LANCASTER ENTERPRISE! Published 11 cry Wednesday -- ,*Y ? The - Enterprise - ^ublishinM Company! A. J. CLARK, r.iitnr. AUGUST, .... 25, 1897. ;? ; | The farmer who raised his own wheat, this year hit it right, for a fact. Meat ia advanc'ng rapidly. If1 you are not raising some hogs, it's a good time to start. No more "> cent meat in this county for awhile, mark it. How can Irby charge McLanrin with being a Republican because lie voted lor a small duty on cotton and white pine lumber, when Mr. Irby himself voted for 150 per cent duty on collars and culls? 11 you have any objection to McLaurin for the l\ S. Senate, your good sense must lead you to see insurmountable objections to Evans or Irbv. Then of three evils, choose the least. Don't forget that the primary election comes off next Tuesday ? the 31st. You should go to the! polls and vote for the man you , think best titted for Senator Tillman's collague in the 1*. S. Sen | ate. McLaurin's condition is daiiy improving, but hi-> physicians ad vise against his attempting to speak, hut all tin* same he will get the votes next Tuesday, he cause the voters believe lie is the most suitable man for the I . SSenate. Those who do not like MeLaurin's tariff views have a choice between his views which are also Tillman's views, and Kvans' ' single tax" views, which would place all taxes upon the land.and let stocks, bonds and all other species of property owned by the wealthy class, go without paying I iimt t * * 4 I n v II.*- ?. * 1 1 - * ? ' II will III Iii.\u. llll? 1? lilt- h 1 MM of stuir Kv;ms advocates. McLaurin lias satisfactorily' answered every a I tack 1. vans. I rbv vV Co.. have made upon him during this campaign, and he has shown up the falsity of the posi tions they were trying to pose in before the peojde in such a way that lie was actually benefitted l>y the attacks. The attacks often acted as boomerangs. Irby's vote in the Senate for 1">() percent duty on collars and cull's, and his vote the very same day (Kjainxt. bO per cent, duty on wool look strange and inconsistent, and when viewed in t lie light of (he facts poi111c a year or two before the fiends were executed. If it had been in South Carolina, when would they have received their retribution' Nervous People often wonder why their nerves aro bo weak; why they get tired soeaBily; j why they start at every slight but j sudden sound; why they do not sleep i naturally; why they have frequent j headaches, indigestion and Palpitation of the Heart. The explanation is simple. It iH found in j that impure blood which is continually feeding the nerves upon refuso Instead of the elements of strength and vigor. In such condition opiate and nerve compounds simply deaden and do not cure. Hood's Sarsaoarilla fccdB the nerves pure, rich, red blood; gives natural Bleep, i?erfect digestion, selfcontrol, vigorous health, and is the true remedy for all nervous troubles. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the One True Itlood Purifier. $1; six for $5. 1 Prepared only by t\ I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. | ?. j, ?-? ?! c,lr<, b'ver Ills; easy to tlOOd S I illS take, easy to operate. i Imagine that South Carolina and a lew other states had made a rousing big cotton crop, but ! that" the remainder of* the cotton i belt has made a comparative failure, and that cotton has. in con < sequence of these eonditions.gone ; up to 1 or 1cents, ami you < will have a case parallel to the wheat situation, and will be able to faintly realize bow happy j those wheat growers of tin* West , are. Cash wheat rea* bed .f 1 a bushel i iii New York and Minneapolis last Friday. This is the first time it lias sold tor that, price since 1 1 S1)0. The prospects are that it ; will no still higher. The crop of this country is very large. both Winter and Spring wheat,hut the < crops in Argentine. India and Kus sia as short, and it it is the hig j export demanded that is taking the priee up so rapidly. , .Mel.aurin has shown by his re- i cord in the House and the Senate ( that he is a man of superior abil- ' ity and that he is capable of doing us a great deal of good at Wash- i ington. Then what sense is there I in dropping a man of that kind ?a man of known valuable parts ?for one who has not been tried, or for one who has been tried and found woefully wanting in alii that goes to make up a first class | represontative in the I'.S. Senate. Politicians had hotter take j warning from the verdict of the! people against the advice of Sen ator Tillman last year when lie undertook to advise them to vote for Kvans instead of Karle. They ignored his grat nitons ad vice and, voted for whom they pleased. , oenaior iintnan learned a lesson from that experience, and has studiously avoided giving any advice as to who should be elected in the coming primary. Nevus Heine" says he doubt*! very much that [lie means if'| Mcl.aurin is as popular in t! is county as some of tiie newspaper! men would have him to be. If it is true, as lie says, that j the people of this section |the northwestern section of 1'uford; township, which Novus Homo" says**is indeed a corner" | are for Kvans." he is correct in his surmise. The Kntkki'Hisk wants to i see Mcl.aurin heat Kvans, not only in this county (which he i will easily dot, but in the entire , State, which we believe he will do on the first ballot. Wheat going up and cotton going down is suggestive of ourl farmers raising their own wheat, j J. Peirpont Morgan of I'. S. bond 1'atiH during Cleveland's last administration, is reported bvj the New York Journal to have made $700,000 on wheat during the recent advance in that product. Philip I>.Armour, Chicago's multi-inillionare packer, is lso reported to have made a barrel, as has also Ex-Gov. Kosevell P. Flower and .John Cudahy. The wheat situation means high priced biscuits for the South, but it means plenty of money for the wheat growers of the West, who have been perishing with plenty to oat during this period of low prices of their only product for six years. It is a happy day for them, and most of the money they will get for their crop will come from across the water. "Novus Homo1' says, ill)r. Strait will lose no votes here for criticising McLaurin's tariff views." Put Dr. Strait never criticised McLaurin's tariff views, it least he said so at the Tirzah encampment. alter being charged with making a weak criticism ot hi* and Tillman's tarilf views. Resides that, we did not know that Dr. Strait was in this race. While not believing in Mor-j monism, we think the treatment the Mormon Klders are receiving in 1'airlield is disgraceful,and will h> more to establish Mormonism in the State than any thing else likely to be done. "The blood of I he martyrs the life of the hurch" is as true now as in days zone bv. The desire tor religious freedom and the consequent hatred for re- 1 ligious oppression brought to this country some of the tirst set llers. Those people sought America that they might worship (iod according to the dictates of their own conscience, yet here in our v - r>"" lie made last year?that ho was lirod of hearing Kvans pose as a martyr at his hands. Maybe Kvans is trying tho hiilldo/.o on those j who alludo to tho "rebates'', I>11Y | ho did not try it on Duncan at Newberry, though at the Marion meeting Saturday he treated j another voter to a verbal htilhloz -j ingl'or making a re lore no? to "re . bates". He seems to be awful i "touehous" on this question. uwii mate, in an adjoining county, arc people persecuting others an account of their religion. That was a mean insinuation that appeared in the Columbia' Register a week age?that Me- | l.aurin's collapse at Yorkvillej was feigned. It is about on a! parity with the alleged statement of the man who said tie* day after the senatorial speaking here; "I told you McLaurin would not noine to Lancaster." Such mean insinuations should be beneath any self respecting man. Strange it is that Kvans should have gotten so bristling mad when the man in the audience asked1, I.: i.:i? . . i 1 Him \\iiiif s j ten Kin g nere,"wnat I about rebates?" Is it tho truth that hurts Kvans sot The ques tiou was entirely pertinent, and especially so since Mr. .1. '1'. Duncan, the man who last year made the charges of rebates against Kvans appeared at New berry only a lew days before the Lancaster meeting and said that he was ready with the testimony i to prove the truth of everv ehnrcro I HERE WE GO, o We Have Done Pas And Nothing ?o We are in the field this s< complete line either in or South Carolina. S do you handle ? Don't handle; but what is handle ? Here Are a Few of th( Machinery of all kinds, Engines, Boilers i-resses?nana amrstcam?otto n and May, I'll 1 leys, ?!tc. (i>- We Make G .?^""Outfits a Sp If you wish to examine one of these, we re are a few of the gentlemen to whom we have L lllackmon, .1. A. Bridges, 1 >r. K. K. Ilortoi Welsh. There has been but very little it tion for several years except what we have Simple enough. IIVi take our (Inter Buy te/ti t'e it'.s t/i Buggies, Buggie We have on hand and to arrive the most ec Surries, Carts, Ac., in the State. We have t best makes, hem e our ability to furnish wlia of the kind we handle: Itabcock, Tyson .1 bus, Columbia, I'any Advance, and a great n tion, ranging in price from $25.00 to $ Over the brain of each youth is spread "How long! How long! before 1 can w< You must wait patiently and endure And wait until it does mature. Hut, how much sooner it would be If you only buy an H. M. T. We have the cxclusiv Koof ?1 ".:ii --11 r uv-oi Iiitirvv^^, til IVI Will i>Uil 1 anybody. Cane 1 flills p. ane Mills l ane 111 ills j u Now is the time to buy your Cane Mills. Chattanooga Cane Mills, Kvaporators, steel j both here anil :it Kersluiw. Wagons, \A We carry the best line of Wagons in the C Piedmont, Spraeh it any oilier kind you ina, and four horse. Repairs of all kinds on ban have three large distributing points, hence t low prices paid. o< IIARNE: * IIARNE: The h a/' tin it coven <1 the A nice line cf riding saddles and bridles o harness a specialty. Mowers, I\ We handle nil Liiul^ iim? o ...?i 0 rA 1 v> hi cow's bark carl. '/// hold I' J//'. tit I'll. U'/'c is no cod, tialfy lien. on :inctfully, 10RY ft CO.