1KRHS OF S WBSCRIPTION. il l Tin TTUol ^.,:, ^-.... A-...^ .^S jm ' """ ' ^ ^ N * ' "" "" ^ r ' ' ' ' " ^ YOL. XYI. LEXINGTON, S. C., Y'ErfE$)AY, FEBRUARY 3, 1886. NO. 12. - - ! . "J * - ' - i ttmn ** n H.IItblMrt Never Vas Heard of Be- ; fere. i, : I bare m immecsa. stock, pei&yc, M the largest ever opened io this mar- ( . ket And I want yoa io remember ^ that I wilt not be undersold by any 1 ?tv," .- >v v v.. >, y- ? .- ? ?! j It :b impossible to enumerate all : <*?lf'A ' ' that I hare in stock, but all I ask is ' ' * ', - I W,r?:<- fog yoa to cell aod gee for yourselves and then joe will be continced. I?*- ' v. -'** ' 4> > >" . X . " j $$<$> .. . v -:-h; #v?K i ^ ^; PHILIP EPST1I, 148 KaiB Street, 0- . ' . .: COLUMBIA, S. C. v'C, :; ".' SOJCBOTESS-DAT. ' ' 1*r?> l*V ' * ' Of all the words thai grown folks say, The saB^^^these, '*80106 Other Dsj.^ So eaaQy, carelessly oftaaJBz** ^ ' "' But tothfedi^ ectts they ttre-vrcrrds of dread, To hope a knell, and ta*4dr*?doonv A Froet on expectancy's tender blooinj , For even the baby who scarce can crawl .Knows a promise like that is no promis at all, And that oat of sight and of xnind alway is that mocking mirage, "SonHAOther Day." we drink rt up, Ind'old hopes laugh at us as we say, 'At last it has oomc, that 'other day.'" Lh! little hearts which beat and fret Lgainst the bounds by patience set, fours is but universal fate, ind the oH'ah tfcftjfcxnhg aH have to wait. 'on wil fefo, Eke us to be sfenfin pain, jid not to cry when your wishes prove vdn, < id that serrioe is done by standing still, Ad so bravely look np into heaven and 6ay, I shall find it all there, some other day." i Tm mttttTE. ' ~tr~ -vrv ?Op mt u. f;, ? -?L&~ - - V-****. ? V ' > .>?.?? K & ,r '^22 g Josi oa the oonfiaercJ of oar ride extent of garden stretching on II oI/Im tlm mftflier nf wfaifth Ms a srenty. years older, and a very feeble Id woman. . V -VYe# sever were any yonng ooople tore devoted than this oddly-con aated pair, whose marriage, though rough# ?S&I mi&xke, was a seuafcn of bgarla. " , From - early " boyhood, Edward i jgx was ^oney^ ?ded ^jat he never be gwd At ihirty he found himw^bankipt. oofc of butfnees, antf wiibot?? ? nrAimo^ifi' and while he as seriously considering suicide as way out of his difficulties, he relived an invitation to visit an old ieod in Blackpool. He found the "Northern Brighton' \ the height of its sommer season, id his own attraction very readily sknowledged by the ladies, who anted .with hfrn, flirted with him, Tolled on the beach by, moon-light ith him, and accepted his graoefol ttention with smiling pleasure. It was here that he was introduced ) Hiss Susan Hartley and her neioe d supposed heiress, Miss Maud laxwell. They were ladies of posiion, refined, graoeful; the younger ne lovely in the freshness of her oath, a pretty bkmde face, aod lender figure; the elder one stately nd dignified, showing in every word cultivated intellect and strong corncon sense. Edward Joyce's friend, after the otrodnction, spoke his mind with r ? rank if valgar freedom, "Go in for the heiress, Ned. They av the old lady is worth no end of in, and Miss Maud is her only rala ive. Anyone can see tbey are deroted to each other." Freud ship led to intimacy, and Mr. foyoe did try and fascinate the leiress, whose simpering prettinees jovered a cold heart, and a very com* non-place mind. Though he bad always seemed to have lacked* business ability, Mr.! ] Joyce was no fool/and he found himself evening after eteniDg turning bom Miss Maxwell's vapid talk to the fresh strong mind that shone through her aunt's conversation. Miss Hartley was an accomplished musician, with a rich contralto voice, and love of music had alway amounted to a passion with Mr. Joyce, as there was a strong bond of sympathy there. Loyeing neither, in the true sense of the word, he certainly found more pleasure in the society of the older lady, and then a little demon of policy * * ^ tkai nlfati oil fVlA wnispsrou iu iiiui) VUAH 0*i| ?MV mousy was Mrs. Hurley'*, sod, with her social position find real attractions, she might marry, and so deprive Maude of her supposed inheritance. For two or three days he hesitated, shrinking yet from piaceing himself in the position of a fortune-hunter, and then be wrote a manly, tender letter to Miss Hartly, asking her tc he hie wife. An hear later his me* , aenger broaght an answer, and Mist Hartley was his affianced wife. The wedding took place in dm cooree, the honeynoon ended, and one "morning, in cosy confidence, the subject of going home arose. "Where have jon taken lodgiDgs, dearr Mrs. Joyce asked, "till we find some little place to snit us." "Lodgings!" cried the bridegroom. "Shall jou not retnrn to yonr own house?" "My own house! I have no bouse!" For suddenly the troth flashed upon her. "Did you think I had money? I thought every one knew that I was LMonde's pensioner. Ob," and her face grew very pale, "what a fool I 'have been. I thonght yon loved me." "Yon were no fool in thinkiag that," was the quick reply, as ber J husband pat bis arm aroand her, "I * t do love you! I did think the position reversed, and that Maude depended upon yen, but never doubt my love. If it was -not very ardent when I proposed to yon, it grows stronger every day that we spend together." "Bat yet yoa thought me wealth t* "A hamiliatiDg fact I cannot deny/' ; and then, in a sadden outburst of J confidence, Mr. Joyce told his wife ' the whole troth, dwelling somewhat 1 longer open his business attempts i and perplexities than on the hope be 1 had entertained of afature, life of 1 Insurious idleness. < When he had finished, his wife ( spoke: , ' "Yoa may not like to. hear my ? father's opinion of me, Edward, 1 though, he meant it to be a com pii- 1 mentary one. He elways said I i should have been a man, for I had a. i true business head. For ten years ( before he died be was paralyzed, shd ( I was the actual bead of, bis business. < He left me a competency, which was* S stolen from me by a dishonest trustee, i and I should have taken np some oc- c cnpation to gain my own living had a hot Maud been left an orphan and j implored me to lite with her. i ,4It was scarcely a life of iadepend- g roce for she needed me, and her t lavish gifts of clothing and jewelry I 1 accepted iri the - place of the salary t iby! odo else in my place most have c been paid. Now listen to my propo- 1 sitiop. The factory raj fathSroon- c trolled is closed, bat I am an old c of the detaol/awept awayS^ his "I will introduce yon to him, and t the sale of ray dihmo&^wiU giye oe c sufficient capital "for a mbdest start f Yon will bp nominal master, until e yon conqaer ill the rntricaciea of t business, and dan carry on the whold r without my assistance. Until then { let me direct and teach yon. When i yon are a rich man yon can boy me f some more diamond*" i ? It was not a matter for hasty de- t oision, but before their wedded lwe t was six months old, Mr. Joyce was engaged in his new business, and was t amazed himself to find how rapidly 3 he learned to guide it. ( "Every day filled his heart with" ( deeper love for the noble woman who ( was so true and faifchfal a helpmate j to him; who, with all the knowledge j he lacked, never let one elerk or em- i ployee gnsss her real positron. And j he, learning all qnickly, had' sufficient < sense to let her control the entire ; bosiness, nntil she herself, after two < years of faithfal service, said: "Yon 4 can do with oat me now, dear. I resign." , And as years robed the devoted , wife of her strength and the noble ; beauty of middle life/they took noth- \ ing from the love of a husband who ; knew that to her be owed all his prosperity.' He realized fnlly the life of indolent luxury he would have ' led, and contrasted it with the useful one to which she had guided him. A I kind master, the families of bis workpeople knew they had always a friend in the head of the vast establishment in which the husband and father toiled. Without children- they extended their charities far and wide, and when gratitade met them, Edward Joyce Said? "The thanks are yours, dear. But for you, I should be thet dreadful object, an aimless, indolent man of fashion, what in days gone by they called 'an old bean.'"?The Saturday Evening Poet. A CARD. To all who are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c., I will send a recipe that will core you, free op charge. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self-addressed envelope to the Rev. Joseph T. Inman, Station D., New, York City. Jnly 22?ly > Ark You Made miserable by . IndigeetioD, Constipation, Dizziness, i Jjosa of Appetite, Yellow Skin ? Shiloh's Yitalizer is a positive care. > For sale at Pyzej-'fl. A Sitter Party Wrttigb in the Hcuse-Bontells Bottled. U Washcwtok, January 22.?Mr. Bar- I bert of Alabama, from the Committee j on ]$aval affairs, reported back Bon- \ telle'8 resolation calling on the Sic: A retary of the Navy for information i relative to alleged erasure of certain J inscription?, and the * dismissal of Union soldiers at Norfolk navy yard, with an amendment extending the inqniry to dismissals inade'at- the navy yard and ligbthon&e district Norfolk danbg tb^ totibt i mediate predecessors of the present Secretary of tbe Navy. Mr. Herbert stated that the resolution was sabstantially the same as that originally offered by Mr. BootelHr, except that" it was somewhat broader. ' There was crowded into the tieit half boar the most exciting political debate that has been presented to tbe Hoase this present session. Tbe debate was opened by Mr." Bo ate He, who premised his direct speech apoD the resolation with a remark calling attention to tbe fact thit the fiijgt< legislative set Of the Hoase bad beet < the passage, by noanimons consent, ] afa bill remcjviogdhe political disabilities of an ex-Con federate who had j waited mow than twenty years before ? j cliscovering a desire to be plaoed in t tbe line of eligibility to an appoint- t nent noder tbe executive department c jf the' United States. In contrast t with this, he ^Bootefle) had' been t ;anntingly informed that fifteen mio- g ites of time was an ample allowance c n which to ptesfent the case of an g )atrageow d?ufi^ of daabled tetP >rahs of the Union 'army from the '? ?mpioyment of the' government i?d I id obliteration, debasementfand re- r nova! of the inscriptions cormnem- I >rative of the ^sncoOsr of the Union a irmyt He trnsted (bet thes* fiu&' J )laced in Jaxtapbsitron would prove r nore inetroctive to the country than I >.> >>. - ^33 my remarks he could oner. The I esolutioD he had inirodaaedlfc'aff re- ii >f the havy yard's .of the goveroinent t! lad ordered the obliteration of bo&?. n >rab!e ^ hat the facta had been 10 8nj. way a lootradicted. On the contrary, be .1 on ad that a Norfolk paper whose fa iditor was closely connected with fa .his officer, had stated that Com- fa nandant Trocton was entitled to the t! )lace." The paper said when he had fa aken charge of the navy yard he g| band inscriptions intended to keep fa dive bitter memories, of .the : civil a itrife, and had patriotically ordered fa Mr. Bontdle the* referred, to the g emoval of-tbe Soperintfendent of Machinery at tbe navy yard, because s if his demnrring to tbe defacement a if the dry dock, and the appointment r if a man whose title to tbe position c ested on hia service in the*: Con-' 'ederate army. He considered that a 1 sufficient reason for calling attentjpn c :o the matter. He had feofad/bvi- ? lence that nface the-4th of Mfafab, a 1885, there had been repeated and.. ( systematic removals from positions, ( of officers of the government who e were wonnded and disabled veterans f of tbe Bepnblic to make plaoe for c -L- ? 3 4j? ? ' - 'ii . men wuu uhu ?uug?k iu uomtu^r .?* He deemed that a fitting matter to t call to the attention of the Honae ( and of the country. The attempt, ( whenever made and by whoever < made, to set up the plea that ? tearing down of the loyal memorials 1 of the war was demanded by any i broad sentiment of patriotism was | an absolnte sophistry. If the time < bad come ; or should. come to ob- J j* ' t f literate the great rneiilorials of the 4 rebellion, the monuments of the 1 rebellion itself ebould be first torn 1 down. Let not the work be begun by taking down inscriptions com- i memorative of the victories of armies i of the United States. He bad a list / of great marble memorials growing ( op all over this land to perpetuate^ J the canse of treason and rebellion. He had a description of a monument . ?n /laAv/vio Kfiorinrv oft infiiifiru CiOUbOU 1U voui^ia tug HU iuwv**p tion breathing anything bat a spirit of loyalty to this government?a r monnment bearing on its face evidence of a design to perpetuate the memory of an attempt on the life of the Republic. A soldier who came to Washington might wander in vain throngh a great art repository of this city, looking for a counterfeit presentment of one of the heroes who sustained the flag of the Union. He wonld find that the only men who were memorialized and remembered in the Corcoran art gallery were Robert ?. Lee and Stonewall Jaokson. These representations were not simply to keep alive the memory of a great war, bnt were representations of soldiers. They war* de jf&ted it fall Confederate oniform. Hfro yeaf*ago, when the House- wee considering an appropriation of 1?$Dd,GQGfor the New Orleans Exposition, iije people down there who wire e<7 anxious to have the Uuion aemorialtf obliterated were erecting Hmofeament thirty feet high to kfcrt- E. Lee, the chief military Si 1 ? it ? uv mL..< ?' wps oi toe reoetnoD. iuwc no? uu o^ice io the claim that a broad lairiotiem resulted in the obliteration f records of the grandest triumph tm. made for humanity since: the tr4 morning stars sang v together, ^plans? on the Bephbiicso side.] . I&ere verb . two statutes oo the MB declaring that in goreroineot ppsointmeots- soldiers should be' jft&thf preference. These had not y^MjiSaatea witb;confempt/bat vjksci&a of the Koffajk nwj Jkrd pSKeostotn bouse, the gallant, fficient, worthy faithful public Bryants who followed the flag of i$*r conntry acfofis - a hpqdred ittte fieldslmd been tulroed buftbat ieir places might be given to men bo: had fought tcT destroy the fXcrnuieDt. [Applause op the epnblican side ] air, Wise of Virginia said he was a&thatbebad an opportunity .to., ate a statement of the facta at' lough he had hoped the subject of resolution would hot have bees; Itonssed notil information about ^matter had been received from KBecretary of the Navy. tFhej ptleman from Maine (Mr. Bontelle) Ignore than, one occasion, bad. eight to revive the passions and Radices of the war. He (Wise)JMA nMminA rrm/>h nf ftnlh ipiOJU DJMIUJiUO 0re was in the statement of these solutions. The Secretary, of the ijry was; called upon to report if r ' r'ry.tablet bad. been destroyed at the orfolk navy yard which comai emoted the fact that the dry dock at ptamoutb had -Iteen destroyed. KHKAS glad of an opportunity"!*)'' cform the .gentleman from Maine ide.] The gentleman from Maine tinted to know if a Union soldier & been discharged and a Conjdferate pot in his place. He would iform the gentleman from Maine bat the man who was discharged had ever been in the Union army, bad #ver been, io 1,000 miies of a line of ettia, had nerer heard the mnstc of , minnie ball.[Applause and koghter on the Democratic side.] Mr. Bpatelle?"Did be- not render "He,: ir, was in receipt of a large salary in , bomb-proof position, while brave aen fought the battles of their fMPf* fff I JUL I JJ&au vi v ikgiu.M www ? isked permission to propound a [OestioiL sir; .no, bis," exJ aimed Mr. Wise. "I will give my .Mention to'yTO^W'ow! tttfbtni. "Fne kmfederate, or, the 6ne whom yon Boatell&YaJtege "War'nppointed on teconnt of bis senrice in the Conederate army, was appointed- after a ompetitive examination, and the nan to whom yon refer was removed brteaatljr tntoxicatrhn.'' [Applause md laughter on the Democratic side.] 5ne other fact I commend to your tonsideration. Daring the Arthur idmiaistration the ?. postmaster at Portsmouth, who was a Union toldier, twice wounded and twice promoted for gallantry, was removed it the dictation of William Mahone. [Applause on the Democratic side.] 'AhtMr. Speaker, it is a good thing bo raise a fuss over this, isn't it ? Your fellow-citizens of Mane," addressing Mr. Bontelle, "are anxious to know if a Confederate has been appointed - '? "VT *-11. ?^4 ?.KJa HI IQ6 rioriuiil liotjt jakVM wj vuw administration. Have yea forgotton that daring the Grant administration and daring the administration cf Hayes andArthur, yooeent* Captain of Confederate' guerillas?John S. Mosby?to represent the government of the United States in a foreign eonntry?" [Applause on the Democratic side.},. Have you forgotten that Longstreet, a Confederate Lieutenant-General, was selected by your Republican administration for the most important office in Georgia? Why is-it, I will ask the gentleman from Maine, that we have not heard a howl from that ice-connd region about these appointments?'' [Laughter on the Democratic side.] "Does the gentleman desire a reply?" inquired Mr. Boutelle. "No, sir," exclaimed Mr. Wise. "Go read the speech of a Senator of the United States, who, with all kind." noss, is in, the estimation of the whole country a better man than yoa are? ' \ go read the speech of Charles Sutnner. of Massachusetts " "If Charles Samoer knew that bis mag nan i moos suggestion would be quoted by yon for such a purpose, be would torn in his grave I claimed Mr. Bontelle amid much con farion. "Go," continued Mr. Wise, "reed the speech of Charles Somoer of Massachusetts. If I mistake not, he was the first man in the country who declared some fifteen pears ago that the time had'oomefor peace, and that the bitter memories of the war should, be removed, and mark the. contrast ' between the leader of the Federal t . . - * i army and the gentleman from Maine. The last words spoken by that great leader on his dying bed at McGregor, were that he thanked God that he closed bta eyes on t&e worm owierir-g thai peace bad returned to the distressed country. [A.pp)anse> on the Democratic side,] And yet, and yet the balls of legislation are to be annoyed by the backbiting of 8&ob men as the gentleman from Maine 1 "Nov; Mr. Speaker,; I want to say one word more to him. While' we [ ? y. -. . m *__ ' . f sit here and vote pensions to your soldiers " . "Oar soldiers, claimed Mr* Boutelle. t , , "Yes," replied Wise, "oar soldiers. < We-are in the hoos8 of our fathers,. and we have come to stay. [Applause on t&fcDfeinoeratio side.] While we are rbedy and willing to rote pensions' to honorably discharged soldiers who served their conn try in time of war, we will never consent that it tball be held and proclaimed on h|gb that one who happened to have been in the Confederate army is forever disbarred 1 from the service of his country. I protest that these honorable soldiers of the Union army shall never again be enfajseted to the treatment tbey were subjected to under the lasted*- < ministration, when men who had fought bravely for the Union, under 1 a circular hearing the name of Wil- iiam Mahone as Chairman, and James i D. Brady, the present member of the 1 as Secretary-?" potest and WprOTsqiiiwd like sieves to hold their ballots ap~ that their bosses's miatbni might see whether they voted right?oh I what an attitude in/ which to plsee a discharged soldier of the Union. Under tike whip and lash of the Confederate Brigadier I" (Loadand continued applause on the Democratic side and is the galleries.] j At this point the Speaker brought down, his gavel and declared that WiaeVtime bad expired. Mr. Brnmm of Pennsylvania was immediately on. bis feet asking nnanimoos consent that Mr. Wise's time be extended, in expectation that, if this was done, a similar courtesy wonld be extended to Mr. Bontelle to reply, bat the Democrats were wary, and comprehending that Mr. Wise bad been cat off in the most, telling part of bis speeoh and that its effect might be weakened by an addition of farther remarks, they reeponed to the suggestion with a storm of objections. Mr. Wise took bis seat and received the hearty congratulations of bis party friends. The resolution, as amended by the Committee on Naval Affairs, was then adopted, and at 3:30 the House took a recess until 7:30, the evening session* to be for the consideration of pension bills. ?????? n A UBOOP, YV HOOPING uoucm turn xjxuw i chitisimmediately relieved by Shiloh'a j Core. For sale at Kyzer's. If there is a past in which men have done ill, let them have hope, for there is a fatare in which they may do well. Shtloh's Cough and Consumption Core is sold by 08 on a guarantee. It cares Consumption. For sale at Kyzer's. Let ns value goodness at its trne value. It costs some people twice the effort to be good that it does others to preach goodness. Fob Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint, yon have a printed guarantee on every bottle of Shiloh'a Vitalizer. It never fails to core. For sale at C. N. Kyzer's. In order to save time and trouble, youDg men shonld remember that it is ploughing sand and sowing salt to attempt to talk poetry to a girl who has been eating onions. Yon are not old, yet yonr hair is getting thin. Yonr friends remark it, yoor wife regrets it Parker's Hair Balsam will stop tms waste, save jovt hair and restore the origial gloss and L color. Exceptionally clean, prevents dandruff, a perfect dressing. \i -wpjy so & a. To the Lexington Dispatch. Mb. Bditob:?I notice a very sharppointed piece in your issue of Jan. 6th tinder, the signature of "E. H./' of Gilbert Hollow, S. C. He throws stones with snob fearfa! force that it., mokes your little scrib think of dodging lest he may bare some of his bones mashed. Mr. "E. H." says be thinks I am "a new beginner in prohibition," and that I want to have "a long discnesion on subject." X did . not write that little article . i ; 'T . , : headed "Temperate J)riokicg<" with any idea of discnesitig the 6abjer any one else attempt to argue that it is not sinful to drink temperately as well as any other way? when the Scriptures condemn it in different places. On one occasion the Lord said: "Do not drink wine nor strong drink, thou, nor thy sons with thee, when ye go into the 'tabernacle of the congregation, lest ye die: it shall be a states forever throughout your generations," Lev. 10:9. On another occasion the Lord said: "He shall asperate himself from wine and strong drink,, and shall drink no vinegar of wine, oi vinegar of strong drink, neither shall he drink any vinegar of graves, noi eat moist grapes, or dried," Num. 6:3. In another place it is written: "Now therefore beware, I pray tbee, and drink not wine nor strong drink, and eat notany unclean thing,*'Jadget 18:4. Please see St. Lake 1:15 Prov. 23:29-33; GaL 5:19-22. As to the."reproaohfai slang "hf speaks of, tbej seldom get any more than tbey fully deserve. He seemi to fear that the prohibitionists will gain the day. Aoy party would do e 'wise and wonderfal thing by aoitin? against this accursed staff called whisky. He says "they expect some .day to ride ioto power on the drj horse, etc." 1 think it will be a greal deal better to ride into power re speotably on a dry horse than to gc rolling in, as they have been doing for the last twenty-three or twenty .four years, on a whisky barrel!, s< fall tbey can hardly hold fastan< still racking. "E. H." quotes a part of the lattei part of that little artiole headet "Temperate Drinking:'' "God speet the day, if it is ever coming, whei both drnnkenness and temporal drinking shall be driven from on land; when there will not tp a grog shop in America." Now yon have i repeated, and consider it so as oftei as yon please. He says: "God wil not be apt to change things he ha ?Mrmittad from the beginning to ac commodate 'J. W. H.' or any othe prohibitionist* I do not want Go< to alter the creation for my sak alone, for strong drink and I oanno agree; bnt I want it removed becana it ie such a cnrse among oar people I don't think that whisky and tro religion can dwell in the same body No gennine Christian will say "it i ' no harm to ta?e a drink," becans temperate drinking is the soarce of i stream' that empties, in the end, info the very jaws of death. Who, bat tb ' ' \ 'r ' d^tik ^ whe^ ^ ^ almshouses, of the j|jthe T ^ Which are supplied with vwstims lj ^ damnable staff: I might show, you . iv numbers of other evils canted fey " ^ driBk; bat I deem it aselees, as some people have eaob & fondness for strong ^ ?> arga^ ^ exempt iruui luau uuy. An act to authorize trial Justices to ^ ' issue Warrants for search and seizure and for the arrest of Sospected Section 1. That trial j notices shall have authority to issue warrants to make search or seizure in suspected | places, and to arrest suspected persons and to ceize their property. Sec. 2 That such warrants shall issue only in cases of stolen goods | and must beteupported by the oath or affirmation of the party applying . ;for the same, w&ch shall set forth fully and particularly all the facts upon which such application is based, ' and shall specially designate the soa| search or seizure, the name or names 1 and who are to be arrested. 1 Sec. 3. That no sraeh warrant shall | issue except in the cases and with the | formalities herein prescribed. jg| r An act to amend Section 2,487 of the t the Generai Statates, relating to Stealing Grain and Cotton from r Section 1. That Section 2,437 <|if ., . tie General Statntea be, and the ' ) same is hereby amended, so that the "Section 2,487. Whoever shall r steal from the field any grain, cotton, r j or vegetables, whether severed from , r 1 the freehold or not, shall be deemed / % < - i gnilty of a misdemeanor, and, ,00 eona, viction thereof, shall be punished by r imprisonment for not more than one . year or by a fine of not more than t five hundred dollars." s relieve Cronp Whooping Congh and > . Bronchitis. For sale at KyzeFs. I r Wmr Witt Vnn mnoh whan Sbi* J HOI *1 ""* ^ - ,t 0 little less charity apd more cash is d ^ 1 , * -??v .. ??