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THOS. J. ADAMS, PROPRIETOR. EDGEFIELD, S. C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1893. _ - r-? ----- 4> VOL. LVIII. NO. 39. TO EVERY FREE _ GREAT OFFER .OF THE - WEEKL Y NEWS w COURIER. - EMBRACING THE - Choicest Standard Works of Fiction ! and Useful Books for Reference ! ABSOLUTELY FREE I TO EVERY SUBSCRIBER. COMPLET By the World's Greatest Authors ! Each Book Consists of a Handsome Octavo Volume of 64 Large Double columns Pages Neatly Bound in au attractive Paper Cover. THE BEST STANDARD WORKS OF FICTION WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL! THE FOLLOWING IS A By LIST Na A 1. The Scarlet Letter. thaniel Hawthorne. A 2. The Mystery ot dide Fell; or, Not Proven. By Charlotte M. Braeme, author of "Dora Thorne" A 3. Under the R^d Flag. By Mis? M E Braddon. A4. King Solomon's Mine;-. By H Rider Hafigard. A 5. Around the Word in Eighty Days. By Jules Verne. A 6. Tho Corsican Brothers. By Alexander Dumas. A 7. Lady Grace. Bv Mrs Henry Wood. A 8. Averil. By Rosa Nouchotte Carew A 9. Tho Black Dwarf. By Sir Walter Scott. A 10. A Noble Life. By Miss Mulock. A ll. The Belle of Lynn; or, The . Miller's Daughter. By Charlotte M. Breenie, author of "Dora Thorne." A 12. The Black Tulip. By Alex ander Dumas. A 13. The Duchess, By "The Duchess. A 14. Nurse Revel's Mistake. By ~~ilr?reirco- Warden. A 15. Merle's Crusade. By Rosa Nouchette Carey. A 16. A Study in Scarlet. By A Conan Doyle. A 17. Rock Ruin; or, The Daugh ter of the Island. By Mrs Ann S Stephens. A 18. Lord Lisle's Daughter. By Charlotte M Braeme, author of "Dora Thorne." A 19. The Armorer of Tyre. By Sylvanus Cobb, Jr. A 20. MrGilfiTs Love Story. By I George Elliott. Address, TffE WEEKLY NEWS AND COURIER, OF THE BOOKS OFFERED: By Florence By Capt. By II 21. A Scarlet Sin. Marryat; 22. The Sea King. Marryat. 23. The Siege of Granada. Sir E Bulwer Lytton. 24. Mr Meeson's Will. By Rider Haggard. Bv W. author of | By By 24. Jenny Harlowe. Clark Russell. 25. Jenny Harlowe. By W C'ark Russell. 26. Beaton's Bargain. By Mrs Alexander. 27 Tho Squire's Darling. By Charlotte M. Braeme "Dora Thyme." 28. Thc Russian Gypsy. Alexander Dumas. 29. The Wandering Heir. Charles Reade. 30. Flower and Weed. By Miss ME Braddon. 31. No Thoroughfare. By Char les D? ~ *" - 32. rj rr cjd 33. T Sir Wi 34. Hi By Che of "Doi 35. Gra. Nathanil 36. A Trip to me Moon. By Jules Verne. 37. The Pioneer's Daughter. By Emerson Bennett. 38. A Little Rebel. By "The Duchess." 39. Master Rockefeller's Voy age. By W Clark Russell. 40. The Heiress of Hilldrop. By Charlotte M Braeme, author of "Dora Thorne." CHARLESTON, S. C. "The New York World" One Year, WEEKLY EDITION, The "COLUMBIA" WATCH, AND "The Edgefield Adre rtisr" ALL raR $3.50. $1.00 $3,00 THE NEW YORK WEEKLY WORLD is the Leading American paper, and is the largest and best weekly printed. THE COLUMBIA WATCH is an ex i cellent time-keeper, with clock move ! ment, spring in a barrel, steel pinion, j clean free train and a good timekeeper. It is 2J inches in diameter, I3, inches thick, and requires no key to wind. THE EDGEFIELD ADVERTISER is the best and strongest local paper in this vicinity. We thus furnish the Time and all the news up to time for one year for $3.50. Send your order with above price to the ADVER TISER office and the watch and papers will be forward ed at once-_m ALWAYSlN THE LEAD. /. C. LEVY & CO., TAIL OR-FIT CL G THIERS, AUGUSTA, - GEORGIA.. Have now in store their entire FALL AND WINTER STOCK OF CLOTHING. The largest stock ever shown in Augusta. We aim to carry goods whic.1 are not only intrinsically good, but which also, in pattern, style, and finish, gratify a cultivated and discriminating taste, and at the same time, we aim to make our prices so low the closest buyers will be our steadiest customers Polite attention to all. A call will be appreciated. I. C. LEVY & CO., TAILOR-FIT CLOTHIERS, AUGUSTA, GA. DO YOU EXPECT TO BECOME A MOTHER? "MOTHERS' FRIEND" MAKES CHILD BIRTH EASY. Assists Niture, Lessens Danger, and Shortens Labor. " My wife suffered more in ten minutos with, her other children than ehe did all together with her last, after having used four bottles of SI O THE R'S FEIEND,'* says a customer. HENDERSON DALE, Druggist, Carrai, 111. Sent by express on receipt of price, ?1.50 per bot tia. Book " To Mothers" mailed free. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. ATLANTA, QA? HUMPHREYS' Dr. Humphreys' Specifics ore scientifically and carefully prepared Remedies, used for years In private practice and for over thirty years by tho people with entire success. Every single Sp?cifie n special euro for tho disease named. They cure without d mpgln g, purging or reducing tho system and aro In fact and deed tho Sovereign Remedies of the World. KO. CHXES. retenu. 1- Fevers, Congestions, Inflammations.. .25 2- Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic.25 3- Teething; Colic, Crying, Wakefulness .25 4- Diarrhea, of Children or Adults.25 7- Co ashs, Colds, Bronchitis.25 8- Neuralgia, Toothache, Faceache..25 9- Headachen, Sick Headache, Vertigo.. .25 I IO-Dyspepsia. Biliousness, Constipation. .25 11- Suppressed or Painful Period?... .25 12- Whites, Too Prof use Periods.25 13- Croap, Laryngitis, Hoarseness.25 14- SaIt Rheum, Erysipelas,Eruptions.. .25 15- RhenmatismT Rheumatic Pains.25 16- Malarla, Chills, Fever and Ague.25 li)-Catarrh, Influenza, Cold In the Head. .23 20-Whoopina Couch. ?5 27-Kidney Dinoa ne?. 2S-Nervons Debility.* 30-Urinary Weakness, Wetting Eid.. .2o HUMPHREYS' WITCH HAZEL OIL, ** The Pile Ointment."-Trial Size. 25 Cts. 6old br PmcRlKt?. or ?cut pout-paid on rcrelpt of price Da. H enmura' MANUAL (M4 P?KC?,) MAILED KBKK. ll L: "ir II Ki: VS' MED. CO., lili 113 William SU, SBVf YORK. SPEC! FBOS, ^SPECIALISTS*^ (RcffTt?aL' Graduates.) Are the leading ami most successful Bpeciatl3te and ?111 give you help. Yout?ga^.d tali* die need men. Remarkable r? su?s have follow ed our treatment. Many ye sir? cf varied and success lill experience In thc usi; of curn t;vu methods that vc ol?iue own and control for nu dis orders cf men who r?.:'-^.Viiav? wea!:, unde veloped or dis :eascd orpr.ne. ot gggwho are suilcrlne "from errors of __jronth and excess remedy. A complete fur J Guuranteed. SHIV T?I8EA SES of all kinds cured where many others have failed. UXXATTJKAX? DISCHARGES promptly cured In a few days, (?nick, sure aud safe. Ttdi neiudes Gleet and Oonorhoa. TRUTH AND FACTS. We have enred case3 of Chronic DIser.35s tl? nive fatted to get cured at thc hands of other specie, ats and medical InstitutT. -a RgMEMBBR that there ia hope for You. Consult uo other, as yuu muy waste valuable time. Obtain oar treatment nt once. Beware of free and c'"?np treatments. Wc give (ht; beet and most scientific treatment nt moderate prices-as ?ow as cnn b>; done for safe and skllifc treatment. FREE consnltatlsn nt the oiiicec iv mall. Thorough examination r.nd careful ela,, nnsls. A heine .realmi-nt cnn I-f p'.vt?? In annjorlty >f c-fi. Read fur Syrantom Clank Ko. 1 fur Mon; .;?. 2 for Womens Ko. 8 fur Skin Diseases, All cone .?."ti'icnce t"i.jw';r<':l promptly. Business strictly con t'lcttslsl. Entire trestment sent tree from observa -UiO Refer to our patients, banlis and business mea Ad-ireiE or call on DR. HATHAWAY ?c CO., fi 1-9 .*outb B-oad S-t-cet, ATLANTA. CA WANT COTTON. UNTIL further notice, % we will buy Cotton delivered at Langley, S. C., at Augusta market prices on clay of de livery. Will not buy anything below Strict Low Middling. THOMAS BARRETT/ Jr., Pres't Langley M'f'g Co. THE EDGEFIELD IlfcTSTrrUTE. THE Trustees announce to the pub lic that this school will open on Monday, Sept. 4, 1893, and continue ten months, forty weeks, with .1 recess of one week at Christ mas. There will be three departments, each carefully graded : The Primary, embracing 2 years. The Intermediate, embracing 4 years. The Academic, embracing 4 years. Provision is also made for Music and Art Departments, under competent teachers. Arrangements for studies higher than the Academic will bo made hereafter, if it be deemed best to do so. The rates of tuition will be as follows : In the Primary Department,first and second years, per mont li.. % 1.00 In the Intermediate Department, 1st and 2nd years, per month.. 2.00 In the Intermediate Department 3rd and 4th years, per month.. 3.00 In the Academic Department, 1st and 2nd years, per month. 3.00 In the Academic Department,3rd and 4th years, per month. 4.00 In the Music Department, per month. 4.00 In the Art Department, per month. 3.00 From these charges will be deduct ed the pro rata amount allowed for each pupil from the public school fund. The trustees have committed this school to the management of Dr. L. R. GWALTNEY. He will be aided in each department by competent teachers. It will be seen that the basis of financial support which has been in operation for sev eral years has been abandoned, the trustees having fully deolded that it is better to have fixed rates of tuition for all pupils. If the eil ?zens of Edge field will heartily stand by "The In stitute," they will have a good school in which they may take a commenda ble pride. The Principal is well known. He returns to Edgelield to become the pastor of the liaptist Church, and to give his matured experience to the work of educating our boys and girls. Good board can be had 'for .$8 to $10 per month, W. E. PRESCOTT, Chairman. "THERE IS NO DEVIL NOW!" Men don't believe in the devil now, as their fathers used to do; They forced the door of the broadest creed to let.his Majesty through; There isn't a poi.it of his cloven foot, or a fiery dart from his bow, Tobe found in earth or air to-day, for the world has voted so. But who is mixing the fatal draught that palsies heart and brain And loads the earth of each passing year with a hundred thousand slain? AV ho blights the bloom of the land to day with the fiery breath of hell, If the devil isn't and never was? Won't somebody rise and tell? Who dogs the steps of the toiling saint, and digs the pits for his feet? Who sows the tares in the field of time wherever God sows His wheat? The devil is voted not to be, and of course the thing is true; But who is doing the kind of work the devil alone should do? We are told that he does not go about as a roaring lion now; But whom shall we hold responsible for the everlasting row To be heard in home, in Church, in State, to the earth's remotest bound, If the devil, by a unanimous vote, is nowhere to be found? Won't somebody step to the front,forth with, and make his bow and show How the frauds and the crimes of the day spring up-for we want to know.. The devil was fairly voted out, and ci. course the devil is gone; But simple people would like to know: who carries his business on? -Author Unknown. A Bit of History in a Common Phrase. When one says of anything it is "not worth a straw, one means to imply that it is worthless, for what, can be the value of a straw? Thev older saying was "not worth a rush." and this brings out the origin of ?he phrase better. In the days before carpets it was the custom to strew the floor with rushes. When guests of rank were entertained rushes, green, fresh, and sweet, were spread for them, hnt folk of lower rWroo kjj[?*-r?^5 jUBL past, eye*jvliiiig uua npeneu up in good time, and "on all well managed places the heavier work is finished up so there will be no rush to save late crops that usually must be left as long as possible to mature. Grass, weeds, and brush should at once be cleaned up and removed from about the trees, as they are unsightly, afford hiding places for vermin and breed dis eases. It is seldom, if ever, that trees are injured by too much ma nuring, provided it is applied on the surface of the ground, while thousands of trees and whole or chards prove unsatisfactory or come to an untimely end from starvation. Trees must be well fed to give them vigor to resist insects and disease and mature a first class fruit. Just as soon as growth has entirely ceased manure should be hauled and spread liberally over the whole ground. The rains of fall and spring will carry their fer tilizing elements where they are most, needed, besides the litter on the surface affords protection to the roots against the frosts of winter. WASHING. For those who have time to do it nothing pays better than annual washing of the stems of fruit trees. Ithelps to keep the tree clear of dead bark, which is an advantage, and tends to destroy mosses and the spores of fungi. By this time insects have very generally gone into winter quarters or deposited their eggs and made proparation for perpetuating their kind. Wash ing at this season will destroy many that have found lodgment about the trunks of the trees. The old-fashioned lime wash, with the addition of sulphur and a little soot to quiet down the glare of the lime, is very good. A wash of soft soap, weak lye, or potash has been found to be not injurious to trees and is obnoxious to insects. Our favorite wash fer this season of the year is a bucketful of com mon whitewash in which is dis solved ono pound of copperas (sulphate of iron) and one-half ounce of carbolic acid. We are satisfied that it is a help against sun scald and a partial protection against gnawing of rabbits or mice. Moderato pruning maybe dono toward the last of the month, provided the wounds mado are covered with white paint or graft ing wax to prevent evaporation and injury from the weather. ! PIEASED WITH TILLMAN. j - IJhe Impression Made on an ! Unsophisticated Citizen I. of St. Louis. ?t.B. C. in News and Courier, ?The people of St. Louis and the Mississippi Valley have just learn e?lthat South Carolina has within h|:: borders a most remarkable min. He is your Governor, of wp:omwehave heretofore known northing except his name. The St. Ipuis Bimetallic Convention had bgen in session nearly three days 6% October 5. Governor Tillman had come in respouse to the sup Elemental call for that meeting 6?nt out by Governor Stone, of ?K?ssouri, and had been made ?ist.- 7 temporary chairman at its opening. Ivater when permanent organiza tion we effected he was placed on tfie committee on resolutions and -jr'as made its chairman. He made ie* report of that committee and jhe resolutions were being discus sed preparatory to a vote on their j Adoption. # There had been but little in fjerest shown by our people generally in this ^Convention and iew spectators were present; among that few, however, was the writer. The Convention itself was small in numbers. Many who had peen appointed as delegates had j5ot come, either-from inability to '^receive how they could take any ^psctive political action at this te, and so soon after the great ?mctallic Convention held at Ihicago on August 1,1 or from imidity and fear of the charge of sectionalism'' or 4desi?n to break ip their respective political >raties, Democratic or Republi can. For these reasons there ijfrere probably not more than two jhundrad persons present in one send of our immense armory hall an which the Convention was flitting. together by the same tremendous and overwhelming danger; and that his purpeso was to effect a powerful and permanent union, of these elements thus sparsely repre sented in the gathering before him. Many speeches had been made, some sensible and beneficial, others tedious and tiresome, by delegates who desired additions to tho resolutions, reflecting their own eccentric ideas. Governor Tillman was then called for and came forward. He took a position on the floor near the presiding officer, Dr. S. S. King, and on a level with his audience. He then slowly, in a distinct and moderate tone, be gan his?speech. I will not attempt to give any abbreviation, as you have most probably received the whole of it, either by telegram or by the St. Louis Republic, in which it was published .'n tull on the next morning, but will essay to write only of its delivery and effects.' From the time he took the floor thero was the closest attention; and in twenty minutes every auditor knew that he was listening to a speaker of transcendent ability as a political leader. He had no polished oratory in either voice or gesture ; but hip words were clear, direct and) unmistakable, striking home to the point intended at the end of every sentence like the shots of a Bk ill ful artillerist who plays his gums at pleasure from front to right and left with exact preci sion. All vho heard him saw at once that he blazed out the way for a political movement as wide as the continent and of immense pos sibilities; and which if properly organized could overthrow all opposing organizations and parties and unfurl its standard on the Capitol at Washington. Quick preception, directness, sesolute will and audacity-that is Tillman. His closing declaration aroused his already electrified audience to a wild outburst of enthusiasm. In less than sixty minutes he had made a lasting impression on the people of this great vallej', and its echoes will re verberate for many a day. He is un doubtedly a natural leader of men and may become the chieftain of millions who now have no poli tical cohesion. Have you any more such in South Corolina? I ?hould think not, for they are few and far betwoen. His great power lies in presenting facts so ns to ap peal to the sympathies and inter ests of men, arousing them to action by their sense of justice as well as their knowledge that they cannot remain passive and them selves escape. If he should come into this region in a campaign none can donbt that he would sway the multitudes. St. Leuis, October 7,1893. Death in a Simple Medicine. A seidlitz powder was probably the cause of the death of Christine Kroys, a pretty domestic, lately employed in Brooklyn. Miss Kroys, who was about twenty years old, came from Germany some time ago. Last Monday she com plained of headach. About 4 o'clock in the afternoon Mrs. Smith went downstairs to make some in quiry of Christine. At first she saw nothing of the girl, but her attention was soon attracted to ihe dining-room closet. Here the girl lay, face downward, on the floor. Sho was unconscious, and was breathing heavily. There was blood on her lips, and Mrs. Smith who was much frightened, sum moned Dr. William B. Waterman, of No 822 Lafayette avenue. His efforts to restore the girl to con sciousness were uuavailing, how ever, and she died in a short time On the dining-room table were found the empty white and blue papers of a seidlitz powder, and also a glass in which their con tents had apparently, been mixed with water. The ba-ds of the components of one portion of this remedy is tartaric acid; of the other; bicarbonate of soda and Rochelle salts. These two when emptied into water and poured together from separate glasses, efferveces violently. This action rtonrmioa but a mement, and the .. . yaonage, and right afterward those of the other. The two coming in contact in her stomach rapidly generated a volume of carbonic gas. This caused the girl to vomit and simultaneously made her breath less. While gasping for air she inhaled some of the matter in process of expulsion. A fit of coughing ensued, from the exertion of which an artery burst. He Could Not Spell Right. Let us be careful with our spell ing and phrasing. Heartrending mistakes may be made through de fective orthography and odd ex pressions. For instance : A man living in the country wrote to each ot his friends in the city: "Deer friend, you air respectably invighted to go berrying with me neckst Saterdy morning. Yours, &c." And when his friends came with their tin pails and baskets, they found that his wife was "dead, and that it was to attend her funeral they had been invited.-John Spollon. The Size of the Sea. There are not many people who, if they were to bo asked the ques tion, could tell the size of the salt waters of the earth. The figures are so great that they could only say, with Dominie Sampson, "Pro digious!" And yet some interest ing illustrations and comparisons may be given as to] the sizo of the sea, and here ia a simple ono found in "Golden Days." The whole sea is composed of the Atlantic aud Pacific, tho In dian Ocean, the Arctic and Antarc tic ceas and various smaller bodies of water. It has an area of 140, 000,000 square miles, and would form a circle of 13,350 milas in diameter. The relative size of the arcas of the whole surfaco of the earth, of the whole sea, of the Pacific aud of the Atlantic can be represented* by a silver dollar for the surface of the earth, a half dollar for the surface of the whole sea, a 25 cent piece for the surface of the Pacific and a silver half dime for tho sur face of the Atlantic. Mies Keedick-"Mr. Gi Hey ac tually offered himself to Miss Darley on a postal card." Miss Gasket-"What did she do?" Miss Keedick-"Refused him1 She said she preferred sealed pro posals." CLEVELAND TACES DEFEAT The President Blundered Wo i fully in Handing: the Cause of Silver Repeal. President Cleveland is face to face with defeat, overwh elming and inevitable, and at the hands of his own party. He may, and probably will, call it treachery, but others who look over the demo cratic field without prejudice and who recall the attitude of many democratic leaders towards him throughont his entire national career, will appreciate the fact that the antagonisms he has crea ted were too deep-rooted and too many to be overcome. Mr. Cleve land has never had auy reason to look to the influential democrats in the Senate to hoed his beck and call on matters of party policy. He has usually made up.his mind for himself and in his own way aud then endeavored to force acquiescence in his views either by the power of patronage or the lachrymose howlings of his news paper following; but the certain result of such a policy cannot be other than disastrous in the long run. In President Cleveland's case disaster has come sooner than most people expected, but not before it forced him to look to the minorit}7 party in Congress to carry out his wiews. Senator Gor man declared publicly the other day that never before in the his tory of the country has any .Presi dent ever gone to the opposition for votes to sustain him ; and yet on the first great question over which Cleveland and his party have ever had complete control he de monstrates his utter incapacity to govern or to shape policies. HIS FIRST ADMISTRATION NOT A TEST. Mr. Cleveland's statesmanship was not on trial during his first four years at Washinton. He had a Republican Senate as a wall Ll VJ V U ibu. supreme moment of his life came when on March 4 last he again assumed the reins of government untrammeled by a majority op position in either branch of Con gress. It was then that he "con secrated himself anew," as he termed it, to a greater task than he had ever before attempted., and accepted [with his party the res ponsibilities of complete power. Has he succeeded? IT WAS TO BE EXPECTED. "House bill No. 1," his personal measure, is as good as dead-not only defeated, but miserably de feated and spurned by his own party. Nor is it surprising that it has met such an unhappy fate. Those who have read these letters will recall that they have never .looked forward with much hope to unconditional repeal, and have re^ peatedly [insisted that no bill would pass much before November if at all. That prediction was based on the opinions of those who had unusual opportunities to kuow what was going on behind the farcical debate in the Senate, and it has proven absolutely true. The fact is that the moment Cleve land's message was read to Con gress last August it was regarded by public men as unfortunate and as sealing the fate of the silver bill. That message gave no demo crat not sharing his extreme views au opportunity for honorable surrender: He sought only un conditional capitulation by the silver element in his party and would be satisfied with nothing less. Practically he arraigned the democratic party as narrow and vicious in its tendencies and started out to re-create it on what he regarded as a broader, more Gresham like basis. There's where he blundered. THWARTED HIS PARTY'S PURPOSES. Had Cleveland had tact and adroitness, or had his first four years made him used to political methods and public life,the govern ment's purchases of silver would now be at an end, and some satis factory law substituted for the present one. Instead of that however, he att3mpted to lead his party away from its record, away from its pledges, and what is more to the point, away from its tendencies and desires, and that too, despite every warning that he would be beaten I His message was a lecture and his subsequent action a hreat of annihilation to every democrat who hesitated to fall into line for silver repeal, when he should have remembered, as Clark Howell, of the Atlanta "Constitution," says, that the money plank of the democratic convention was for free silver, and that he, rather than his party, was outside of democratic professions and democratic purposes when he insisted upon unconditional re peal. HENRY L. STODDARD. President and Party. Macon New?. Is it impossible that as Mr. Eli jah Halford predicted when Mr. Cleveland was elected that the President intended to formulate a new political party out of the con servative elements of the two old parties, after his own designs. Mr. Cleveland is an ambitious man, he i^ a strong man and re markably independent in charac ter and spirit. There is no doubt that he is desirous of identifying _ himself, as closely and perma nently with his period's history as possible. He is without question tho greatest political leader since Jef ferson and would no doubt like to impress his political individuality and views upon the country in a manner similar to the.great father of Democracy in accordance with the changed conditions and re quirements of the times. This may be Mr. Cleveland's in tention, and it may not,, we are not prepared to say, but of one thing there is no question the present political situation offers a field for study and speculation. The Re publican party has been badly worsted and is now little more than a wreck with no room for repairs, and, thank God,' none too soon. The Democratic party, while its platform is explicit and a perfect repaireu auu ino party united, again or not. These are the interesting facts to the political student. We do not desire to impute any selfish motives to Mr. Cleveland or to be a party to placing him in any false light, and so far as we are concerned, wc believe that thc old Democratic party is good enough for the President, it is certainly goed enough for the people, but merely mention these things inci dentally as current gossip and con ditions. A Historic English Jury. An odd jury-to modern ideas indeed the oddeit of all-was not a joke, and was impaneled during the most sober and serious period of English history. Most news paper readers have doubtless heard some of the names, for they are often quoted as examples of puri tan nomenclature. Hore is the complete list as recorded duly in the annals of the court of Rye: Accepted Trevor, Redeemer Comp ton, Faint-Not-Hewet, Make Peace Heaton, God Reward Smart, Stand Fast-on-High Stringer, Earth Adams, Called Lower, Kill-Sin Pimple, Return Spelman, Be Faithful Joiner, Fly Debate Rob erts, Fight-the-Good-Fight-Faith White, More Fruit Fowler, and Hope-For Bending. The Philadelphia Record asks the question: "Why Butler of South Carclina, Dubois of Idaho, and Peffer of Kansas, are not as much anarchists as Emma Gold man or John Moss?" The same paper commenting on Senator But ler's course in the Senate says: "He has become one of the loudest champions of free silver coinage and one of the most, violent ob structionists in the Senate. THE BEST COUCH-CURE and anodyne expectorant, AYER'S Cherry Pectoral soothes the inflamed membrane and induces sleep. Prompt to Act sure to cure.