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4 DISPATCH, | ^ ^ ^ ^ Marriage notices inserted free. Obituaries over ten line charged for at 7 FP.MS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ? ? ~~ ? ?... '' ? - - ' " regular advertising rates. 'tie copy one year $1.50 _ .?* . ^ *. tt. py. . ?? ? VOL. XXI. LEXINGTON, S. C.,. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1891. NO,4o. ' " three months 50 *" I EPSTIN BROS., CLOTHIERS, rr HATTERS, 1RNIIRIS UNDER COLUMBIA HOTEL, With their extensive stock of ^CLOTHIXG, SHOES, HATS AND or?*-irn? nimvjnitu n f\ AATlfl Iiit.Yiy rmisnuu uwuj, Our increased facilities will enable ns tc battle all competition before ns. We ^ shall drive our axe to the hr.ndle and propose to hew any all fancy profits;, to a fine edge let it hurt who it may. Our stocn is too large for the space we occupy: we want more room in onr store. The only way to make room for our daily arrivals * - 1-?1- 3^ Kt. ooll_ BM OI -> t-Vi i i >xa. j^wuo to ow ing the stock on hand at low pricey Don't tase our say so in this matter, but call and see for yourselves that we ar< giving better values for your money thai any other house in the city. YYe have aloo a choice selection of I DRY GOODS L I Ladies' Trimmings, Whieb stock we propose to close. Oni stororoom is not sufficient to carry an< keep that line. We are determined t< R slaughter it regardless of cost. All we cai jK? say is, let the ladies call on us and prio ^ our goods, which are of the best style am ^H^fc^^^^^^manufactare, then you can tell your neigh BKflb^^^ffi&egjg^mican get an honest $1.5< want tb forces I 50 MAIN STREET, V UNDER COLUMBIA HOTEL. COLUMBIA, S. C, Sept. 7-tf J. C. H, TROEGER'S fnmimmmmm, 145 Maix Stbeet [Opposite Lorick & Lowrance,] COLUMBIA, S. C. SALOON is stocked with the Fines "Wines, Liquors, Beer, Tobacco and Cigars Restaurant is First-class in every respect Meals served at ail hours in the bigkes culinary style. Oysters, fish, etc., an< every thing palatable that the marke affords, at moderate charges. Oct 22?12m COMMERCIAL BANK. COLUMBIA, S. C. Lapital Paid $100,00( Transacts a Banking and Exchange busi ness. Receives Deposits. Interest allowei on Deposits. Safety Deposit Boxes to ren at $6 per annum. W. G. Childs, T. Hasel Gibbes, .President. Cashier. Nov. 28?ly '??-~,r " ?'???? BB^tt CAROLINA NATIONAL BANE COLUMB |A , S. C STATE, CHI and COISTY DEPOSITORY. j?p&$;, w Paid up Capital $100,00* |p Surplus Profits 60,00* B^Mr~?*?SililWS DEPARTIJEYT. t Deposits of $5,00 and upwsrde received > "'V Interest allowed at the rati' of 4 psr cent QlB per annum. \V\ A. CLARK, President tgf;:, Wilie Jex%, cashier. December 1-1 y. VItu^ 3>??ce Cured. Vlli Sajj Axdkea*. Cnh Co., CaJ., Feb. 1S89. My boy, 1J year a ole* \Vflji so. affected by S: Vitus Daoct- thai ho cor.ti ao<. go to school fo 2 y oar it. Tvo bottles of Factor ji<*znig'3 Nerv Tonic restored his health, and he pn a: tending scUwJ a^aiu. MICHAEL O'COSCKEL. A Vet;' iiad Case. East ^KvniAttKfcr, Md., March 8, 1801. My daughter had epilepsy go severe that sh would hare 6 or 7 fits every !i< hbure- Imme ciately after using Pastor Koenig's J?*rye Xoni the spasms decreased in number, and if: . than two weeks .'rom taking ;.ho first dose tht; V entirely ceased. Before using this medicine he mind was very weak, but now micd and mem ory are fully restored, and she is entirely curtx of the fits by the use of th**j great remedy. MKix J. U. ANDliEWS. ????? > I"?A Valuaolo Book on Tfervou1 ? B tVno. tn ftosr I 7a fj |U fj rrtwiwi .?w f n f I and poor patients can ai?c obtaii 8 8 abate this medicine free of chart-?. litis remedy has been prepared by the Eevereac Pas tor Eoeai?. of Fort Vv ayne, Ind? since W76, &ac is now prepared nnderMs direction by the KOENIC MED. CO.. Chicago, III. Sold by Druggists at SI per Bottle. 6 for S3 large Size. 81.75. G Bottles tor S9. i THE MARCH OF CHRIST. Ca : SERVICES OF SACRAMENT SUNDAY ta AT DR. TALMAGE'S TABERNACLE. th at. | The Lowly Surroundings of the Advent ro - - I 4.U and tfte Signs in tne neaveas?ueinm> w of Christ's Separate Walks from Keth- til ' lehem to Calvary. ill Brooklyn, Sept. 27.?This is Sacrameat Sunday at the Brooklyn Taber- ^ nacle. The services as usual on these . occasions were very solemn and impres- cj sive. The morning service opened with the Long Meter Doxologv. The grand ^ offertory by Grison was exquisitely rendered by Professor Henry Eyre ^ Browne, and the service closed with ^ the majestic "Coronation*' hymn. I)r. . Talmage's discourse was on ' "The March ^ of Christ Through the Centuries," and . . his text Revelation xix, 12, "On his head were many crowns." ^ May your ears be alert and your ^ thoughts coneentered.and all the powers j ., ? ? 1 mt.il/, T tj^AaV f A I t)l vuur sum atuuscu, ?nuc x ?.v ^ you of "the march of Christ through ^ the centuries." You say, "give us then w a good start, in rooms of vermilion and ^ on tioor of mosaic and amid corridors jof porphyry and under canopies dyed in ; all the splendors of the setting sun." ,' > You can have no such starting place. ^ At the time our Chieftain was born, V( there were castles on the beach of Gali- m lee, and palaces at Jerusalem, and imperial bathrooms at Jericho, and obe- &r lisks at Cairo, and the Pantheon at ^ Rome, with its eorinthian portico and its sixteen granite columns; and the ^ Parthenon at Athens, with its glistening coronet of temples; and there were * mountains of fine architecture in many parts of the world. But none of them were to be the startling place of the ^ Chieftain 1 celebrate. . A cow's stall, a winter month, an at- ' i Biosphere in which are the moan of ^ 1 camels, and the baaing of sheep, and ^ the barking of dogs, and the rough ^ banter of hostleries. He takes his first journey before he could walk. Armed desperadoes with hands of blood were ' ready to snatch him down into butchery. Rev. William H. Thompson, the ^ veteran and beloved missionary whom n. I saw this last month in Denver, in his er eighty-sixth year, has described in his p volume entitled, 4'The Land and the ^ Book," Bethlehem as he saw it. Win- ' r ter before last 1 walked up and doun jn * the gray hills of Jura limestone on which the village now rests. ^ e The fact that King David had beer. ^ 1 born there had not during ages ele- ^ vated the village into any special at- * J tention. The other fact that it was t . the birthplace of our Chieftain did not ^ m ^^pthe place in after years from spe- . there j. H^^ue ht'i9 observed was the most abhorrent debauchery the world has ever seen. Our Chieftain was considered dangerous TK from the start. The world had put ^ suspicious eyes upon him because at the time of his birth, the astrologers ^ had seen stellar commotions, a world nut. nf its nlaee and shootinc down to- , t ward a casavanaary. Star divination was a sbienee. As late as the Eight- ^ eenth century it had its votaries. At the court of Catharine de Medici it was ^ honored. Kepler, one of the wisest jl m philosophers that the world ever saw, ^ declared it was a true science. As late as the reign of Charles II, ja Lilly, an astrologer, was called before ^ the house of commons in England to , i . . x ? , hi give his opinion as to future events. For ages the bright appearance of j ' Mars meant war; of Jupiter, meant j-( power; of the Pleiades, meant storms tv at sea. And as history moves in cir- ^ t cies, I do not know but that after ai . awhile it may be found th$t as the j moon lifts the tides of the sea and the . ' * sun affects the growth or blasting of t crops, other worlds besides those two j( worlds may have something to do with the destiny of individuals and nations je . I ir? rhw wnrlfl "* " " pi THE SYMPATHETIC STARS. g I do not wonder that the oommo- ar tions in the heavens excited the wise jj men on the night our Chieftain was w ) born. As he came from another world j, . and after thirty-three years was again j. i to exchange worlds, it does not seem ar t strange to me that astronomy should ^ have felt the effect of his coming. And jf, instead of being unbelieving about the st one star that stooped, I wonder that ^ all the worlds in the heavens did not ^ that Christmas night make some special demonstration. Why should they leave f to one w orld or meteor the bearing of jjj the news of the humanidation of Christ! UJ ^ Where was Mars that night that it did JU not indicate the mighty wars that were ^ to come between righteousness and ,) iniquity.' Where was Jupiter that night that it did not celebrate omnlpo- H, D ter>ee incarnated? Where were the lj1 [> Pleiades that night that they did not m announce the storms of persecution rj< that wc^uld assail our Chieftain ^ ' J In watching this lusjch of Christ g.f ] through the centuries, we must not < ] !walk before him or beside him, for that j would not be reverential or worship- * ful. So we walk behind him. We fol- ^ j low hhu while not yet in i?i* teens, up a ^ Jerusalem terrace, to a building ^ hundred feet long and six hundred feet wide, und under the hovering splendor of gateways, and by a pillar crowned ' with capital chiseled into tlu* shape tl; flowers and leaves, and along by walls ^ of beveled ma*oii;y and near a marble screen until a group of whitehaired philosophers and theologians ' gather around him, and then ti*e r 1 boy bewilders and confounds and overwhelms these scholarly septuage- , j narians with (Questions they cannot an- , j Jjncl under his quick whys and * wherefore and liows and whens they , j pull their whit*; btayd* with embarrass- fa - ' ment, and rub their wrinkled foreheads fh ^ i in confusion, and putting tlipijt ^4# rj * I hard down 011 the marble floor as they jj, r | arisa to go, they must feci like chiding se j I the boldne^c rhar allows twelve years \ ! ?* age to ask seventy-tj ye years of age J jn r ! such puzzlers. j CJ Oat of this building we folioyv h;u, j or j Into the Quarantania, the mountain oi J p, | i temptation, its side to this day black { with robbers' dens. Look! Up the i side of thjs mountain come all the ! forces of perdition to effect our Chief- UI ! tain's capture. But although weak- m j ened by forty days and forty wigbts of 1 qC stinence, he hurls all Pandemonium ?\vn the rocks, suggestive of how he u hurl into helplessness all our temptions. And now we climb right after him up e tough sides of the "Mount of Beitudes," and on the highest pulpit of eks, the Valley of Hatin before him; ^ ^ A''A 4-r\ tho virrhf lilTll C JjarvT Ul \^? c\iii vt CVS Cite V4 ??4MJ , e Mediterranean sea to the left of til, and he preaches a sermon that yet 11 transform the world with its apied sentiment. Now we follow our lieftain on Lake Galilee. We must tep to the beach, for our feet are not od with the supernatural, and we re ember what poor work Peter made it when he tried to walk the water. Christ our leader is on the top of the ssing waves, and it is about .half past ree in the morning,and it is the darkest ne just before daybreak. Hut by the ishes of lightning we see him putting s feet on the crest of the wave, stepug from crest to crest, walking the (lite surf, solid as though it were ozeu snow. The sailors think a ghost striding the tempest, but he cheers em into placidity, showing himself to ( a great Christ for sailors. And he alks the Atlantic and Pacific and editerranean and Adriatic now, and exhausted and affrighted voyagers ill listen for his voice at half-past three clock iu the morning on any sea, inled at any hour, they will hear his >iee of compassion and encourageent. We continue to follow our Chieftain, id here is a blind man by the wayside, is not from cataract of the eye or om ophthalmia, the eye extinguisher the east, but he was born blind. "Be )ened!" he crie3, and first there is a carting of the eyelids, and then a twi?ht, and then a mid noon, and then a lout, "'see! isee!" Tell it to all ie blind, and they at least can appreate it. And here is the widow's dead n, and here is the expired damsel, id Here is .Lazarus: "Live: our liieftain cries, and tiiev live. Tell it trough all the bereft households; tell among the graves. And here around him gather the deaf, id the dumb, and the sick, and at his ord they turn on their couches and ush from awful pallor of helpless ill?ss to rubicund health, and the swoll i foot of the dropsical sufferer be>mes fleet as a roe on the mountains, he music of the grove and household akens the deaf ear, and lunatic and aniac return into bright intelligence, id the leper's breath becomes as reef as the breath of a child, and the ?sh as roseate. Tell it to all the sick, irough all the homes, through all the :>spitals. Tell it at twelve o'clock at ght; tell it at two o'clock in the orning; tell it at half-past three, and the last watch of the night, that jsufs walks the tempest. ) ii"T ir r~ Still we follow our > /eminent that gave him no proteoon insists that he pay tax, and too x>r to raise the requisite two dollars id seventy-five cents, he orders Peter > catch a fish that has in its mouth a oman state, which is a bright coin .nd you know that fish naturally bite , anything bright), but it was a mirae that Peter should have caught'it at le first haul. Sow we follow our Chieftain until r the paltry sum of fifteen dollars idas sells him to his pursuers. Tell to all the betrayed! if for ten thouind dollars, or for five hundred doirs, or for one hundred dollars your ;terests were sold out, consider for iw much cheaper a sum the Lord of trill and heaven was surrendered to inniliation and death. But here, while flowing him on a spring night beveen eleven and twelve o'clock, we e the Hash of torches and lanterns id we hear the cry of a mob of nihilts. They are breaking in on the lietude of Gethsemane with clubs? a mob with sticks chasing a mad >& It is a herd of Jerusalem "roughs" d on by Judas to arrest Christ and mish him for being the loveliest and ist being that ever lived. But rioters e liable to assail the wrong man. OW >yere they to be sure which one us Jesus? "J. will kiss liim," says idas, "and by that signal you will iow on whom to lay your impel* Qt rest." So the kiss which throughout ie humau race and for all time God tended as the most sacred demonration of affection, for Paul writes to ie Romans and the Corinthians and i? Thessalonians concerning the "holy ss," and Peter celebrates the kiss of iarity, and with that conjunction of >s Laban met Jacob, and Joseph et his brethren, and Aaron et Moses, and Samuel met nil, and Jonathan met David, and ppah departed from Jsaoini, and Paul para ted from his friends at Ephesps, iii the father in the Gamble i/reeted e returning prodigal, and when the illenniuin shall come wo are told ^hteousness and peace will kiss each her, and all the world is invited to eet Christ as inspiration cries out, ?i** the Son lest he be angry and ye >riah from the way"?that most saed demonstration of reunion and afction was desecrated as rhe filthy lips Judas touched the pure cheek of tirist, and*the horrid smack of that ss ha? }ts echo in the treachery and ?basem.enf inid hypocrisy all ages. As, in J)eceuibeV, 188!), f. waikod Pft in way from Bethany, and at the foot : Mount Olivet, a half mile from the all of Jerusalem, through the Garden ; Gethsemane, and under the eight jnerable olive trees now standing, teir nouiological ancestors having ^en witnesses of tin? pmjrrences spoken ', the scene of horror and of crime une back to uie unti! I shuddered ith the historical reminiscence, in further following our great Chief .in's march through the centuries 1 i in lY.mfr <if 1U LllV^CIl 111 W4. V- J VV 1 r 4.4 W.. . erod's palace in Jerusalem, and on a ovaOij; platform placed ujKm a teslated p&veiiifUi j/'fptuw Pilate sirs, nd as once a year a condemned al is pardoned. Pilate lets the people loose whether it shall be an assassin our L'hieftain, and they all cry out r the /iteration of the assassin, thus claring they picier % juurderer to the lvation of the world. Pilate took. a isin of water in front of These people id tried to wash off the blood of this nivt^r fiviin hi* hands, hut he eouid ;t. They are still lifted, and 1 see them looming up through all the age>, i eight lingers and two thumbs standing ; out red with the carnage. THE AGONY ON CALVARY. Still following our Chieftain 1 ascend j the hill which General Gordon, the ' great English explorer and arbiter tir.st i made a clay model of. It is hard climbing for our Chieftain, for lie has not only two heavy timbers to carry on hi? "Krt.A- fKa nnKiAif on/? Imt'i'/Antn 1 niaOu. uci^a, me uuu ii\/i u.t/iiun |/?vw>, of the cross, but he is suffering from ex liaustion caused by lack of food, iiiouj tain chills, desert heats, whippings with elmwood rods and years of maltreat ment. It took our party, in 1889, only fifteen minutes to elimb to the top of the hill and reach that limestone rock in yon der wall, which i rolled down from tin apex of Mount Calvary. But I think our Chieftain must have taken a lon?j time for the ascent, for he had ali earth and all heaven and all hell on his back as he climbed from base to summit, and there endnred what William Cow per and John Milton and Charles Wes ley and Isaac Watts and James Mont gomery and all the other sac-red poet: have attempted to put in verse; anc Angelo and Raphael and Titian anti Leonardo da Vinci and all the greai Italian and German and Spanish ant I French artists liave attempted to pamt and Bossuet and Massiilon and Greorg< Wliitefleld aud Thomas Chalmers liavt attempted to preach. Something of its overwhelming aw fulness you may estimate from the faci that the sun which shines in the heav ens could not endure it; the sui which unflinchingly looked upon th< deluge that drowned the world, which without blinking, looked upon the ruin: of earthquakes which swallowed Lisboi and Caraccas, and has looked unblanch ed on the battlefields of Arbela, Blen lieim, Megiddo and Esdraelon, and al the scenes of carriage that have eve: scalded and drenched the earth witl human gore?that sun could not lool upon the scene. The sun dropped ove; its face a veil of cloud. It withdrew It hid itself. It said to the midnight "I resign to tliee this spectacle upor which I have no strength to gaze; tlioi "? - i- ? J_ ? ? ? 1 X il.MI i arc onna, oil, imaingut: aiiu xur ma i reason I commit to thee this tragedy!' Then the night hawk and the bat tlev by, and the jackal howled in th< ravines. Now we follow our Chieftain as the; carry his limp and lacerated form ami< the flowers and trees of a garden, th< gladioluses, the oleanders, the lilies, thi geraniums, the mandrakes, down flv< or six steps to an aisle of granite when he sleeps. But only a little while hi sleeps there, for there is an earthquaki in all that region, leaving the rocks U this day in their aslant and rupturec state declarative of the fact that some thing extraordinary three happened ' A a I _.Jjjs brief slumber and wrestle down ruffian Death who would keep him im prisoned in that cavern and put botl heels on the monster, and coming fortl with a cry that will not cease to b< echoed until on the great resurrectior day the door of the lost sepulcher shal be unhinged and flung clanging int< the debris of demolished cemeteries. "*T /-II ML I.n. XL iiow we iouow our vmieiuun 10 ui< shoulder of Mount Olivet, and withou wings he rises, the disciples elutchinj for his robes too late to reach them, ant across the great gulfs of space with on< bound he gains that world which fo; thirty-three years had been denied hi: companionship, and ail heaven lifted ? shout of welcome as he entered, and o coronation as up to the mediatoria throne he mounted. It was the great est day heaven had ever seen. The; had him back again from tears, frou wounds, from ills, from a world thai never appreciated him to a world ir which lie was the chief delight. In al the libretto of celestial music it wai hard to find an anthem enough conjubi lant to celebrate the joy saintly seraphic, archangelic, deific. But still we follow our Chieftain ir his march through the centuries, foi invisibly he still walks the earth, ant! bv the eve of faith we still follow him. You can tell where he walks by tlj? churches and hospitals and reforina tory institutions and houses of mercy that spring up along the way. I heai his tread in the sickroom and in the abodes of bereavement. He marches on aod the nation* are gathering around him. The islands of the sea are hearing liis voice. The continents are feeling his power. America will be his. Europe will be his. Asia will be bis. Africa will be his. Australia will be his. New Zealand will be his. All the earth will his! f)o you realize that until now it was impossible for the world to be converted! Not until very recently has the world been found. The Bible talks about '-the ends of the earth" and the Uttermost parts of the world" as be ing Sftyed, hot hot until now have the "ends of the earth" been discovered, and not until now have the "uttermost parts of the world" been revealed. The navigator did his work, the ex nltvKav fllil VL'.-vi'lr tlio j his work, and now for the tirst time since the world has been created has the world been known, measured off. aj)d geographized, the lost, hidden and unknown tract has been mapped out, and now the work of evangelization i will be begun with an earnestness and velocity as yet unimagined. The swiniships are ready, the lightning express trains ape ready, the printing presses are ready, the telegraph and telephone are ready, millions of Christians are ready and now see Christ marching on through the centuries. Marching on! Marching on! One by one governments will fall into line and constitutions and literatures will adoro his name. More honored and worshiped is he in this year of lstll than at any time since the yeai one, and the day hastens when all nations will join one procession "follow ing the Lamb whithersoever hegoeth." Marching on, marching on! This dear old world whose back )ia> j jjvW} scourged, whose eyes have been j blinded, whose heart haa been wrung i will yet rival lu?aven. This planet's j torn robe of pain and crime and deI mentia will come off and the white and | spotless and glittering robe of holiness i happiness will come on. The last J wound'will have stu|g for the last i time, the last grief will have wiped its j last tear, the last criminal will have ! repented of his last crime and our world that has been a straggler anion I worlds, a lost star, a waywa.-t! plane a rebellious glolx\ a miscreant sate lite, will hear the voice tliat uttere ' childish plaint in Bethlehem and ag< 1 liked prayer in Gethsemane and dyir groan on Golgotha, and as this voic cries 4"Come," our world will retur : .from its wandering never again t ! straw Mareliintr on. marchintr on! ' TH1? GLORIOUS FINALITY. Then this world's joy will be so gre; that other worlds l>e.side.s heaven ma 1 l>e glad to rejoice with us. Ky the ai of powerful telescopes, year by yes Incoming more powerful, mountains i ' other stars have been discovered an ' chasms and volcanoes and canals an the style of atmosphere, and this wi ! go on. and mightier and mightier tel : scopes will be invented until I shoul not wonder if we will be able to e 1 change signals with other planets. And as 1 have no doubt other worl< ? are inhabited, for God would not hai built such magnificent world houses 1 have them stand without tenants or o cujjants, in the final joy of earth's r * demption all astronomy, I think, w *. i l i; i taae jwn, wt> Mgnuung uinei wurn ^ and they in turn signaling their stell; ^ neighbors. Oh, what a day in beavt * that will bo when the march of Chri ' is finished! 1 know that on the ero * Christ said. '*lt is finished," but i ' meant Ills sacrificial work was finishes All earth and all heaven knows th evangelization is not finished, but the c will come a day in heaven most raptu ous. ' It may be after our world, which ; thought to have about fifteen hundrt > million people, shall have on its dee] i twice its present population, namel 1 three thousand million souls and i adeemed, and it will be after tli world shall be so damaged by court * gration that no human foot can trej r its surface^and no human being c? 1 breathe its air, but most certainly tl c dav will come when heaven will be fi r Lshed and the last of the twelve gat of the eternal city shall have elarig< ' shut, never, to open except for the a 1 mission of some celestial embassage i 1 turning from some other world, ai * Christ may strike his scarred but heal< hand in emphasis on the arm of tl v amethystine throne and say in su ? stance: 44All my ransomed ones a gathered. The work is done. I ha' ' finished my march through the ce turies." When in 1813, after the battle 3 Leipsic, which deeided the fate of tl 2 Nineteenth century, in some respec 2 the most tremendous battle ever fougL 2 the bridge down, the riv >r incarn 2 dined, the street choked with tl ^ wounded, the fields for miles aroui strewn with a dead soldiery fro ?whom aHtn^s of humanity ^ad l>e< 0 -square piR/eipsicthe all it /eonqueror^^Mfcings who had gaii* the victory king of Prussia, ti 1 emperor of Rissia, the crown prince 1 Sweden?followed bv the chiefs 3 * their armies. With drawn swor< | these monarchs saluted each other ar cheered for the continental victoi they had together gained. Histo) has made the scene memorable. A Greater and more thrilling will be tl spectacle when the world is all coi J quered for the truth and in front of tl palace of heaven the kings and co: ! querors of all the allied powers < r Christian usefulness shall salute eao i other and recount the struggles I: i which they gained the triumph an I then hand over their swords to 111 j who is the Chief of the eonquerer crying: "Thine, oh Christ, is the Kin| doiu; take the crown of victory, tl r crown of dominion, the crown of grac 1 the crown of glory." "On his hea & were many crowns." i | Last year: * Her eyes were rheumy, and weak and red Her breath ?yoa could smell it afar, , She had ringing and dizziness oft in h head, t And the case of it nil was catarrh. r This year: ? I Her breath is as sweet as the sew meadc hay. Her eyes are as bright as the star. And the cause of the change, she is rea< to sey. Was the Dr. Sage Cure for Catarrh. Dr. Sages Catarrh Remedy will po * itively cure catarrh in the hea 1 no matter how bad or of how lor 1 standing. Fifty cents, all druggist i Decree in the Coosaw Case, Charleston, Sept, 18.?Judge Sir i onton to-day filed in the Unit* States circuit court his decree on ti i decision of Chief Justice Fuller, co: j- curred in by himself, against tl i Coosaw Mining company. The d l nrca rrron + a o nayriotiiol ininndu I V 1 WW IV iwm AMJMMVVAC restraining the Coosaw from claii; > ing the right to dig rock under tl act of 1870. It is further state ; that nothing in this decree shall pr vent them from mining in Coosa territory in . the future when du L authorized to do so under the law < ! the State. It also discharges U. ] i Brooks from the receivership orde ing the plaintiffs to pay him SB ' for services. Judge Simonton added that tl 1 Chief Justice authorized him to ss ' he concurs iu the above decree. : Strange and Fatal Cattle Disease i Huntingdon, Pa., Sept. 20?Tl: cattle in this and adjoining countie are being attacked with a peculia and thus far unidentified, diseas I which, in nearly every instance, prove fatal. The disease first appeare about two weeks ago, and alreatl hundreds of cattle have pensile* When attacked, the animal's hen falls helplessly and its legs seen unable to bear the weight of the bod; It is believed that the disease is form of Texas splenic fever, and wt ' brought here by Southern cattle. o w I ? 1 "Randall Rope, the retired druggis of Madison, Fla., says P. P. P. is tl best alterative in the market, and 1: has handled and sold all the sarsapi villas and blood medicines that wei advertised. i ? %?,? Northern onions, at the Bazaar. ig The Glory cf Agriculture. t, i,(] A Lecture Delivered Before Rock A1 [>- liance, No. G36. by Their Lecturer. ;e ^ l^nlvliobA.l 1\Y? *P f I i. UWliBilCH .O I In six days God created the heaven* and the earth, and by his omnipotent hand planted in the earth the seed* ^ of the stately oak, healing herbs and beauteous flowers, and to mar ir he gave a home among lueious fruit* 111 and fragrant flowers. Agriculture is the first and grand ljj est of all occupations. God plantec the garden of Eden and placed man therein to beautify and tend it. H< caused to spring forth out of tin ground every tree that is pleasant to the sight and bears fruit for man's sustenance. It was a command oi I tr [.0 the Almighty that man should till tin c_ ground. History proves that wher< e_ agriculture has been fostered by ? ill People that nation has reached a higl p, degree of perfection. ar Since the creation of the earth ,n agriculture has existed. There is nc st occupation that precedes it. No or ss der nor association that can rani ie with it in antiquity, power or knowl J. edge. It is the pivot of the world at as compared with it all other occcu re pations are as vapor driven before f ir- tempesteous gale. When Napoleon drew up his troops is before the Mameluks under tin id shadow of the pyramids, pointing t( Its the later, he said to his soldiers y. "Remember that from youde: dl height forty centuries look dowr on you," but as we behold tin a" glories to be won in the grea ld held of agriculture, we cry ou in to the youth of this land, that mon ie than six thousand years look dowi n" on you and tell you of the happi es tipqq to V?p found in this occuDation ^ But let us look at some of the ad vantages of this vocation. In tin e~ first place, as all other vocations de * pend upon farming, the people win ' are engaged in farming are more in dependent than the people who fol low other occupations. Then, if i v_e be true that the more independent i man becomes the happier he be comes, it follows that the farmer are happier than any other classes o je men. It was Scotland's immorta ts bard that said: uTo court Dame For tune's golden smile assiduous, wai upon her and gather yearly ever !je will that's justified by hornor; no to hide it in a hedge but for the glc ia rious privilege of being indepen id >d pure air iq all the of teaches the great lesson of self-reli of ance. Life on the farm developes is both physical and moral courage, id When the aims of the living Goc ry were defied by the great chieftain o ry the Philistines, who was it that ad vanced to meet the mighty man o: le war? I answer that it was the shep n" herd's lad who fed his father's fiocki le in the land of Bethlehem of Judah and when there came a lion and i J bear and took a lamb from the flocl )V he slew both the lion and the bear, id Many of the great of the eartl in were farmer boys. When the Romai s- armies needed a man to lead them t< S" victory, they called from the plow * 16 n* il T .... v^iuuiutttutJ tu ittiu ixitrju. niuuruwi J glorious country, the land of tin free and the home of the brave, whei the British yoke had become unbear able to the colonists and they hat determined to be free, whom did the colonists call to lead their armies? ] er answer him whose name causes to thril in every bosom the heart that loves freedom and liberty and indepen dence. That name is George Wash )W ington, once a fanner boy. Agriculture is the light house o \y the world. When the waves art surging to and fro, and when th< storms of life are raging highest, ii >s- is then that her golden sun shine* d, brightest. I thank God that I an ig permitted to live in this glorious ag S. rimiltural country where every mar can sit under his own vine and tree. Of all the instrumentalities for soothing the wrinkled brow ol n care, tranqulizing the feelings of th< s(j suffering invalid, elevating the mine ' to higher and nobler purposes anc n_ for making life happy there is non< that equals a life on the farm. e Again, agriculture has a greal moral effect for it deals with the real ities and leads from nature up to na je ture's God. We of this generatior and nation occupy the Gibralter oj the ages which commands the world's 0- O future. Iy I do not mean to say that all far mers are just what the ought to be. ^ That is not the subject under discus '' sion. It is my aim to call your atten >- tion to the possibilities and advantages of this great occupation. liven heart should pay tribute to agricul ture. Brain and blood and life owe their existence to the labor of the husbandman. All classes of men should do everything possible for the encouragement of * is noble pursuit. This is a duty tha >-ery man owes ie to himself, for when the farmers oi -s the country are prosperous all other r> classes are prosperous. There should e> be on the statute book no law detri -s mental to the man who upturns the d sod with his silvery plow or reaps the harvest of golden grain. The farh mer is brother to the world. Every d effort should be put forth for his de13 | velopment and improvement Some Y- j farmers seem ashamed of their call a | ing. This is simply lack of sense. 19 | Then there are those who say there is 110 money in farming. To the man who gives to the town or village six I days in the week, chietiv to whittle ^ goods boxes and gossip, the earth 10 does not yeld the bounteous increase. 10 But to the faithful man who puts his a* hands to the plow and does not "turn ? back," there is the glorious promies i from God himself that he shall have i plenty of bread. The farm in so j eiety has always held a material su ! premacy to which every other interj est has turned with filial respect. It i is further an undisputed fact that of c - ( all the callings agriculture is the most f ; suggestive of mental training and ! improvement. ! Lauded indeed should be every i sentiment .to the intellectual develop- ^ | ment of the rural districts for the r . , world is in need of more rich far i -a ii - -A i i.-i.: ^ ; mer imnas, more mieueciuai puuuj cal and literary leaders of the Cin- j, cinatus and Washington type. r , May God hasten the day when the .( ^ youth of our country shall recognize j the mighty importance of this grand j and glorious subject, and may the ^ [ time soon come when over this broad land of ours agriculture shall occupy 3 the.position it so nobly deserves. < 3 Lexington, S. C., August, 1891. ^ i ? ^ ' State of Ohio, Uity of Toledo, f ? i i* ? Qfi Lucas County. ) 31 Frank J. Cheney makes oath that 3 I ^ 1 lie is the senior partner of the firm i j of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing busi| ness in the City of Toledo county ' | and State aforesaid, and that said | firm will pay the sum of One Huni j dred Dollars for each and every case - of Catarrh that cannot be cured by ; j the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. t Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed 5 in my presence, thi3 6th day of ' December, A. D. 1886. i . ^ i ^ A. \Y. ULKASON, : 1 I - { r < SEAL > V-- - if. > ^ 1 t .. * ^" i"w Notary Public. ^ j Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter- 1 t nally and acts directly upon the ] ^ blood and mucous surfaces of the ^ g i l system. Send for testimonials, free. J F. J. CHENEY & CO., j Toledo, O. ~ Sold by all druggists, 75 cents 47. 1 ~ Another Hog and Hominy Advocate. j The Alliance was one of the grand- ] - est organizations of the Nineteenth t Century. It acquired the largest 1 a membership in the shortest time of j '- any order to my knowledge, but with- 1 s out it quits dabbling in politics, I < i* f * 1 i 1 J *1 ?U 1 1 i am airaia inai it win lose niwuufra 1 ,1 faster than it gained them. If poli - tics had been kept out of the Alii- j t ance I have no doubt in the world y it would have succeeded in its under- ' t takings. The Alliance was a Radical ?- invention, I fear, to decoy the Dem ocratic party. I have nodQ^^^tfSjip the peopleyntenti(j||^KS^^^^^H - cratic party, and she is in their grasp 1 } at present but I do hope by the time 1 of the ensuing election that the peo 1 pie will have enough of warehouses 1 f and land loan schemes. I am fully 1 - satisfied that if you look info this < f matter thoroughly your conclusion J - will be, that sub-treasury is another 3 name for office. , It is surprising to see how people i can be blinded and led off. We listen : too much to those shrewed, perfidious politicians. Of course they will en1 deavor to make you believe if they i are elected you shall have werehouses > and other prodigious schemes that i they are advocating in operation. i Friends, don't believe every word 3 that emanates from eloquent lips and i silver tongue orators. If you do, they will have in your imagination i 1 that you will soon be rolling in af> fluence. Have a mind of your own 1 [ about these matters; study both 1 sides until you satiate every desire > you have on the subject; don't take up bright things of one side and - think you will just march on to victory, but see if the advantages outf weigh the disadvantages. Supposing } there are 3,000 counties in the United 3 States, and one warehouse to every three counties, that makes 1,000 f i ware houses in the United States. 1 There are 5,000,000 farms. In all j - probability in those 1,000 counties i there are 2,000,000 farms, what is to 1 y become of the 3,000,000 fanners who ( * live in those other counties? Haul * f their produce fifty or sixty miles to j j store it up for speculators? It is go- ^ 1 ing to be one of the grandest things ^ I for monved men ever known in this j ) country. People are going to be mighty accommodating to haul their t produce to speculators. It is the - most preposterous thing I ever heard - of. Friends, don't let every ,?fool- j: i hargs" expression put some pernil tious idea into your head. ^ j Land loan schemes, did you say? "What benefit is that for a poor man - that has not got any land? Those l. - i i .1 i T i : who nave iauu nave ueen uuriuvvmg . - too much already for their own good , - and if the interest was brought down to two per cent., I am afraid they 0 ' would Borrow so much that they a - would never get out. Some might 13 ) have the audacity to say that people ? > ought to have better sense than to t borrow more than they could pay i back. I will say to all such that they should know better than to favor such ij s destructive schemes as are before the ^ ; people now. Laws have always been ? to suit the wealthy, and I am afraid j i they are going to remain so. In conclusion, I will say that the q i farmers of this country need not ex- jy ; pect to be hoisted up in the realms ^ of bliss and their soar around in opulence. No, friends, you just as well subdue that novel sentiment that i is now thrilling your whole being with enchanting anticipation that you F will never realize by the sub-treasury 1 scheme. This needs no pins; it will \ J* * * t rr o I n noict. o. u. rx Hollow Creek, September 14. 81 a: 0 A gigantic skeleton of a man over < eight feet in length has been (lis- 11 covered out in Utah. On the body i was a large copper chain of expert workmanship and a number of me- aJ dallions with peculiar hieroglyphic tt inscriptions. | tt Pic Nic of the Peak Eifles, It was the liappy privilege of your :orrespondent to attend the pic nic if the Peak Rifles on Friday last, ibout one mile from town, near Mrs. Levi Stuck's. Jnthe outset I will tate, that though the company was tommissioned the Peak Guards, the lame has lately been changed to that >f the Peak Rifles. At 10 o'clock the company assem)led in their armory, from which it narened oat to tne grounds under :ommand of Capt. P. E. Eargle. [Being arrayed in handsome new uni'orme, with glistenirg bayonets and _?_ lag flying waving above, the company nade a show unsurpassed by few, if my of the military companies of the State. On arriving at the grounds, vhere a large crowd had already assembled, the company spent more ;lian an hour drilling which was jreatly admired by the entire assem)lage. A rest was then taken, when Capt. Eargle, in a few appropriate remarks, ntroduced Lieut. Harry Blease of ;he Newberry Rifles, who entertained us with an excellent address appropriate to the occasion. He spoke of lL. :j. -1 v j [lie preue 01 uemg a suiuier auu especially a South Carolinian. He recounted the positions South Carolina had always eccupied in the various wars to which our country has been engaged and the valor displayed by aer sons in fighting for home and country. Want of. space will not admit a full synopsis of hia speech which was attentively listened to and greatly enjoyed by all. The next thing in order was din aer, the anouncement of which was ananimously resphoded to. The din aer was excellent in every respect and [he supply was bountiful, in fact the Long table was heavily laden with lainties that would tempt the appetite of the most fastidious. After dinner Lieut. Blease drilled the company for a short while, and after a short rest, the march for Peak was taken up. The day was pleasantly spent and will long be re* membered by all present. Capt. n 1 _ i? J ? J.. rjiirglc xiau 1113 turnpauj uuun tw trol throughout the day, and the military decorum of J the boys, as well aa their fine drilling, reflected mnch credit on themselves as well as their Captain. The occasion was closed with a grand ball in the town hall at night, which was participated in by a number of visiting ladies and gentlemen. H.OR for over sjx years, taken down and confined to my bed. My legs and feet were badly swollen faftPWl md the color of a red apple and I ^ H9BH|H?R| was in a fearful condition. I heard EaWMim )f P. P. P. (Prickly Ash, Poke Root md Potassium.) and after. seeing what the ingredients were?as the wgHflfiKHj formula is on the bottle?I con- B?hBm8?BP eluded to try it, and after taking IQHBflHHP ;hree small bottles was able to go lown town and attend to my busi- ^^^1^ less, and I must say that I feel like mother man. Am now taking the large size, and to-day I believe that [ will soon be as lively as any man ){ sixty one years of age can expect :o be. A. C. L.o?a. An Alliance Disbands, tfontgomory (Ala.) Advertise, in Important Break in the Order and the Reasons Therefore. Elsewhere we present the resolu;ions of "Woodside Alliance in this 'ounty, disbanding that organization or patent and satisfactory reasons dated therein. Departing from tho )riginal purposes, seeking to divert md prostitute the order to their own personal aggrandizement and to satsfy their political aspirations the lemagogues and hungry oflSce-seekera lave well-nigh wrecked the Alliance, ind the action of this Sub-Alliance is mly the beginning of the end, and ia A i warning to those who have the in- * erests and welfare of the Alliance at leart, to stop and consider well what hey are doing, before they longer )lindly follow corrupt, designing eaders to full disruption and disnemberment of their order through?ut the State. They are still deoted to the original aims and purges for which the order was ounded, but hold that it has been >erverted and made a political mahine, whose edicts must be swal- , i 3wed, e^en at the expense of solemn onyictions of duty and and the sacifice of self respect. They hold hat such a course is paying too learly for membership, and take the pen and manly course of severing 11 connection with the Alliance as tow constituted. 'A Drink Fit For Ye Gods.** Lovers of a fruit juice beverage rill find a pure, wholesome and aeightfully refreshing dnnk in the Ipecialty Go's Apple and Peach cider, h-ape and Florida Orange Juice, iaspberry and Pineapple Julep. Be ure that you ask for the Specialty Jo's goods. The Specialty Co., Cider lills, 28 and 29 Williamson St.; Ofce, 107 Bav street, Savannah, Ga. 52-ly * The Cost of Free Sugar. rom the Boston Transcript. Tt is nnw thought that ?12.000. 00 will be required to pay the sugar ourity the present year. "We are apposed to have made sugar free, d the American people will pay $12,00,000 in 1891 for having done it. he Government doesn't furnish the loney. It is the people. Tetter, Saltrheum and Cancer are 1 1 1 ? "D X> "D TV,^ A UUi tJU ujv x . x . x . xuc cunt wax iese diseases are perceptible after le first bottle of P. P. P.. was used. / - ?