We get Rev. Mr. Justus back to our charge for the next conference year, which gives general satisfaction to his flock. It I spent Thanksgiving Day with Mrs. ? Bank Harris, down on Brown's creek, if and partook of a sumptuous dinner with about 30 other invited guests. I went to the place where my father and mother were married in Noveni- It ber, 1833, the same night the stars It fell, and then I went to the spot where It I was born. There are no houses at either one of these place now, but the very ground is dear to me and it J seems like holy ground to me. I j? thought of the touching lines of som- ? of the old-time songs, such as "'Way Down Upon the Sewanee River,"' . "Take Me Home to the Place Where I first Saw the Light" and "Backward,-Turn Backward, () Time in Your Flight," and others. Mrs. Martha Mitchell and daughter, Amy, of Atlanta, have been visiting Mrs. I,. J. Fowler but have returned home. Miss Cleo Dobson spent Thanksgiving with her parents in Gaffney. Miss Annie Miller spent Thanksgiving in Rock Hill. Miss Sarah Black visited her aunt, Mrs. Barron, in Union and Miss Byrtlc Bennett visited her parents at ^ Cannon's Camp Ground. ki< Telephone. ? ca Cures Old Sores, Other Remedies Won't Cure. j an fhe worst cases, no matter of how longstanding, to are cured by the wonderfut, old reliable Dr. , * Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. II relieves l0' I'ain and Heala at the name time. 25c. 50c, Si.Of. lik J. T. Collins, who has conducted a j department store in Chester for sev ' eral years, has filed a volunary petition in bankruptcy. ^ The Best Hot Weather Tonic GROWS TA8TKI.K89chill TONIC enriches the blood, builds up the whole system and will wonderfully strengthen and fortify you to withstand P'l the depressing effect of the hot summer. SOc. Dc - ' Ml MONEY TO LEND Co ?N FARM LANDS J* $.100.00 to $10,000?Ten years time, rr See Qu JNO. K. HAMBLIN Lawyer Office 2nd door East of Postoffice. tf. ur I ilRED S6UTHERNERS. futation of a Familiar Slander. newspaper writer in the periodic attack in a New aper on a great business >f* the South allows himik of "The South, where i and children are 'tired.'" of Washington, the Virrenowned for his adveni as for the sustained vigturity. the Virginia legislature c Henry's fiery eloquence i of national independence. Virginian, who by his ilry exploits in the Revolu U* TTV1I VIIV IIMHIV VI Ul^lll/ 11VIOC Ty" Lee. ASouth Carolina, Marion and SumMbstitute of almost all things exBims and courage, checked Tarlinvasion by what a historian Br "an irregular, harrassing wartthat for daring and dash, ingenuB>f plans, pertinacity of purpose Bkoneral effectiveness, is without a 111 el in the war." Br 32 of the first 36 years after Organization of the United States rarnment, the presidency was held natives of Virginia?Washington, lu-son, Madison, Monroe?all men Hat Southerner, Andrew Jackson, Jo followed them, was never susRted, either before, or during his pht years in the presidency, of beg "tired." The successful defense 1 Now Orleans was ascribed more an to any other cause, to Jackson's ilmost frenzied energy." "Davey" Crockett, the tireless exorer and dauntless soldier, and Deitur. the conqueror of the Barbary rates, were Southerners. Taylor, the driving force of the exican war, with his victories of do, Alto, Monterey and Buena Vista the last named against odds of four one?was a Southerner. In the War Between the States, the gor, energy, enterprise ^ and re urcefulness of the Southern men sre as remarkable as their courage, needs only to mention Robert E. Lee id "Stonewall" Jackson. Tennessee ive also to the Union cause the Neln of modern American history, jvid Farragut. Even now we have in the White ouse a Southerner, who held the xty-third congress in continuous ssion from March 4 to October 24, rough a blistering Washington sumer, when he was to all appearance, e only person not "tired." Of Southern activity in the pursuits peace, we need no other testimony an the tremendous energy that has covered from the utter wasting of e w?r?lands devastated, u^Blestroyed or dilapidated, farms flM|decay, the men who might 85 Cr^~ PTFpanu ouyof tne desolation} somew, the men of the South have built i wealth and prosperity again. One is indeed ignorant who supses that Southerners are not active vigorous. In fact, the Southern ople seem to be rather conspicuous r the very activity and vigor in li'ch their critic assumes them to be zking.?Exchange. lis iiuwu i^uuiin: irnie that Rood old-time preparedness, -? mme that pood old-time preparedness, mme that pood old-time preparedness, It's pood enouph for me. was pood for old Georpe Washinpton, was pood for old Georpe Washinpton, was pood for old Georpe Washinpton, And it's pood enouph for me. was pood for Andrew Jackson, was pood for Andrew Jackson, was pood for Andrew Jackson, And it's pood enouph for me. is pood for Woodrow Wilson, is pood for Woodrow Wilson, is pood for Woodrow Wilson, And it's pood enouph for me. ?The State. UNION PROOF lould Convince Every Union Reader. The frank statement of a neiphbor, llinp the merits of a remedy,Bids you pause and believe. The same endorsement By some stranper far away Commands no belief at all. ftere's a Union case. A Union citizens testifies. Read and be convinced. R. E. Henderson, No 1 Louise St., i*2n, says: "I caupht cold on my ineys and it brought on backache 'ten when I stooped over, pain ught me in the small of my back d I had to brace myself in order straighten up. My kidneys acted > freely and the secretions' burned * red hot coals. There was also t reat deal of sediment deposited in e secretions. After I had suffered nonth, a friend suggested Doan's < ney Pills and I got a box. The g few doses relieved me and one % cured me. The cure has been peril ent." . F -ice 60c, at all dealers. Don't simV ask for a kidney remedy?get il i's Kidney Pills?the same that rl Henderson had. Foster-Milbum >.jj Props., Buffalo, N. Y.?Adv. i' luMae Tint Dees Net Affect Tin Head PT*te tonic and laxative effect, I.AXAMO OUIMINKfi better than ordinary id does not cause nervousness nor bead. Remember the foil name ami >e eignature of B. W. OROVH- 23c. A |nan can't get ahead of the world il? i he is born with one. Parents Should F This. Simple Laxative Compound Helps to Correct Constipation in Children. With all children there are times when the bowels fail to act naturally and it becomes necessary for the patients to administer a remedy. Cathartics and purgatives should never be used as these agents afford only temporary relief while their violent action shocks the system unduly.' Mrs. Eva F. Gaff, 617 10th St., Washington, D. C., says that her little girl, Marie, had been subject to constipation. antl that cho n- /,-,J F ??? - MKV avuiiu i/r* vuiU" well's Syrup Pepsin the best remedy because of its mildness, and now always keeps a bottle of it in the house. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin i's a compound of simple laxative herbs, free from opiates or larcotic drugs of any kind, and is an ideal remedy for children because of its mild action and positive effect. Its use tends to and restore formal regularity, strengthen the impaired bowel action and restore normal regularity. It is important that parents should know of a dependable remedy with no Edisonia Thursday "TUn tr;_ a nc uiiiiuucss ui v ir I With Edna Mayo and Br; I superb acting; splendid i R Saturday?"Neal of th S the most popular serials a | more numbers complete a Helen" and/four;other go 1 The Dinner Set will be I at 9 o'clock. I B. P. EL I BOOSTER II Home J F< | Charitabl | Wednesday, Dec. 1st? I Thursday, Dec. 2nd.? | Friday, Dec. 3rd.?Edi | UNION AND BUFFAL Gel Tick From any member of the BE A B WINTHROP WANTS $100,000. Columbia, Nov. 29.?Winthrop college will ask the general assembly at its session in January for an extra appropriation of $100,000 for the purpose of building a new dormitory. The request will be made for $50,000 for next winter and $50,000 the following year. The decision to ask for this extra appropriation was reached by the board of trustees at its meeting in Rock Hill the other night and was occasioned by the pressure for more room at Winthrop coming from all parts of the State. Over 000 appliHas Faith 1 Mrs. H. S. Carison of WakefieU experienced from the use of Fruit "I used Fruitola and Tra having passed almost a cup first bottle. My skin is clei annetite. I have lots of f?i Fruitola is a powerful lubricar ening the hardened particles that pelting the congested waste in an dose is usually sufficient to clearly splendid tonic-alterative that acts lates the flow of gastric Juices U rrom the general circulation. For the convenience of the publ to supply Fruitola and Traxo throi Union they can be obtained at Mi Cnost Splendid Remedy MAF^^^K^F " urmleasant after effects, orinino- nr strain. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin costs only fifty cents a bottle and can be procured at any drug store. To obtain a trial bottle, free of charge, write to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 454 Washington St., Monticello, III.?Adv. Theatre y, Dec. 2 tue" will be presented yant Washburn starring; scenery. ie Navy." This is one of ve have ever shown. Two the series. "Hazards of od pictures will be shown. given away Friday night KS O. E. MINSTREL iF Talent 3R e Benefit -Edisonia Theatre. Buffalo Theatre. sonia Theatre. ,0, SOUTH CAROLINA ;ets Now ! Elks or at the Theatres. OOSTER cants for admission were turned away this year because of the lack of room and the Winthrop trustees have decided to ask the legislature for funds for another dormitory. The present enrollment at Winthrop is considerably over 900. This was the principal action taken by the board of trustees at their meeting. The annual report to the general assembly was gotten in shane. Col. 1). W. McLaurin, who attended the meeting of the board, oaid this morning that the principal other business, which they transacted, was of a routine nUture. In Remedy 1, Nebr., testifies to the relief she ola and Traxo: xo with very good results, ful of gall-stones with the ar now, and I have a good th in Fruitola and Traxo." it for the intestinal organs, softcause so much suffering and exeasy, natural manner. A single ' indicate its efficacy. Traxo is a on the liver and kidneys, stimu> aid digestion and removes bile ic, arrangements have been made ugh representative druggists. In lhous Drug Co.?Adv.