University of South Carolina Libraries
VOL. IV. ~ CHICAGO'S CHANCES. ^ For the World's Fair hit growing Very Slim. Charlestou World. Washington, March 10.?The stormy session of the house committee oi? the world's fair yesterday has .. . .1 ..1 ?c .is. : ... i uiiusvu ii great. n?*ni in iiiM'iiasiuii aim comment here to-day. It is a general remark that the flight over the V question of location is bv no means settled, and there is a general feeling now that the chances for holding the fair are growing less every day. The New York and St. Louis people express themselves frankly as by no means satisfied with the guarantee fund which Chicago has thus far presented. It appears that the statement made by the Chicago committee, which was here to present the sites relative v to the guarantee fund, was made simply before the sub committee, and as two of the three members of the committee are from 111 i nois, it is natural that they should be more easily satisfied than those who originaly favored somo other city than Chicago. The indi cations to-day are that the commit tee will require more defintie information in regard to the guarantee fund of $10,000,000 than has vet been given, and that the work upon the hill will he postponed indefinitely The fact that the expenditures of this congress are going to be very large and that the surplus is rapidly vanishing, is having a depressing effect upon fhe question of the World's fair. A great many people are be coining convinced that the chances are decidedly against holding any World's fair either in '92 or '93. The Connecticut Senator Shows Up the Blair Hill. News and Courier. Washingi(A*, March 18.?In the Senate to-day immediately after the morning business the consideration of the urging deficiency bill was resumed. The remainder of the amendments placed on the bill by the appropriation committee were agreed to, and several others were added, appropriating small sums. The bill was then passed. The lilair educational bill was ta ken up at 2 o'clock as unfinished business, and Senator Hawley adll roouo/l f K n WrtufttA ? * L ,v voov\? tllV J\J> IKIIU 111 IAJ ' it. Senator Hawley summed up the situation by saying: N THE BLAIR BILL NOT WANTED. The twenty-two Northern States did not want the bill. They had no need of it. They had no need of it. They would be ashamed to say they wanted the money. In fact they would be giving more than they got perhaps, every one of them. Seven Southern States had two Senators each opposed to the bill distinctly and expecting to vote against it. That made twenty-nine States that did not need the bill, and it left twelve or thirteen more to be accounted. Of sixteen Southern States sev ei^? had both Senators opposed to the bill, and the other nino were about equally divided. The majority of Senators from the States that were formerly slave States, and for which the bill was intended, were to day opposed to the bill. The great body of the Northern people were willing to do anything in the matter that would be reasonable, but they would be ashamed to be called upon to force "spoon victuals" upon the i^outh. no kebd for "national" As to the appropriation of $2,000,000 for the construction of school houses, Senator Ilavley spoke of the old practice of house-raisiing bees in the rural parish of New England, and said that the school house where he went to school and where an intelli? gent Scotchman taught all the children, including young men who read -fluently pages of Virgil, had not cost for its erection more than $5, and was an excellent school house. It was "mighty easy," he said, to keep school down South. Socrates had not any school at all and he was the greatest teacher of Athens. The fplensantest way to keep school in the | South was to keep it out of doors. All that was wanted was shelter centralization. The bill was a verdict that the the, -a orv of State and Federal Oovcrnmcn ts. mm COS - ? ? as understood for one hundred yours, was a failure. That was what the hill meant. It meant that the people under the old organization had bt&iLfPnhd incapable of performing the (TOmary duties of civilization. ThcrMHUBno other reading for it. I The jjPP^Jpvernment, it said, had failed. Biit, yet he asked, what cen tral*!egi?lative body could do better in managing atfairs than the fortytwo local Congresses could do right among their neighbors. Had Congress a surplus of wisdom? There was a surplus of revenue in the treasury which Congress did not know what to do with. So far as he had been able to read, a continuing sur plus revenue was a misfortune to the State. THE UNWISDOM OF CONG HESS. It seemed that Congress lacked courage or wisdom to cease raising that surplus revenue, and while it remained it was a perpetual temptation. Congress did not govern so well that it should undertake to do everything. It did not know how to get along with steam railroads in the I S District of Columbia, which occu-! pied the streets without permission land without compensation. There j was not school houses enough in the city of Washington, where Congress ! had exclusive jurisdiction, so that a large number of children had to I "ride and tie"?half to attend school :iim i i..,ir 4i?ti... I 11 i ii V AVI VIIVA/Il <11111 I lil I I 111 I 1 J 15 ill U'l ~ noon. So (lmt Congress showed that I it. could not run the common schools of the 'District of Columbia. IIo found, too, that Congress was not u success in the management of the Indians. Tie also found fault with it in the matter of coast defence, the navy, to the needs of which it was just waking up, and the ovorcrowdng of the Supreme Court. In short he found everywhere proof that Congress was not*absolutely wise. The bill was had enough and went far enough in the direction of trespassing on State rights and on State ! duties, but, it was not the distance I travelled but the direction in w hich it went that was objectionable. It jabandoned the original theory of government and launched the Government on an unbounded sea of wild schemes. Notes on Notables. Senator Ilawloy practices on the violin every day. Victoricn Sardou is fifty-one years j I of age, and Alphonsc Daudet forty- j nine. j Miss Nellie Bly, of New York, who! | made the circuit of the world in sevj enty th roe days, is a Canadian. Notwithstanding their religious differences, the Pope and the King of Sweden are said to bv warm personal friends. Secretary Rusk turns his hack up-1 011 all the fashionable dissipations of! the capital. He persistently refuses' to touch cards, dice or wine bottle, and is determined to resist temp la tion as long as he is a Cabinet oflfi- i cer. Cyrus VV. Field is now three score j and ten years old, but still in active j business life. Hfk first employment was an errand boy for A. T. Stewart [ at "two dollars a week. His duties] required him to open and sweep out the store. Major-General Crook is one of the plainest men in the United States army. His modesty is unusual in a soldier, and he looks more like a far mer than a General with a fine war record. lie is a short heavy-set man, j with a thick beard. General William Teoumseh Sherman spends much of his time turn-! ing the leaves of his scrap-books of ? maps. Many of them were pencil sketches which were made by officers under his command in battle days, and all are marked with crosses and lined with red ink and have marginal comments. Governor Bracket!, of Massochu- { setts, is very fond of the theater. He utteiulh every noted performance in Boston. He assumes an air of stu tuesque repose in his box, but is very generous in his applause. Those ' who know him well say that lie is | not a good critic, being too easily I pleased. I The various anniversaries of Count I i Motkie have come so rapidly of late ' | that it has been difficult for the Em-1 j peror to devise means of honoring J the hero and showing his continued j J appreciation of his extraordinary ser- j i vices. The most recent of the "jubi-; I lees" w?w the fiftieth anniversary of j I his election as the Knight of the Or-1 fdorof Merit. The Empress Augusta congratulated him most heartily. 1 The Emperor presented him with a I new decoration of the order, adding to the ordinary blue cross a crown and a black eagle, both of which are set with a row of brilliants. A < "Be True Io Your if I WAV, S. ( TI T1IK JOYNHlt CASK. The Methodist Ministers ot't'iueimiati Write Governor Kowlr Concerning it The Governor's Kelt ly. Wilmington Mesfsonjjer. ItAi.Kiuii, X. March ' S.? ( i ovi'i'iinr I.. i > i > i'.>. ceived a letter written l?y John IVarson, .J. Hothweilor, L. T. Van ( live, ... ami b. H. Hill, the eonunittee appointed by the Cincinnati Methodist Church organization, numbering a hundred ministers, in regard to ltev.1 T. M. Joyner, who has become so not(fl*ious hv his complaint of assault in Kandolph county and by his dismissal hv the negro congregation near here. The letter is remarkable in tone and states that Joyner and his wife were set upon, December did, by masked men who inllicted many wounds upon them; that they have been refused redress by the officers of the law and have been shamefully traduced and pursued by the newspapers and are refused the opportunity of preaching the gospel else- I where in North Carolina and of earn ing their support. The committee then in the name of the nation and of their Church enters a protest against these outrages, whether they he perpetrated by masked assassins or cowardly intimidators of the cringing negroes or false and mischief making newspapers. To this letter (low Eowle to-day replied: "As you seem to he very simple and credulous people, striving with more zeal than judgement to right what you assume to be a great wrong. I answer you with the same simplicity and frankness I do kind hearted but excitable colored people when their sympathies have been strongly aroused. If Joyner was treated as you charge, then jus-1 tiee requires that the people who assaulted him should he rigorously punished, and the courts in North Carolina stand ready to give Joyner their assistance whenever he demands it. "The county in which the outrage is said to have been committed is, Republican, the population being j composed of a Quaker elefnent and there is no question tluit the perpetrators of the offence would have been punished if Joyner had been able to show that any one had injured him, but unfortunately did not do so. Even in the complaint you will see the unreason feloness of attempting to punish a man for crime before he can bo identified. Your w hole communication is based upon the Indian's practice of taking revenge, when one of his tribe has been injured, upon the first one lie he meets, whether the guilty one or not. "In regard to the negroes in the church meeting at Oberlin who requested Joyner to depart from their midst; if you think that congregation is composed of cringing negroes who had been intimidated, you are evincing a degree of credulity without parallel even among negroes. Oberlin is a colored town in the Kepubli-.j can county of Wake, and is as responsible and independent as you will find in any colored community on earth. "Judging from your letter there is not a man of you who who would re sist oppression like this respectable church of colored men whom you have the audacity to denounce as cringing negroes. The M. E. Church ...... ..r > mmiui ill nwi i ii v annum 1 o ulU" "i tlie largest and most influential de nominations in the State, and would never submit quietly to the courts refusing justice to any one entitled to its protection, but it is unreasona hie for you to require any more pro tection for Joynor than a citizen of this State could get under like circumstances. The Governor, therefore, recommends the committee to j read .the tenth commandment, and apply it to their hearts, and after so doing communicate their reflections to their brethren who instigated them to write this remarkable letter to him." A Sample of Western (enterprise, j Manufacturer#' Record. The lloanoke (V'a.) Herald, in republishing the following letter front last week's issue of the Manufacturers' Record, adds some comments that are worthy of consideration by all town builders in the South: A gentleman who lives in Portland, Ore., while in Nashville some day* ago, wrote the following letter to the Nashville American: "1 hear some talk of raising $5,. 000 by subscription for the purpose j of advertising Nashville, I am led to wonder what can be done in that direction with $5,000 It would not reach as far as Louisville. Why out * flroi rovd arid Your work a I V lvSDAY, M| ~ " - - -- ' " i jii Portland, Ore., where I live, they think no more of if5,000 than people} do in the Mast of a 5-cent nickel. In 1888 the husines men donated if 12. 1 000 every month during the whole year, the amount being expended by the Board of Immigration. Some firms subscribed $50 per month, many $25, among whom were several Chi nesemerchants and hunkers. Scores $10 to $20 a month, and every mother'sson in t he town some! hi n<?\ That's the wuv the West gets boomed!" And that is obviously the common sense way to boom any locality. Money judiciously invested in printers' ink has built cities and enriched largo communities, as is demonstrated by every-day examples. The beneficial results of newspaper advertising, though not carried to such an extent as mentioned in the extract above (pioted, are being dailyseen in the growth and prosperity of Hoanoke. * We do not believe a dollar was ever invested here in that way that did not yield a handsome j return. Anv wideawake business! man will admit that his success is aitriontame in a large degree to advertising, ami those who invest most liberally invariably, and of necessity, reap the richest returns. Much as advertising has already done, much remains to be accomplished. The seeds already sown are bringing their inevitable fruit, and the returns are increasing day by day; but the field is practically inexhaustible, and the results of persis tent and intelligent cultivation incalculable. The prosperity of every branch of trade, of every enterprise of whatever character, and of every citizen, high or low, is in a greater or less degree a living witness to the value of advertising. Conceding, as all do, that this is true, what may not be the possibilities of Roanoke under a larger and more thorough system of advertising our city and lt< d(t v onid(r.?j In I lin li'ili'lilV It will nut do to conclude that,! because we have the most prosperous j city in the State, there is no longer i need for exertion, and that nature,! accident or necessityjvill continue the work so auspiciously begun. On the contrary, instead of relaxing our exertions, they should be redoubled, or quadrupled, if possible our section niul all it.s advantages and prospects are known in every city, town, and ;ouuty in the Union. In thin hunt ling age, the laggard is lost, or run over by the teeming throngs of piflsh ing energevic and untiring communities in the race for precedence, and it is the most enterprising and persistent only who reaoh the objects of their ambition. The Mount Pleasant and Little j Itiver Project. News and Courier, j'lie committee which was appointed by the landowners of Berkeley County have submitted a draft of j tlie deed which is to be used in transferring land to the Mount Pleasant, Little ltiver and San tee Railroad. The contract read* as follows: "The land shall be granted to the railroad subject to the use of the grantor until the railroad have been graded, laid with crosdies, and with steel rails of not less than sixty pounds, and in all other respects nave constructed a first-class railroad from some point on the Charleston harbor, at or near the village of Mount Pleasant, to he hereinafter designated as the initial point, for a distance of miles from said initial point. It is provided that the railroad company shall have the right to use such wood on granted land as is suitable for crossties, bridges, culverts or other constructions." The deed provides that should the company not construct a first-class road to the southern bank of the San tec River, in the direction of i Georgetown, properly equipped with engines, cars, etc., within two years after the first day of July, 1800, tho deed shall be absolutely void p.nd the said railroad company shall hold the j said premises to tho use of the grantor, absolutely freed from all other j uses or trusts, so that the same shall revert to the grantor, with full right of re entry without any deed of conveyance from the railroad. The company is required to pay taies until the road shall he built miles from the initial point. jj The following is the endorsementf of the committee on the deed: "We endorse and recommend the within deed to the landowners of Berkeley County to be used in denoting to the Mount Pleasant* San tee and rdttlo Rive|* Ilailroad. T. A. Iluguonjn. Thomas Pinckney, Jus. j P. Redding, Geo. B, Ed ward t, R. P. Ilorrison, Wm. M. Ifalo, II. K. Young, John C. Mallonee, Arthur Mftxvok." , * i ? It must ho painful to a girl, especially when she means to say "Yes," to hear a stammering man propose. //(/ Your " lKCH 27, 18JM). WASHINGTON ON KTIQUKTTK. The Quaint Hook Hi- Wroii When Only Thirteen Years ONI. "Uath," in CiiiciniiHti Knqulrer. Dr. Toner handed over to me a hlue-covered pamphlet of thirty-four pages with his own notes. The title was "Washington's Rules of Civility j ami Decent llehavior in Company j and Conversation." Said I: "If Washington at the age of id was writing a hook on etiquette! he was surely preparing the way for his subsequent selection and elevation to dignities. Was he not rather precocious for this kind of work, pre j cocious for Washington." "There will he persons," said Dr.! Toner, "to a gue. that Washington lwvor tliij luu.L- 1ml I .. ?? i ready to contend with any of theni that he did vrite it." "Possibly, doctor, Washington, only copied some boo* already extant upon that subject as a guide to his habits? | Nevertheless," said Dr. Toner, "I think that he wrote it. The whole hook in his hand-writing, and the date is 1745, whereas he was horn in 1 1732." After leaving Dr. Toner I looked | over Washington's rules, and some of them seemed to be funny, as for example: "When in Company, put not your j II 1 . i i 1 ' ' uitnuK m? unv rare or uie tKuiy not | usually Discovered." "In the Presence of Others sing not to yourself with a hunmiing1 Noise, nor Drum with your Fingers! or Feet." "If You Cough, Sneeze, Sigh or Yawn, do it not Loud, hut Privately, i (Jo not out of your Chamber half Drest." "At Play and at Fire it's Good! manners to give Place to the last. (i _ it "oiner. "Spit not in the Fire, nor Stoop low before it; neither Put your i Hands into the Flumes to warm1 them, nor Set your Feet upon the: Fire, especially if there be meat he-j fore it." "Shift not yourself in the Sight of I others, nor (Jnaw your nails." "Shake not tho head, Feet or Legs, row I not the Eye, lift not one eye ' brow higher than the other, wry not the mouth and bedew no man's face) with your Spittle by appr?" It would appear that the leaf iu the State Department original is here torn off. "Kill no Vermin as Fleas, lice-1 ticks, &e., in the Sight of Others, if you See any tilth or thick Spittle put \n\ni* f/uii I ^nv L???/vnul if *4 O JVUI 1/VAIUUUO.J HjlWll II, II 11/ be upon the Clothes of your Companions, put it oft privately, uml if it be upon your own Clothes return Thanks to him who puts it off." PINK FIBIIK. The Process of Manufacture into Cotton bagging and matting explained. Wilmington Htnr. The leaves are gathered from what is known as the long-leaf pine, and taken to the "works," whore they are first weighed. Thence they are thrown into larcre vats where thev U J are boiled in alkali for about twelve hours at a low temperature. Then, after being thoroughly soaked in the same vats, they are taken by a continuous process through the rubbing,; wringing, carding, drying, curding again, drawing, roving, winding,j weaving and calendering machines, when tne article is completed and ready for baling and the market. By the former process there was.much HXtril work utwl ilnluv o/t/Miaioiwwl I.. ? - J ????? "J the fact that the material had to be handled for every different at age of | iU preparation; bnt with the now and Improved machinery now in use1 Jjie work goes on without interrup- j tion from ^i|i beginning to its completion, and the same powor tliat i feeds it to one machine also convoys j1 it ti< the next, and to the next; un-j til the leaves that enter as a raw ma-! terial come out finished into matting 1 or bagging in accordance with thej purpose for which it may be intend-; ed. U may not only lie made into matting and bagging, b??t it can also! be made into carpet lining, roofing1 and upholstering, and it also furnishes a volatile pine oil which has' IT valuable medicinal proportion. The company is now exclusively engaged in the manufacture <?f bagging, and this business bids fair to demand all the possibilities of the present plant, which has a ('opacity of 2,000 yards per day, the weight per yard being two pounds. The pine straw bagging is equally as good as jute for baling purposes, and can )\4k Iklll /\ll t lk<\ Ikiai HI- ,.t nt ii .,1, ?II....I,AII i>v i'iii wii inr 111.II rvvi llllli ll t linuil-l than the former article. In fact it wan an advance in price by the "jute trust" that first gave an impetus to the pine straw hanging industry, at' first as an experiment, hut with re suits tlint have already demonstrated its superiority over the former article in point of economy, and that it is equally as durable and strong. Mr. A. Scott, who has been connected with the enterprise from the, beginning, and is a thorough me | ehanie, with a great deal of inventive genius, is the superintendent of the works, and he has thirty-three employes, males and females, under his control. Those latter, by this industry, are enabled to earn fair wages, with sure and constant employment at all times of the year. There are seven machines for weaving bagging and thirteen machines for weaving matting. The latter is woven in colors (as I hey dye in.. o. ?i. i.... \ < nv limit I ml 111 (lilllii.-l < I I I N I'IMIII,) and is made from twenty-two inches to seventy two inches wide. There is also a newly patented drying 111 a chine, tlio cunning invention of Mr. J. 11. Lorimer, of I'hiladelphia, who is one of the stockholders of the company. The fear is fiv<|uen!ly expressed hy sonic who are prone to look on the dark side of a picture, that there is danger of exhausting the supply. To this we unhesitatingly say that it is simply an impossibility, as a few statistics gathered from the most authentic sources will show. The fact has been established beyond a shadow of doubt that for every foot of pine timber in this State one pound of green leaves may he gathered. Since the works at Cronly were started) six years ago, they have used 21, 128,000 pounds of pine leaves, all of u'hieh loin lirmn iru Iw.i'ml n ill.in .. - h'""' ,v" """"i " radius of four miles unci not a tree has been injured in the least by this tribute to what, is destined to bo a groat industry an important factor in the prosperity of the South. This enormous, amount of raw material would make 3,000,000 yards of bagging of two pounds for each yard. In the single county of Columbus,! where these works are situated, according to the official report, there are 223,000,000 feet of pine timber.' Cumberland and Robeson counties* j which are the largest pine timber! producing counties in the State, have, by the official* reports, more than 300,000,000 feet each, and in fifteen counties in Xorth Carolina there are i 5,229,000,000 feet of pine timber, which with one. pound of leaves for each foot of timber, would give 7 47, 000,000 yards of bagging from one year's crop. A Young >Inn of Winning Ways. Kx-Senutor Henry (?. Davis, says j a Washington letter to the Brooklyn Kdffte, is reputed t?? be close. Recently, en route from Deer Dark, lie fell in with a voting man of winning ways, who saiif he was the son of an influential man known to the Senator, and had lost his purse. He was en route to Florida, and succeeded In tvirwiwiiif Q 1 Of? I. .1 m mm wa i < / * IJIM/Uj 1*1 ' " ' I l'l 111 Ill'II immediately. Two weeks passed, and the .Senator, not hearing from him, wrote. He got. this answer: "My I) car Senator: It is extreme ly mortifying that I cannot liquid ato your kind loan of $100, lmt investments upon which 1 have failed to realize, due principally to manual vacuity, preclude the possibility However, I incloso collateral upon, which I hv.ve on numerous occasions obtained ten times the sum I unfortunateh owe you. ' Yours by chance, Davis still keeps those four aces. ^ . Poor Author?And is this all I am to have from tlie sale of my book? Wealthy Publisher That is the regular percentage, sir. What more i\o you want? "Unt?well, I'd like the loan of your turnout and coachman for an hour or so." "Humph! Where do you want to be taken?" "To the poorhouse." P. HTvX/y. *4 " ' J jffm ^5 v ^ ' * * ' 1 xUsJ 1 " - ?- ' j?t - t NO. XXXVII. \Y lioat mid < 'oru. \\ \siiiNfiTo.v, March 10.- The statistienl jcporl of the I )purt moot of Agriculture for March relates the distribution and consumptioh of corn and wheat. It makes the porportion of the corn crop in the hands of growers 15.1) per cent., or 1)70,000,000 bushels; and of the wheat crop .'11.9 per cent., or 150,000,000 bushels. Tin.'stock of corn on hand is the largest ever reported in March, of the largest crop, after the mildest winter. The average of eight annual returns i> 070,000,000; that of last year 787,000,000 bushels. The estimated consumption to March Ist is 1.143,000,000 bushels; a llgure exceeded only last year and 1800. The prop* rt ion of merchantable corn of the corn crop of 188'.' is 8"). T percent.; excee led in recent yuirs only In those of 1881 and 1880. The average value of all corn on the first of Deccmlwr was 28.3 cents per bushel. The uv ei'ftge value of all corn on the Ill's t of Ib'cemher was 28.3 cents per bushel. The average on the first of March was 27.b cents for lnorehant..1,1.. .....1 in ') ............. 1..... 1.. 1.1.. ?l ' ' I ? ? (IIIU I I't V I * ' I \ I I I I I I ? i ' I I . I I I I ?I ' ? I I , making an aggregate of value ?d?\000,000 less than (lie I )cc0inl?er e-t imate. The w heal crop of IMS!) was exceeded l>\ the crops of 1*80, 1882 mid 1881. rhe average remainder in the hands of growers on the lirst of March for ten years has heen 180 000,000 bushels. The a\ eioge crop during this period t~>0.ono,000 bushels. Only in year- having a product much below this average has the March remainder fallen 1 .'JO,000,000 bushels, with the Sole exception of 1881), when a crop of fr.7,000,000 bushels followed one of 4iS7.n00.0ini. o vTilings 15vs| l.t'll I ikIoih1. Do not write on nih il paper, or on that decorated with printed sunflower or blossoms of any kind. I >o not i lit roiluoeo your girl friend to the gentleman visitor. Instead ' saw "Miss Hrown, will vou nie to ' 7 present Mr. .rones?" Do not talk especial In to one person when you have three or four \isitors. Instead make the eonversut ion general. Do not at tempt to take care of a loan's overcoat he has a vote and ought to bo able to look alter his own ( lollies. Do not ask people who they are in Hamming for. If you don't know, wait until you liind out. and in the meantime don't ask after the members of their family. Do not giggle when a smile would answer, and don't talk in a jesting way about things that are holy to other people. . Do not laugh at anybody'- form of anybody worship respect a toad praying to a mushroom. Do not say the rules of etiquette are nonsense t hev are made up for your comfort and arranged so that the feeling of every human being is considered. i * . ' ... i iiiii get into flic habit of luughing at elderh people. It is not unladylike, hut it is vulgar. Do not think it clever to liml out l?y pumping, the private affairs of your friend. There is no reason why you should lay hate her heart for an inquisitive daw to pyek at, Do not get into debt, oh^ you have been guilty, deny yourself every tiling possible that you may he free once more. Do not believe that all these I don't* are not spoken to you in the ! kititlest manner as front girl to girl, hut one has I?? suffer and make mistakos one's golf to liiul out into just I what pit falls ono is apt to tumbTo. /,Ih/ii,s* l/onn Kvon the most vigorous and heartv people havo >?t times a feeling of weanneva tool lassitude. To dispel this feeling take I Jr. J II. McLean's iS'arsaparilln; it will imparl vigor and vitality. For salt) by I >r. K. Norton. The Fl rut Mllntirr, The Sub-Alliance1 in South faro olinn wa> organised in llom County.. October, iss;. Our State Alliance was organized pluly, 1SS8, at Florjenee. Now we have in South faro ^ linn over 1,000 Nuh-Alliuneos and 132,000 members represented; and 1 still they come. K.\. ^