University of South Carolina Libraries
ly' PICKENS, S. (5,THURSDAY, FEBRUARY1,89... . II. 0. BowniN. L.-Js. .Canamnas. OWEN & CIDU1RESS Attorneys a a DR. J. W, V01%_O0D,. Dentist, Dr. D W. WM.v swoob, Assistant. Ofet III) e cenfce 88j Main &treet, (,reenville, B. C. Jan0.9'O Y jL8L R. J. P. CARLISLE, Dentist Oreen vil' ~le *. .. Q i ovev Udin Mo~ee's -r' g Sto~ .. DIt. J. F. '-YI I f L 7A 8 I -r neati located at Pldken 11e-Profee n~il ServiceC' to III p flee and residence it the Grifeit Oct. 26--St ThaExchangO Hotel, EirVLaICE. B. C. 0. W vEN"AROgN,"Troprietor. b~e~ra IzprY~tOI~P~Tar W'nons. ucI an. speil 01wltloi' tho 00i1,e~r med.i~~l >urIts -.Table-iare Unsurpmasse . Fine .&1ugatW the year routd. Ap. 7,92 J. L. THoRiLY, JOu -C-C. TIIORN LEY, HAO0OD & THORNLEY BROS. Easley andlPibkeu,i8. 0j; . .: (OppOIate I otel.) - Carrlages'BItgto' and -$addlo. IIorsee, at --rea'onable rates. 2W Your patrouage solicited. AUM CLARK.,.. *. - 'GRO. IF. CooPRt 0ark & Cooper, healci's in Me-d NlntQ O.MoRme0ts, TOMBSTONES, of every doscription Also. MANTELS, STATUA RY, VASES and Wrought Iron FENCING, Greenville, B. C. Sept. 19, '91. If you want the iiniest P1ruTEs mado in the State, go to Wheeler's Studio, 111 Mclece Avenne 0 icenville, S. C 8W- Crayon Portraits a specialty April 7-y. - isse.s e a Has .rea(y _. for inspectio Latest styles in Walking Hate for Ladles; and Children. Infantts Caps 1and1 Rfat!s; Ali (e Noveleti "Al Goodis at Cost fori1 30 (lays." PRIZE WINIHERS Fuirniislewd on' 1i- das ( x Tial when he proper edithict Is signed. -if you wInt; anl organl aft Reputation Buy the.. Carpenter Organ. JQ.0NWr",-VV PItICRS FOR CAXU7, J. B, STILES. Nov 9, 3 Dealer in W ceDiamDonlds & owiry,. SGREENVILLE, S. C. REPAIRINB A 8PECIALTY. CO TO DWUG STOE Tojluy tho' best D)RUGS, at the lowest, prices.. Full lhne of BLANK BOOKS, STA TrIONE RY and S U II O0O L SUP.. PLIES. Closing out our PAl NTS, AT COST I A full line of ARTIST'S MATE. RLIALS. D. Tr. BACOT & CO., Oc. .West Greenville, S. C. Oc.5l893.--6m. sioo keward For the Merchant that gives you more'Goods:for* your money then I will. Just notice the following pri ces : OLOTHTNG--NEWV STOOKC. Youth a Suita at *3.74 D o. do 4.75 Do. da 5.50 Ipo. ,do 6.60ii tioffee 10 pouinds to the dollar. Cgtton Checks 41 a. by the ibol, 8.4 Shirting 4h0." a Print4, all styles, from 4 1-2 to -i. all colors 7ce. G.ood Brogan Shoes~ 75 cnt .-nth er Shoes in proporttn.. .A lot of . Shoesq, smaUll and large No.., at costs. Chidrens courso shoes. 121 cents per.pair. -.aJeadis at 18, 20, 24 and 80 cents. Can't be b'at at the price. 1 will buy your lhnt Cotton, Seed Cotton, and Cotton Seed, at market prices. Also, dr y or green Hides. Mr. C. H. Parkcins and Richard T. Hlaillm, are now with me, and will be glad to meet their friends. Respectfully, J. II. Brown nurhy, 8. 0.1 -ct. 12, '~i8 Smith Ac Smith, Is thePlaoeO for GHEP FURIIITURE. Split Botton Chairs, Cribs, Cradles, Tables, Washistands Wairdrobes, Bureaus, Bedsteads, Mattrasses, Carpets, coffis and Caskets, 1) ay and Night. Telephione Nos. 64 an 3. Night calls will be answered by Tele phone No. 88. 8NITH & SMITH, ~3 and 65 Main Street, Greenville, S. C. The Best aiid Largest STOCK OF SASH, DOORS AND BLNDS, BOTH WHITE AND YELLOW PINE, CEILING, FLOORING, WEATH ERBOARDING, BOX-BOARDS, WASH-BOARDS, PARTITION MOULDING, &C. HOT-BED SASH, 3 FEET BY 6 F EET, at $I.75 Each. Please give 11S n callI when you T. 0. GOWER & SON. 101 id I- oll.r-,[ Drugs! Drugs! I HAVE on hand at all times a full lint Iof pure DRUGB, CHE 1MICALS, TOi LET. A RTICLES, FANCY 0 O 0 D B PERFUMERiY, ;FINE ST 'A.TIONERY A. large stock of COUGH SYRIUPS tia. willl cure your Coughs and Colds. A full line of D~iamata EYE GILASSEF and SPE~CTACLE8 for your eyes. I wi: it you up so that It will be a. pleasure fs: you to~ read. As it Is now time to go to Gardening csne and see ab)out GUardsen Seeds, Will keep a fut~ line on band. Then there are PAINTS and OILS8;i full line---and overy thing utually found a a firaIt-class Drug~Store. e&- Physicians' Prescriptilons carefully comnpouunde 1, day or night. WVhen you come to Easley give me a call. Respectfully 0. N. Wyatt, M. D. Quiiliau'a 0O(1 snd Easley, 8. 0.. Feb. 9. 1393. l y T W ~ 000%3 COMING 'Dry ( oorI 1 h soil chtE- p.. than ever. Arbuickk-.s Coffee att 25 ete. perI pounhl. You cani save money by buying goods from me. James E. Brown's, Centralt SL (L. Nov. R0 93 THEY DEFY IMITATION. Saventlon Can Supply No Subetitutge Wov . Whalibone or Teasel. With all our boasted labor' saving machinery and modern inventions there are numerous articles entering into the economy of manufacture which seem crudo and simplo, but which defy im provenient. No one, for instance, has ever been able to find a substitute for whalebone. With tho'diminution of the supply and the enormously increased cost of the ar ticle, ecores of inventors have turned their attention. to the article and at tempted to supply a substitute, but up to the present time nothing as durable, tough and pliable as whalebone has re sulted. Another article without which no woolen manufacturer could prepare certain goods for the market is the tea zel. It is absolutely essential in rais ing a nap on cassimeres and soft wool en fabrics, and although scores of imi tation toazles have been invented none is found to give the satisfaction of the odd little burr, with its stiff little hooks, which is so extensively exported and cultivated for the cloth finishing trade. Persons who have never soon a toazol can imagine a fur cone, set all over with little barbs. It is really a burr, or flower head, or thistle top of the plant dipsacus, and so identified is it with cloth dressing, and so long and so general has been the use of the teazol for the purpose mentioned, that it ie even reflected in its botanical name, Dipsacus fullonum, or "fuller's toazol.'" However familiar the teazel may be to persons familiar with woolen manu facture, or to those who live in coun tries where it is extensively cultivated, the fadt remains that the great major ity of persons have never heard of such an article and will be astonished to learn in whaf enormous quantities they are raised. In France alone 0,000 acres of land are exclusively devoted to the cultiva tion of the tenzel. French manufac turers use annually nearly $2,000,000 worth of the prickly heads and export during the sano period upward of 60, 000 tons, valued at $2,500.00. - When it is considered that a tenzel weighs not more than an ordinary burdock, the vast quantity exported can be realized in part. In addition to the French crop, which is the most highly esteemed, teazels are producied in enormous quantities in Austria, England, Belgium, Poland and tho Crimea. Until recently they did not grow satisfactorily in the Unit ed States, but now they are quite ex tensively grown in Oneida county, in this state, and possibly elsewhere, and it is said return a fair profit to the cul tivator for the outlay of monef. The prickles of the toazol have a small knob at the end, and this mount ed on an elastio stem, and sot with great precision on the central spindle, which, revolving, claws the surface of the cloth, raises a nap which mechan ical contrivances have always failed in equaling.-New York Herald. Eccentricity In Literary Taste. Curious whims are occasionally shown by readers at the Public library. There wasi a woman who regularly every Fri day onme for a volume of sermons. Sho did not mind whose sermons, nor what the subject, so long as they were reli gious discourses of some sort. Monday she would come back, return the ser mons and take out a novel to unbend her mind until the next Friday, wvhen the sermons would again be in demand. There was another woman who would never read anything but a religions novel, as she called it, not such a one as "Ben-Hur" or one with a particular religious tenet- to Inculcate, but a book with a clergyman an its chief charactor. Swinburne's "Heavenly Arcana" was rend daily for years by an eccen tric old gentleman. Ho would draw the book, keep it two weeks, return it with his place marked and call early the next morning to take it out again. He never took any other book from the library, ad finally died, leaving his place marked as usual. There Is one old man who will never read a book written by a wonman. Ho reads good books continually, but will have noth ing to do with a volume bearing a wo man's name as its author. -Boston Herald. One of the Paine Anecdote. A volume could be made of the good stories in which the venerable Henry W. Paine, wvho ended his long life here, is the central figure. Mr. Paine un-. dloubtedly knewv more law than many of our judges. Hie himself had declined a seat on the supreme bench of his native state of Maine and again when Gov ernor Bullock tendered him the succes sion to Chief Justice Bigelow in Massa chiusetts. But lie was not arrogant of his learning, and It is only as illustrat ing his perennial humor that the story is told of him, how, when seen reading a lawbook on a street car, a friend said, " What! Mr. Paine, you rending law?" "Bless your soul, no!" was the reply; "this is not law; it is a volume of supreme court decisions. "--Boston Commonwealth. The Advantage of Light Head. "I come of a very old family," boast ed l3atkins as the party sat around the fire at the club lying about their an cestors. "1 supp~oso they were in the ark with Noah,"' sneered Smith, wvho affects to despise thoso who claim a long litie of ancestors. "They didn't have to get into the ark,'" interrlited Simpson, who dis likes hatkinis; "the family is so light headed they floated like corks." Then Smith touched the button, and by his presence of minid prevented a riot.-Philadelphi a Call. His Fatal Nerves. Father-Well, young man, I under *tand, then, that you love my daughter? Nervous Youth-N-n-n-no, sir; I wvish to marry her.-Exchange. What a devil of a time there would be shotid truth and gronin gne; mnrrier1. SHOOTING HONKERS. 3REAT SPORT WHICH IS F'OUND IN THE NORTHWEST. Dountless Swars Wlitch Congregate Do. twoen the itod River Valey and the BlsI sisnippl--Shooting Does Not Appear to Diniash Their NPunuber. Wild 1,oos0 hunting on the plains of the northwest is a sport which always bas 'great charm even for the experi mneed Nimrod. It is a sport replete with incident and a recreation which must once be indulged in to be thor )ughly appreciated. The wild gooso is known in all parts of North America, but in no section of the country does his bird appear in such numbers as in that territory lying between the Red river valley and the Missouri river. rhore the geese swaim in countless aumbers and beconio corpulent on the grains of No. I hard which have been shaken from thestalk by thareaper and are lying in the stubble everywhere. Largo numbers of the birds are killed by resident hunters And* for eastern tuarkots, but no apparent diminution is aoticoablo in the size and number of the flocks to be seen when the shooting ieason begins each year. An hour's lively sport with the hon kors on the wheatfields of North Da kota moans but one thing to the inex porienced hunter, and that issomething lor his pains, especially if ho happens to got in a well concealed stand direct ly in the line of flight. Then it is noth ing uucommon for him to "tumble over" a wagon load of geese in very short order. Wild geese are a staple omnodity in North Dakota and road. ily bring frnon $2.50 to $3 per dozen luring the shooting season. In the lit tlo towns and stations along the North Erii Pacific railway, during the fall and spring flights, almost everybody turns out for a fow hours in the morning and toward the close of the day to shoot at the geese, and a right warm reception are the birds treated to. 'iany will ride to the outskirts of tho' town and shoot from a buggy or wagon at the passing myriads overhead and occasion ally bring down a bird at long range. Tho hunter who is out for business and is shooting for market and the money there is in it drives out 10 or 15 miles over the prairie neveral hours before daylight, and Zfter seleLting a spot whero the geeso have been soon in great nuimbers the day beforo digs a pit in the ground large enough to con ceal himself and arranges the stubble or grass about the mouth of it so as to pro sent a natural appearance. Close by he plants his decoys and settles back in the pit and anxiously awaits the corn ing of the morning. It is still dark, but from every quarter of the prairio come sounds of animal life which fore tell the coming of a now day. The mournful cry of the curlew is heard overhead, and a flock of plover demon strate their closo proximity by the hur tling noiso of their wings. For some time ho sits in a cramped position, listening to the booming notes of a prairie chicken, which bird Is. pour Ing forth a volume of drumlike sounds. Thesharp yelp of a coyote not faraway Is unmistakable evidence that that thriving, skulking animal has jumped 3p a cotton tail and is hustling for an iarly breakfast. At the first peeping of the gray dawn the hunter suddenly wears a welcome sound-the faint and ~araway honk-honk of the goose. He 3xamines his gun and notes the dirco :ion of the sound. Nearer and nearer :he sound comes, and finally he yen :ures to take a peep out of the pit and liscovers the distant outlines of a largo lock spread out V shaped in the morn ng sky, bearing of?' to one side. Ap iarently they have miot seen the decoys, md the hunter thinks it is yet too dark. Suddenly tho leader is seen to waver, mud with loud cries the flock turns and sircles around the decoys as if suspi >ious of their genuineness, but drawing nearer at each turn. They have ap roac hed withbin easy shooting distance, mdl just as sooii as the flock pitches lowni among the decoys the loud bang! bang! of a heavily loaded shotgun is beard, and two puffs of smoke are seen ooming apparently from the surface of the earth a short distance away. 8ev oral goose are lying on the ground, and one is skimming away over the prairie with a tipped wing. Some other flocks appear, and the shooting becomes lively until the sun is fully two hours high, when the flecks diminish, both in size and number, and with the exception of a few stragglers the morning flight is over. Crystali Springs is the name of a small station en the Northern Pacific, 110 miles wvest of Jamestown, N. D. There are several small alkali lakes in close prox imity to the station and a number of springs in the hills near by, from which tihe place gained its name. The town proper consists of a -depot, boarding housE andl water tank and a population not exceeding 10 souls. One April morning a few years or so since the wvriter, in company with the telegraph operator at the place, sallied forth in quest of gooeo, large flecks of which were seen circling aroind and alight ing on a snmall lake, fringed with bushes and tall gensa, not over a mile from the station. After a full hour spent in crawlhing over the ground and keeping out of sight as much as possible the. hunters crept through the grass3 to the bushes and looked cautiously out. Upward of 1,000 geese wvoro sporting an the water, diving, ,squawking and Darrying on at a great rate, When the edgo of the flock -had come within 80 yards the hunters t ised their guns and gave them a barrel, following it up with tlme remaining barrel as they rose heav ily from the water, Twenty-eight geese woere gathered up as the result of the shot, 2.1 of them the white or brant geese. Tho remaining four were fine specimnens of that wariest of all birds of its species--tho blackhead or Cana dian goose. 'The morning's work was highly satisfactory.--Cleoland Leader. Talking about handsome skip. per's, what's the matter with a protty grirl readlinr a. prosy navn1 A LIVING MUMMY. S Traveler Tell. of One He Found In an EgyPtian Domielle. "We wont into the hut after some iesitation-tho dragoman whispered here woro,.ladies there-and found a vigorous old man, tolling his Mussul man beads crosslegged on a mud bench, md on the floor bont over the fire tho aldest looking human being I ever saw alive. "Mummies I have seen, and wondered pot that they were dead, but in what part of her withered desiccated frame that old woman found space to keep the stern vital energies that lined her grim, carved face I can scarcely guees. She looked no more living than seaweed loes, dried and stretched on paper. Her arms, her legs-thrust almost into the Bro-were so shrunk that the long leathern flesh and flaccid muscles hung round thom liko dangling shreds on sticks. "Round her neck were beads of wood, and round her wrists leathern bracelets-though, to be sure, I cannot fool certain they were not folds of skin -and on her faco lurked not only lines, but gullies and passages, they seemed io deep and fallen. But for the occa ilonal upturned glance of her cold, un questioning eye I could not have sup posed her anything olseo than one of the earliost and best preserved of tho re motest queens of Egypt. "The old man gave us a lusty wel come and sent for milk and datos and illed our pockets. Ho showed us his long spear that hung against the wall and told me with a proud gesture that he had often killed his man, but more often with a sword, and taking me by the shoulder showed me fiercely how lio used to do it. Ho was 00 years old Rnd had never boon farther from home than Assonan, and then only once. "All his sons sat and stood round us, and in the background against the mud granary whito teeth glimmered and the broad, black faces of the women shone. I asked him what present ho would like, and he asked for a little rico and a little coffee. All tho timo he clutched and fingered his Muslim rosary, which, when I admired, he wanted me to ac cept. The son caie back with us to the dahboa and carried off the coffee and rico in envelopes, to which I add ed a handful of cigarettes and a couple of oranges, with particular injunctions that one was to bo givo to the old gen tleman."-Cornhill Magazinue. A Weird Love Story. "The strangest test of will power and endurance ever mado, " said E. D. Gon sauls of the City of Mexico, at tho Southern, "was in Mexico, the charac ters being a Mexican girl and an Amer ican man. They were lovers, and the girl's parents refused their consent to the union, insisting that sho should marry a wealthy Mexican suitor. At the suggestion of the girl they agreed to dio together, and to test the strength and endurance of each other's love they chose a means of suicide unlike any over dreamed of before. Food and fruit were placed on a table in the center of a room, occupied by both, the girl having escaped from her home, but being unwilling to olope with her lover. It was agreed that they should starve to death with plenty beforo them, and should either succumb to nature and partake of tho food then both were re leased from the bond of death, but thero should be an everlasting separation. For 12 days they endured the pangs of hun ger without a murmur or a thought of wavering from their purpose to die to gether. The twelfth day the father of the girl discovered her whereabouts, and breaking the door they were car ried out, too faint to stand alone. It took them several days to recover their strength, and when they did they woero married. This is a true statement, and the American is living with his Mex ican wife today."-St. Louis. Globe Democrat. Counterfeit Coins. Within the last few years numbers of forgeries of extremely rare coins in the British nmuseumn and in private collec tions have been sold by auction in Lon don. So good is their execution that it seems probable .that means have boen devised for casting steel dies on plaster casts or of hardening electrotype dies. The manufacture of rareo"siege pieces,." carried on in one of our midland towns, shows a far lowver amiount of skill. When genuine but defaced coins are restruckc with new impressions, it is very difficult to discover the fraud. Some genuine ancient coins are su rf rap poes in this manner--as, for instance, a whole class of Jewish coins which are struck on Roman silver denarii. But when the image and superscription of William I11 can be discerned underly ing the device on a rare crown picce of Elizabeth the question of its authentic ity Is soon solved.-Longman's Maga The Law of theoJungle. The law of -the jungle, which never orders anything without a reason, for bids every beast to eat man except when lie is killing to show lis children howv to kill, and then he must hunt outside the hunting grounds of hisa pack or tribe. The real reason for this Is that man killing means, sooner or later, the arrival of white men on elephants, with guns, and hundreds of browni mon with gongs and rockets and torches. Then everybody in the junigle suffers. The reason the beasts give among them solves is that man is thme weakest and most defenseloss of all living tiings, gna It is unsportsmnan like to touch him. They say, too-and it is true--thiat man eaters boconme mangy and lose their teeth.-Rudyard Kipling in St. Nich olas. Strange. It seems that some 180,000 persona commit suicide yearly. When one realizes how large is theonumber of per sons wvho are " tired of life, " it seeams doubly stranige that so few of one's own enemies should be among them.-Mil waukee Journal. A man mad with wvhiskey naturally uses intemperate lanuae Course of Study tor the Pcblic Schools. At a late meeting of the Stato Board of examinors Professor Mc Cain, of Duo West was appointed to prepare a courso of study for the public schools of the State. The work has boon completed. Professor McCain prefaces the course with the following romarks: The State Board of Examiners fools that there is need of a graded course of study in the public schools of South Carolina. Un dor the present system each school is left to itself and as teachers are ofton young and experienced, it could not be expected that they would be ablo to arrange a course in such a way ao t-accomplish the bost results. They have no dobt dono the bost they could under the circumstances, but if they had a courso outlined for them they could have done still hottor work, and the childron could have made still bottor progress. Other States have adoptod some such plan as the ono hero prepar ed and they are most highly plonis od with the results. It gives more uniformity to tho work of the cho . If socuros the regular progross of t io pupil from yoar to yoar, whethor under the samo or under difforent teachors. It gives to the various studios their proper place and emphasis, and thus provents a chango or a more ropotition of studies when a now teacher takes chargo of a school. It. enables t ho pupils to study with miuch more intorost as it sots 1ofore thin a dofinito end to ho completod. As the conditions vary somo what in difloront localities, it is expected of courso that it will sometimos he necessary for the teachor, in the oxerciso of his judg mont, to make some changes in the plan in order to adapt it to the special needs of his school. It is recognized that the longth of thle school tornm is not tio saei overywhoro. Avorago timo, how ever, is about three and a half or four months. In two years thoro foro the childron of tho public schools recoivo about the siime amount of instruction as is rocoiv ed in town or city schools whore the session is usually about eight nmonths long. Accordingly in this course of study two school years of about four months each are taken together as if they constitutedl one sessioni of about emight muon ths. Schools that run f'or a longer or a shorter p)eriod than four months can comp~lete more or loss of the course in one year. T1he patrons of each school are earnestly advised to supplemeont, whenever it is possible, the public. funds in order that the schools may everywvhero be open for eight months each year. The rest of the article, which coverns twenty-five legal cap pages of manuscript, suggests a course of study and is filled, in the form of an essay, with suggestions andl ad vice to the teachers ini minute de tail as to how tho (1 ifferent branch es and grades should be taught. That part of the article is of ini terost and1( value to the teatchors, all of whom will bie sup~plied wit]h it.-Palmotto Teacher. In the list of books pub!lished two wooks ago, the following typ)o gra ph ical errors are noted: Strong's Ex(orcisos in, English, shiould h( ave boon Strang's. Carnogy's Primer of Ethic's should1( have boon Comogy's. T1he attont ion of teachers, rs tees andl parents aro called to the following from the regulations in regard to schnool books(: 5. "That whoro a complete chango is madoe from the text books now in use oni any branch to a new text book, that tw o years be allow ed in which to oil'ect the change, thme new books being put into use gradlll~ly as now classoi are form oid and as new books are to be pur chatsod. Teachers are requested not to give orders for books that will go out of use in two years as it will cause nendlesn axpnnn to the nar )nt I?810rs are rqueosd 46 A Visit fiPutids ll h n No. 1. r6#41d U t0 en beheldby theftb ioners in this oofity, >erhaps onotugh wood 't >ilod upnicely near the eh n kouse to least a mnihor ixWe b uch a sight has never -been adbl )Y the present School" Commie ill moner. The condition of the house 'i ;ood but rather small. The hous6 s kept neat and clean, order vetyf ,ood. Thetprimary class' were a Jhe blackboard reciting and writ. lng their lesson. The method of 0onducting the recitation by Mr. Perry was practical-the pupil learns to know bj doing. A home made outlino map of South Carolina, on a paper, was n''- -Wd for the class just itarting in Histo' ..outhCaro ina. Another novelty in the ichools of the county was a home nado Globe about eightoon inches n diameter. This globe is made voll, you know how Prof. Hughes ;old you to make it last summer Lt the institute. It is made to miswor tho purpose of a twenty or hirty dollar globo at the cost of a 'ow cents. Will I find your school' ii as prosperous a condition and 'ou trying as hard to excel others is tho teacher hore is, are you satt sflod with keoping school. In answer to many who ask how Jrosswoll runs her public school ongor than others and pays cash it the end of the month, we vould stato that they have used A priviledge allowod all school listricts by tho school laws. They eviod an aldditional tax of two n ills for school purposes last year, m1d did not 1pon(d it until the Croasnror collected it, or at least h. 11most of it, exeopt perhaps the imount ftrom thie the railroad. Tho namos of pupils in Liberty sciool entitled to bo placod on the roll of honor for the week ending Friday January 19 1894, are as ollows: Tun is Parsons, Flora Boggs, Prank Joggs, Horbert J. Boggs, ula Boggs, Arthur Boggs, Hattie 3oggs, Arthur W. Boggs, Ella loggs, Parkor Brown, Jesse Ford, Vora Ford, Alieno Groon, Ida Gant, Fohinnie Gant, Essio Gant, Clifford iant, Martin Gant, Oscar B~oggs, 3ffroy Looper, Dorcas M4oore, AIadalonoe Moore, Johinnio Robm-. ion, Pearl Robinson, Annie Smith, Kate Smith, Nettie Parsons, Wil. Aio Parsons, Agnes Willard, Annie Jan t, Susie Whitlock, May Dawson. Biottie D~awson, Amands. Dawson, Elarry Presley, Addie Young, Con .iio Stowart. FTHE TARIFF BILL IN THE HOU8E. WAsHrNGTON, January 24.--- ry promp~tly af ter the meeting of the house this morning and with the intervention of very little routine. b~usinofls, the house went into corn. mittee of the whole to -consider the Wilson bill. Mr. Taylor of Tennossee offered an amendment substituting provisions of the Mc. Kinley law for the proposed iron~ ore schedule and the Wiluon'bill6 Mr. Chicering, of New York and Mr. White, of Ohio, olposed, 44e bill.- Mr. Deunson, of Alabama,. saidl ho had boon taught that the ,, Democratic party was atariff ,par ty and1 ho hadl learned that under Andrew Jackson. "F~roo trade - is l icentiousnoss," he said, "protec tion is deosporation, and both are. unjust." Hie was not a protection. ist and not a free trader, but was an Andi'ow Jackson Democrat.' JLughter andl app1lause. - N Inl ropl1y to a question hbsaid ho was a protectionist to the extent which would' give equality for American labor and American in dunstry. Republican apihIus'e. In reply to a quesion as to whiat kind of protection ho 'wanted in particular, ho .said' he wanted pro toction on iron ore. "Give us pro. Lection," he said, "and loA46 the cornsequonces to theo Amoric'an pbda plo." Ropubiecnd applanis'o. lie hold that iron ore was not rawv material for the reason that there was a large expenditure of capital in machinery for raising ore and for similar nurnoses.