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I $11,000 | , WORTH OF CHOICE f *? -nifrrftr I Hats, Gent's Furnishing Goo^a^TMHfc" * s below cost. Merchantsapj-^pecially Jnlited to buy the stockS?"baik or in lots to suit their purpose. Ahia offer is made in offered in the interest of T" etery purchaser wboS.ants to bey goods r and reliable goods at a sacrifice. This is . one of the chances of a fcreui's life time to I be able to buy first-ciass goods 'TBEOnfHtlVOICE COST! i | as I have made all necessary arrangements F to go into the manufacturing business as An* TV?in is ti iO nviu v>tv? ? DGE OR TRICKING sat. My stock comprises Men's Children's Clothing of every deHals &';d Gent's Furnishing anks and Yalices in endless his is a CNE BARGAIN SALE, J-K- ''*' ..J ' pose of changing my inveetry article will be marked in s, and positively no deviation _ my one. X r - V -V UKDEB COLUMBIA HOTEL. L * ' ' ' .. I COLUMBIA, S. C. r-^Sept. 7-tf ?LOAN AND EXQHANfiE^11110? 50111 GOSIIIi. f STATE, CITY A\D COUSTT DEPOSITOR I. COLUMBIA, S. C. poiAn?CaiitaL $127,060 Surplus and Profits Vb.uw m Transacts a general banking business. ^ ^'Coreful attention given to Collections. ITHfiS MPIITIEIT. t Deposits of $1 and upwards received. L Interest allowed at the rate of 4 per cent. per annum, payable quarterly on the first fc days of January, April, July and October, Kj " A. C. HASKELL, President W. C FISHER. Vice President. , JULIUS H. WALKER, Cashier. E. June 19?It I COMMERCIAL BANK. B COLUMBIA, S. C. H| Capital Paid $100,00C K: Transacts a Banking and Exchange bus: K" Bess. Receives Deposits. Interest aliowec Br- on Deposits. Safety Deposit Boxes to ren Bp at $6 per annum. wk K. Lr:.--:s. r JAMES Ibedell, f President. Cashier, a Nov. 23?1? I CAROLINA NATIONAL BANE BmStf*LUMBIA' m- c I Pf?< WTf and CWflVT? f>EP(H?T0XY. Ifl Wti up Capital $100,0C Profits....... ... 60.8C I WEFARTHEJT. K Deposits of $5,00 and upwards receive* B> forest allowed at the rate of 4 per cen B vjper ansu>n. W. A. CLABK, President W[ ? WzLzx Jones, Cashier. I L m December 4-ly. i t^HBunucn nnrrnN seei ?IVVbll vv. . ... I NOW OFFERING 100 BUSEEI a new variety of improved Peterk r sale at $20 per bushel, or $6 p It is a Limbed Cluster, very prolif roxn the ground to the top, and m rery b??. Not likely to dry fori c lilce other prolifics; not liable like other clusters; makes about t g _ . saz&e turn out of lint as the well kho' |b Peserkin, (from 38 to 40 per cent). I hare three years experience with t] jk\ Cotton, and can say that I believe it to K \ the beet Cotton now in existence. ' I hare never offered it for sale befo -r#ad have only 1( 0 bushels for sale. Or< fright away jf you want them. I am still offering my well known vari %t $1.50 per bushel, price reduced on la: ?v\ Madera. - * 1 Cash moat accompany orders and freij E&,- .prepaid, as the railroads uil] not acc S. Ttotton Seed without prepaying the freig ice on Improved Seed will not be B % linced by taking over a peck, but will hi ^theorhers.if -rrdered in large lots. A hrfmer who buys a pe^k of the ^^foved Seed, will consider himself foj 9 Kate next fall I have never seen anyfch A. PETERKO B^HwVrt Mette, S. C. AFTERWARD. tTsy u3? tt^he?nnisily\cross, Half-fainting, questioning^ bearing, still, Some time your lesson shall be learned, And ye shall understand God's will, O, eyes that weep through hours of night, And veil your wistful pain by day, Joy yet shall come with morning light, Yet shall not weep in vain alway. O, willing feet, that hourly run On ceasdees errands, here and there, So tried, yet ye shall find a goal, And cease your weary aching there. " - *. , " I O. patient hands that toil so hard To meet the needs of every day, Some time the work/pil all be done, And ye iuTCSflbft-folded lay, ^ 0, Hearts, where good and ill contend. Sinning, repenting, vexed with life And *n it* eareg. fresh courage take. For victory shall follow strife. . ' -;^T- V \ -v . . * (. 0, souls that bear a daily cross! O, hearts that strive! 0, eyes that weep! The time will surely come whew God Shall give to "His beloved sleep!" And every bruise shall find its balm, Good deeds a full and sure reward, Pain, toil,'and grief be overpast, And peace shall follow?afterward! For the Lexington Dispatch. 9 O if the last page of* the. Dispatch of fMay 6, we-found a series -of ten i&fiiA nrsAftfirma which seemed to in vite answers at some one's hands. Having had a few leisure moments on Sunday afternoon, we set ourself to the fcafck of finding tke^janswers to the same, and below is vthe result of our labor. We give the answers in the order in which the questions appeared; 1. Reck aria h, 8: 5. 2. Jehudi?Jeremiah 36: 23. 3. hjutychus?Acts 20: 9. 4. That dry land had appeared?. Genesis 8:11. fi. It was recovered by the Prophet Elisha who cast a stick into the water at the"place where the ax sunk and commanded the iron to. swim.?2 Kings 6: 5-7. 6. Paul?2 Corinthians 11: 33. 6. Gideon thus routed the host of Midian.?Judges 7:16-21. 8. Jacob:?Genesis 35: 4. 9. Bahabr?Joshua 2: ,3 6. 107 A little mafd, a caput1?' the land of . Israel. - NaamaiJfiS H|IEn^WIPHBmthe^King^of was fhA man who was cured and converted.?2 Kings 5:1-14. W. H. H.. Caughmans, S. C., May 10, 1801. "How delict)as is the winning Of a kiss, at love's beginning,"? sings the poet, and his seniment is | true with one possible exception. If either party has the catarrh, even love's kiss loses its sweetness, Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy is a sure cure for this repulsive and distressing affliction. sBy its mild, soothing, antiseptic, cleansing and healing properties, it cures the worst cases. $500 reward offered for an incurable case. 2Tev Gouty Question. For the Dispatch. Editor Dispatch: Please allow m< space in your paper to call the atten tion of the citizens of the lower par of the county to a scheme originates ( at St. Matthews to form a new count} to be known as Calhoun, by taking portion of Lexington county by * line running from the mouth of Si i vannah Hunt creek'on the Congare fc to Witt's Mill on the Edisto, an from thence through Orangebur county by Jaminson, on the Sout . Carolina Bailroad, down Four Ho swamp to the Berkeley line and ba< f to Santee river and up the Congar< ^ to the first named point, thusmaMi it about fifteen miles wide on tl Lexington end and about eight or U miles on the Berkeley epd and abo" sixty miles long, with the court hou ^ at St. Matthews. There was an. attempt made to ha } . it passed through the lasf Legis ,l ture, with a petition signed by soi cf the citizens of Sandy Bun tov ship and a few from Bull Swan " I sifted it down by examing it cios< ). and found a good many of the sig: jS ^atres only transient persons with 0 I>le property and some fewunt Lc? age. Mine and Mr. O. R. Rile ma sympathy was sought in this schei ^ we being the only two members fr the proposed territory. We j |. sistentlv tfppAgi it, and I even be jected to aUorog it to go before committee and get a fa?orable rej ier and then let it lie over to the e ety session as was proposed to us. rge would like for this matter to gbt brought squarely before our pec ept as it is an important one, invoh 'rel considerable in the shape of taxa and iv placing us in a county wl the colored vote would double r.ta" white, and I can sec no benefit to ICg derived only to the few in St. J , thews and its immediate vicinity, f by the way, haw offered, in pro 'W ?- "" c I ? ing the scheme, to bond the town of St. Matthews in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars to build a court house and jail. There was an arch built in Columbia for the Centennial by the friends of the proposed county which will have its influence. I think it would be best to have a mass meeting or two later in the summer in the section proposed to be cut off from Lexington. Respectfully, W. H. F. East. ? t? Catarrh. Can't he Cued "With Local Applications, as they cannot reach theseat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you have to take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly, on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is no quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonic known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces, such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists, 75 cents. 31 SaskelL Man and the Party. Greenville News. A premature discussion is being started as to whether those who voted for Haskell at the last State election will be allowed to vote in the Democratic primaries and conventions next year. . We confess ? our fear is that a good many of them will not offer to continue with the party, if we remember aright those who strayed off after the Greenback candidates a few years ago were welcomed back into the fold on their promise to support the nominees and the same rule,ought to apply to the Independents of the last campaign. White men must stand together. When any go a?trsy the jvbole power of the party should be to .prove to them that Mk successfully fight the After that those who are willuJJPW come back and vote with us help keep the party strong and solid should ? be welcomed. There need be killing of fatted calves or puttijigro of gold rings to mark home coming of the predictions, but the fact that their vot^Mii aid niay be very handy in gmergencies should be recognized.' The.fyjE.satic is always glad to have recruits and to receive back those who have departed from aw i fa nrorftTiization. It has Us pauu w ?? V-Q no right to require of any member more than the promise to support ( its nominees and reasonable assurance that that promise will be fulfilled. - Hum&n Instinct. So powerful is human instinct 5 that some of its suggestions beeomf embodied in social and household * customes. The people know an< J feel .that^t-^Ee^^^nning^d^-ife r' spring season the system needs ai a alterative and a purifying tonic an< Q stimulant. In all parts of the coui try it is the custom' for the hous< 6 wife to dose her brood with sassafrs - tea. Among "the simple remedfc ? that our ancestors employed, this d< * coction .has continued to hold its owi *e The demand- for a spring alteratio ^ and tonic, however^ is filled 'mew ?e efficaciously by B- S. S., which is i self as simple as nature's remedy ie medicine should be. . It purifies tl 'n blood, cleanses and strengthens tl W | systera^and prepares the human - * ?.1 Be chine to stand tne wear auu the summer months. / ve- . -- - j *a" The agricultural department ne Washington has distributed thrdug rn~ out the country 60,000 jcopies of a: *P- port which contains a number sly colored pictures of the edible a aa~ poisonous varieties of mushroor no for the instruction of the f&rme ler Since these copies were mailed, it 1 y's been discovered that the word "E ne? ble" is printed under the picture om the poisonous kind, and the w< >er- "Prisonous" under- the pictures ?k~ the edible kind. Recipients of report will do well to note this ft ,or* and void both kinds for their c Lext good. It is not easy to distingu * 1 fhe two varieties and poisonous variety is almost as des as a revolver in its effects, mg , . k011 At all times, in all places on all iere casions, under all circumstances, the all headaches use Bradycrotine o 1 be ??-?Hat What is the first thing a man < vho, when he falls into the water? ( pos. ODDS AND ENDS. At the present day a ton of diamonds is worth about ?7,000,000. School children in Victoria, Austeafia, are carried on the street can Steamboats, it is reported, wiU^ooo be ronning on the Sea at Galilee. - ' . A handfol of floor bound on a severe cut will often stop the bleeding. There is only one sadden death among women to every eight among men. - * Some lend their hearts much as they do their money, with a pretty heavy interest Rev. R. L. Kidd, a Canadian evangelist boasts that he can recite the entire Bible from memory. The degreaof success obtained may ? l-A-.V.J V? 4k. A/ Oiwa uc ttewruuuou uj uic awvuuv vr* Jealousy which It arouses. The tool's slipper" has a pointed toe, with a high point up the back and another one over the instep. London has 200,000 factory girls, the majority of whom are only able to make a "bob" a day?$1.50 a week. The Greeks and Romans during the prime of their republics contented themselves on one meal a day. The Chinese and Thibetans have a week of five days, named after iron, wood, water, feathers and earth. Any one who has Seen steam should be taken to a warm room^ and the parts scalded drenched by cold water. ^ By actual count. 150 young women have taken up timber claims in Western Washington during the past six months. The h&nk^ of Scotland issued one pound not^S3S^aj|ya^U^4, and their issne has since been contnffcqj^githout interruption. . In the United States there are 2,800,-% 000'hives belonging to 70,000 bee growers and producing 62,000,000 pounds of honey yearly. A Jackson (Mich.) man, recently married, celebrated the event by treating his friends tc bread tickets. He passed them instead of cigars. Professor Boys shows that the heat of the lunar rays can be definitely determined as 150,000 times greater than those of a candle twenty feet away. A good handful of rock salt added to the bath is the next best, thing to an "ocean dip," and a gargfe of a weak solution is a good mid ever ready remedy for. sore throat Water has. been discovered in the Sahara Desert at about 120 feet below the surface. This is the first time that a supply of water has bgpn found in that locality at so elighta depth. Fish ChjUJPtrg. Bgjj>j^^^he^^h^stories told'ancx*. to the city the other day. While in the south the genial Thomas took daily strolls along the beach to get an appetite for dinner. One day he noticed a little colored boy lying upon his itomach along the bank of the river, with his eyes fixed upon the water. He watched the little fellow for fully fifteen minutes, but not a muscle of his body moved. A few minutes later be saw the boy make a plunge toward the surface of the water, and when ha appeared again be held in his hand a good sized trout. Tom thought that this was such an unusual thing that be offered the boy five cents for every trout he caught that afternoon. Thomas sat on the beach and watched the operation. The boy c&nght the trout so fast that Tom, fearing that he would be bankrupted, compromised with the lad. He de clares that his curiosity was pretty ex pensive." 5 It is rather a common thing to se< I trout charming along the banks oi th< ^ southern waters. The temperature L 0 so mild and t he water so clear that oni along the beaglwhcPseevth< a fish jum^SLhuost-fTIoot above the sur 4 'face of theater.?New York Tele j,. gram. . * J* > A Ditpooits.% 43 Naturr with a lavish hand has er do wed fcuraap body no let 53 than streu million spots to which a ^ ache paiu be attached. a. each ^bne of these spots, both ins*V ' oriel m Aside, is filled with a bard plat >31 r-v , . , nmn dipped pain; when your hea re aches that yon are conscious of a ir scallops on your brai j^st as you see them In the pictures i jfour physiology; when your hea thumps and your stomach wobbles ar }* you have the feeling that something ia- wallowing through your inside work 0f when your sternum feels stove in ai there is ap uneasipess tender yo shoulder blades as though your 'win were beginning to sprout; when you a at one moment alive .to the finger tips wi rjj. thinking of the things you -must get i ^ and do and the next completely < hausted by even the thought of doi 9* them; when your backbone has t nd sensation of being twisted by a pionfc Qa. wrench; when you are*so dizzy tl you can't see, ana your ?u? ruig, ?. rs' your eyes water, and your nose is ias such a state that it is presumption di- lay aside your handkerchief for c 0? short minute; when you cough a sneeze and groan In tuf^?ip fiue, wt )ra you feel like the very deaee?you < of set it down that you have the grip kbe Chicago Herald. , cf tt?ag? Cattle Doomed. ' Joseph H. Moore, of Port Wo >wn Tex_, whose cattle interests ex< lish those of any man in the southwest, the among the*guests at the Lick, whet eonyejsaiion wi& ft reporter he? "You have heard a great deal, doubt, or did, a few years ago, at 1< Of the famous 'Cattle Kings' of ioc- west, who were supposed ti) ?or their wealth by the millions. The iuess of raising cattle was conduote ?v* a grand scale, and at one time profits were simply enormous. 3oeg naturally attracted capital In 1 lets amounts, and wealthy men fron ^ '^arts of the world rushed eagerly *~'A y J < 1 tie. The result waa,overprGducaon and a serious dechpej? prices. "Three vears a^ojt became evident to those who studied closely the course of events that cattle raising would soon change from hirge herds on the range c Vto small herds en the farm. Those who * were shrewd enough to foresee th's took prompt advantage of it, and today have before them th# pleasant prospect of good prices and A' reedy market. As a consequence, however, the days of the cowboy are numbered/and he is doomed to extinction just as certainly as was I the buffalo aodithe Indian. The small , farm is crow<$bg them slowly but surely ' to the wall, ^gid itt a few years they will be gone."?J^^cisco Call It was in t -of a fashionable church The organist wa* Amaiiiihff Ovef^TvbtUntarv. . Sud- I denly the orgas . bfetfor got tired, or j something gavS^p^ur. the thunder I ous peals caiue full stop, and a j high soprano voice >ras heard biarfeking j to the contraVfe. ^Spw didyou like the circus?"?Philadelphia Record. Auofer^Pphjr Of View. Mr. Fti>ige^poy6a wish to marry my danghter, &o yon? May I ask how much you arefWhrth? Mr. Broke?fi'e8,' sir; I wish to marry - your daughter^ May I ask how much you are wortb^?Ouce a Week. of oufjaeople who experience so keeping up appearances showjj^ry a hand at keep-, ing down Worse thaJKPFiftoen Puzzle. In the lig^P^the Nineteenth century it sot?toueerly to read of the practices ^^Rie ancient physician. We arjMud that in the fifth celebrated doctor, inventedjfcystTc form of letters called AbragSaabra, believed to be-, possessed of ihagieal import, whereby they esertiBget wonderful healing powers wign^ qsed to permit their free scope, bn^pie-Sixteenth century one physiciai clahaed to have cured 200 cases of'ague by hanging the words about ?b6 necks of patients; while anotfigT^^wtncd to cure toothache by its^^jfcbongh the patient digestion, in" a sureVurefor dyspepsia, and toneB up a Mure appetite. When the system isjran down or over-wrought, by all means try Calisaya Tonic. Then too, it is an unfailing remedy in malarial districts being a sure antiperiodic. For sale, at the Bazaar in 50c. and $1.00 bottle. Personalities. w* Keep clear of personalities in general conversation. Talk of things, objects, ijUtaghta., The smallest minds occupy themselves with personalities. ^"PersonaHties must sometimes be talked because we have to learn and find out men's characteris tics lor legi^mate uujeuuo, uU? ? to be with confidential persons. Do not needlessly ill of others, > There are times when we' are com? pelled to* say, "I do not'think BounB cer is a true and honest man;" but * when there is no need to express an s opinion, let poor Bouncer swaggej - away. Oijhers will take his measure ^ nb doubt, and save you the trouble of analysing him and instructing h them? And as far as possible dwel r on the good side of human beings fc -^ere are family boards where aeon % stant process'of depreciating, assign ? ing motives and cutting up of charac if %er goes forward, in They are not pleasant places.. "On in who is healthy does not wish to din at a disseekng^hftble. y There is ev is enough in man, God knows; but iti a; not the mission of ev^ry young ma i or woman to detail or report it al gg Keep that atmosphere is pure as po re sible and fraught with gentlenei th an(j charity. aP ' ng From Nature's Storehouse. he ??~ ?? It stands to reason that a medich which wil? destroy the germs of co is tagious blood poison and counter to the effects of mercurial poisonh may be depended on to overcome t ^ diseases that iiave their origin t*a malaria, or that have their seat in impure condition of thelJipod. T) is what S. S,: S. has done, and wl it will do, as its popularity' atteg ^ ft "preventive, and a remedy wa8 - the long list of affections-that c e in play their activity during *the spri and summer months, it stands wi ;ast out a rivaL The secret of this the a remedy drawn from nature's c fcos storehpus#, busd on A?7?* - * ij A Wellington, Kan., couple, y :ai^e were married in 2 weeks after t i atf met, parted in two weeks aftfcr t worn TTytrtjed?? p \ . : Address of Ex-President Grove* Cleveland at the Beoeption Tendered Sim. At 7.30 o'clock May 12, Cleveland was escorted from the Hotel. Iriqouis close to the club house, Buffalo, and; the formal exercises soon thereafter began. It was crowded almost to suffocation '/with members of the club, as was also the adjoining rooms and the broad staircase. Cleveland was greeted by the wildest cheering, long continued and often repeated. ? He .spoke as follows: 1 - Mr. President and gentleman: - As t I stand for first tinae face ^ to face with the Cleveland Democracy, t I experience mingled emotjgw of re- i sponsibility and pride. JwCense. of i responsibility arises fi^Fmy relation rl to your organization as its Godfatherf 3 and my pride from the noble maimer j in which yon have borne my name. $ I acknowledge your right to require 1 of me at this time an account of the s manner, in which I have kept the po- 1 iitical faith to which you^re devoted, j This right grows out of the fact that a the word "Democracy," as it Stands i in the name of your organization, 1 means so much and is so worth^your j[*' ' ; - ' ^ v vr'- i' " v care, that its significance should not ? in the least be clouded by any prefix 1 which is'not in keeping mth Demo PUTTING BELIEF INTO PRACTICE. s. * You are not content to allow these truths to remain with you as mere idle beliefs. They supplied constant . and aggressive motives for your politcal activity and were your inspiration as you went forth to do battle in the Democratic cause?resting your hope of triumph upon an unwavering faith in the thoughtful and well informed intelligence of the American people. - r Thus you were found doing valiant service in the campaign of education. As the smoke of the last stubbornly . fought battle cleared away, no soldiers on the field ^were found surrounded by more tropies of victory | ' than the forces of the Cleveland De1 mocracy. Surely your rewards are anost > abundant.' You have not only aided 5 in the advancement of the Demo> cratic standard, but you have also contributed your full share in demon" strating that the people can be trusted when aroused to thoughtfulr ness and duty. When I suggest to you that much sturdy fighting still awaits all those e enlisted in the Democratic ranks, I f feel that I am speaking to veterans ^ who have no fear of hard campaign13 ing. We may be sure that unless we '* ?\rp continue rciiycj w n m. mm, v t*? j* shall lose what we have gained'in the s" people's cause. - Insidious schemes 38 are started on every side to' allure them t6 theip undoing. Awakenec to a sense of wrong and injustice promises of redress and benefit ar< held up to their sight, "like Deac 16 Sea fruits that tempt the eye, bu n~ turn to ashes on the lips." The self ^ ish and designing will not forego th ^ struggle, but will constantly seek t regain their vantage ground throug] m tempting fallacies, and plausible pre ^ texts of friendliness. I believe th ais / most lat THBEATENINO TIGUEE its. . for w"ich day stands m the way c ^s_ the safety-of our Government an jpg. the happiness of our people is rec] ^ less and wicked extravagance in 01 ^ public expenditures. It is the mo _ fatal of all the deadly brood bore >wn - T+ governmental perverwuu. beneath its wings the betrayal of t] people's trust and holds powerless vho its fascinating glance th^ peopl< bey will and conscience. It brazening hey exhibits to-day a Billion Dollar C< gress. But lately, a large strpl ^ v \ j / r ~ ' ' ' emained in^tKe people's public treasury after meeting all expenditures hen by no means economical This :onditioh was presented to the Lmerican people as. positive proof hat iheir burden of taxation was tnjust because unnecessary; and-yet rhile the popular^ protest is still leatd, the harpy of public extravagance devours the surplus- and im- i mdently calls upon its staggering ictims to bring still larger supplies vithin the rea<Sh of its insatiate appetite. A few short years ago a pension roll amounting to fifty-three milions of dollars was willingly main wauv niiiiin nuu ^>uijjuodo. - g In giving an account of my poH- g tical behavior, I can only offer a record of political conducfTfamaliar to r all my countrymen, and supplement ^ this record by, the declaration that I \ have done tiie best I could to deserve the confidence in me which you have $ so gracefully manifested For the j character of the record thus pre- j sented, 3 yourselves are answerable ( with me?for it has been made under j the influence and encouragement of g the sentiments and doctrines which i . the Cleveland Democracy hare culti- { yated and enforced When we started ( together in political life and respon- i j sibility your accepted creed taught { that politics was something more than ; adro& jugglery; that there was still j "such a thing as official duty and that \ it meant obligation to the people; that the ' our Goverastudy, and that th^doctrines of true , Democracy; honestly and bravely en- j forced, promised the greatest good < to all our countrymen, and exacted < through the length and breadth of j our land impartial govermental care and indiscriminating justice. puoiic bt?r y mi to* u. iuvov ?mv stroyed our Government, if it endure^ will endure only in same, failing to bless those for whom it was created and failing in its mission ae an example^ to mankind. Public extravagance in its relatioi to INEQUITABLE TABIFF-LAW8 not only lays an unjust tribtlte upoi the people, but is responsible for un fair advantages bestowed upon specia and favored interests as the price o partisan support. Thus the exercis of the popular will for the benefit c the country at large is replaced b sordid and selfish motives directed t personal advantage, while the ei couragement of such motives in pul He place for party ends deadens th omciai coiiBciou^o. Public extravagance directly di tributes gifts and gratuities amor the people, whose toleration of was is thns secured or whose past pari services are thus compensated, < who are thus bribed to future par support. Th^ mak^s the continuant of partisan pow;er a stronger m tive among public servants than t faithful discharge of the peopI< trust, and sows the seeds of coni 6 ^us cprriaption in the body politi< , BiS^t^tf^Bffladj tile aaddea? ? ) - MOST FRIGHTFUL RESULT * of public extravagance is seen in t ? readiness of the masses of our p 3 pie, who are not dishonest but 01 * heedless, to accustom themsek ? to that direKction in public pi - which it involves. Evidence is tl a that our countrymen i 11u1u?uv~ 0 in danger of losing the scrupuh k insistence upon the faithful discha] of duty on the part of their pul 6 servants, the regard for economy i frugality which belongs to stu Americanism, the independencewl )f relies upon personal endeavor i d the love of an honest and well : k- ulated government, all of which ir at the foundation of our free inst st tions. . of Have I overstated the evils es dangers with which the tremenc he growth of public extravagj in threatens us? Every man who 1 e's his country well enough to pause fly think of these things must know ra- I have not. ;us Let us then, as we push bnjd A aiiied by 4>ur patriotic citizens. T6lay public extravagance decrees that' tree timesCthat sum shall be drawn rom the people upon the pretext that ts expenditure represents the po$mar love of the soldier. Not* many rears ago a river and harbor, bill ap-. )ropriating eleven millions of dollars jave rise to a loud popular^ protest tfow public extravagance Commands in appropriation of twenty-two. milions for the same purposes, and the >eople are silent. . To-day millions, ire paid for barefaced .subsidy, and his is approved or condoned- at the j^iest of PUBLIC EXTRAVAGANCE, ind thus a new marauder is turned oose, which, in company with its vicous tariff partner, bears pilfered >enefit to the households of favored elfish interests. We need not prolong the details. Curn where we will we see the- ad ranee of this devouring and destrucive creature. Our Democratic faith teaches us hat the useless .exaction of money rom the people upon the false pre:ext of public necessity, is the worse >f all governmental pervisions, and nvolves the greatest dangers to our guarantees of. justice and equity. We need net unlearn this lesson to tpprehend the fact that behind such exaction and as'itssourceof existence s found public extravagance. Hie ace will not be laid at the root of .the Mwholesom* tariff tree with its Vienna inequality and injustice until we 'each and destroy its parent and support. . ions, force us to the contemplation jf other crimes, of which it is unioubtedly guilty, besides unjust exactions from the people. Our Government is so ordained that its life blood flows from the virtue and patriotism of our people, and its health and strength depend upon the integrity and faithfulness of their 1 11 ??T# 4-Viaoa 01*0 campaign of education, especially impress upon our countrymen the lesson that teaches that public extravagance is a deadly, dangerous thing, that frugality .and economy are honorable, that the virtue and watchfulness of the people are tl^e surest safeguards against abuses in their government, and that those who profess to serve their fellow-citizens in public place must be faithful to their trust. > Woa't Acoept the BiUe. - . i. 11. ' t> ; JX A Ol.lAft XX A TXAAW 2X. JJOpUBl IIIIIHnWi UiVCO liio 41WU- ^ ers A Dos? Of Heresy And then tiat church here, preached a sermon yesterdayjfcat a most took away the breath of his hearers. Then he pre?. . probably be accepted on.Vednea^y.^/. ^ ^ In the course of his sermon he said: f "It is questionable whether gave us a book and told us to it alL-v We are told that Moee6-'-'tiw|^^^aJ ' fho ?i?/>nnnf flfc Viftnrl Thftro ifl ' >. ' % <* J^ie.. ing positive as to their authd^^ff andl do not believe that all of thtf?-' * ^ Bible is inspired -of God. f v ' "Why are we to believe Paul wafe As to eternal punishments^! believe man wiU always be within the mercy of God. I do not believe Christ when in the manger and while he walkecV. the earth was so consecrated that he was God. I believe, however, God was in Christ.^ Mr.JSonsallis very popular as a pastor.. The acceptance of nation depends upon whether or not the failure to accept it will be eonstruced as an endorsement of his r ". \iis . . news , ', jmai A dove that had reached the age vjf of thkiy4wo years,died at Green- / castle Penh., last week. x * A small box fiHedwith Erne, ^ placed in a pantry, will absorb damj? " and keep the air sweet. Honduias,^ C?ifeal i&erica, made ' ' ^ : f a warning it to-day. Pensions are now paid by the government to the widows of three presidents, eighteen generals, one colonel, and two rear admirals. -"Bridget, what is that child erring so wildly for?" "Sure mum, he's just drinked all his soothin' syrup, and et the cork, and I don't know . what ails him unless it's the bottle L he wants to schwally." y It is now said that the la grippe ' has numbered more victims than the small pox, cholera, and yellow fever i combined. In Chicago, alone there has been 10,000 deaths from it this """ i*?t Irnnv > winter, ine uuuu/i o uv .. i what to do with it. When Queen Victoria is travling ^ by rail in her special train she- exercises no deadhead rights. She pays 6 at the rate of $1,92 a mile, whateyer / the distance in addition to ^first-class y fares for all the .party, servants in0 eluded. Her saloon carriage cost $oo,fi00. - * The Squire?It's no use for you to deny your guilt, Johnson. The chickens were actually fornd in your coat tail pockets. Bre'er Johnsing S (stoutly.)?I kain't he*p dat, sah. L Hain't it pooty tough to hold a poor niggah responsible fo1 what's going on behind his back?' ty \ a nf fhe ohonetic - system ce Auiw??? 4 0. of spelling are making an effort to he have the United States government 3's adopt their mode of spelling in all a. government publications, and in the . I printed proceedings of Congress. Thejollowing is the new hair flirtation: Hair hanging over the left shoulder, "I am engaged;* over the ? gQ right shoulder, "I am married;1* and - . ' hanging straight down the back/ 76B "G? 'or me, boys, I'm your oyster.** %ce Tongue cannot describe the love lus of Christ; finite minds cannot cdnire ceive of it; and those who know most )U8 of it can only say with inspiration rge that it "passeth knowledge." 3^c At the close of a long prayer by a father who had prayed for the poor . ^ family his Son said: Father, if I had ^ as much wheat in the barn as you have got - now, would answer that :e8~ Wmvftfilf itu_ A Massachusetts man with more money than brains proposes to erect a $7,000 dog house, and still there , ' inno are people who wonder at the dis- 4 content of the poor, mce ^ oves A New York girl was rendered so ~ * * ^ and desperate by an attack of the grip that that she* attempted suicide twice.