University of South Carolina Libraries
K. tl t 1., NnT v t 11, fE i t'' :a[: . 4% \o'eed a a a iiate;fr i rS r. n : v :1 :4 la k"4 lv,i: t" -t l . lty \a t h of "Ild!'tan'blitt, ;s al t, nt ntioni,'diby i! frit'td, as a t andlidatte for the s:atme o:th-t'. No doubtit there are' many' now W\ho't nlamt hlave' nlot ye-t been nietn t1it ld all() lIlanly wnort' wV h, conu1d IiII the o11let' whose namer- will not he nu.n tionedl, andl it is a yert' yet. be,fore the cal tpi!n ot)t'n. I-'or Se'nator Ml.lat r'in':, {lart- there" air, so many nlamei'r mnItionedt that w,' ti.t-r not under.1takt" tti eliI ll te'late th}I'1. In II h (''ll lI t . - sillai i.tt't thtrt are nIo sh rtge in the' n1umber of andlidlate',. andl then there are .t 'a- l earldidatt. for each I: the other -(ate olle-', and when the canmltaien. otarts out next year there w i\tl alt' to lt'' d iiot into ec tior in ort,ir that each tllmber of th - fro t -on ltuy hae tthe 1pportunityo he o h1' sten by Ilthe votr'e. I t is ton carly in the gane yet to Iek hrt the antlitlates or to u folertae to sieak of the Ioy-ibiitI.it':: of tle i.ous ellt rics. 41.1. THiE 1'AM11IUK. In all ages, from the begining to el' Ireet, in th heart of worker t,here has onstantly dwelt the imtage of thle \'ampire, Fomletimles clear, often vague, alwayst there. Iindt'y there were onscious, D>ully they knew aind know. -We made al' we Ike all, Of od. We kept non we' have none. We had each of what he ate only that he used to make gore wit.h for the \Vampire. The Vampire ha it, all. It maketh noth ing. It only takes fronm u, while Wd sleep. I y its wisdom'7 No! H our folly. 13trnte-d ones pin1ted it. IKiipling jpentned h is reading of t he pietnure. Whmt. is tho \'amplir- . It is not a th inig. Whoti is the Vampire'/ It is not a W hat is it, then? 1It, is a creature of evil power, to sap our st rengthb and kill us. It takes t he latnd G.od gav'e to aill, and lots it, out to some for hire. It takes and keeps the hire, andi miakes it heav ier as outr labor makes the land mtore fruti tftul. We mazeke it, of otn.selves, for our solves. We name it: PTust. We feed it tIll at last it, eats us and we cease to be. It, Is forever, for wh'lile we lived andI fed it we also got otur k inid to feed it atnd be eaten a fter us, and getting more like us to make uinto themtiselves Vamn lures to destroy their creators. \Vhat should be the funct ion of a man' To kill the Vampire. H low kill it? St,arve it to death, wit.h in yourself first, then in your clildroen, then in yottr law. H1 ow shall we know It? Igy this sign: It Is in,jtustice. Jutstico kills it. It. thrives ont privilege; give ntone. It fattens on an unjtust tax. T1ax only justly. It lives alone on wvhat you feed it. b1eed it not. It will die. What is it to man to live? O.nly this: To light the Vampire, to kill It, or to be killed by it. "'Know ye not that t.o w hor.n ye yi eld yourselves servanuts to obey, his ser vant,s ye are to whom ye obey. "-St. Paul to the Romans, vi, 16.-L. A. Russell. Th'iIs is the age of trusts atnd great cotmbines, and In our country~ today the great tetndency is towards contrallza tion of wealth in the hands of the fe~w. IEvery day b)rings rceports of new com bines formed for the express putrp~ose of one corporation controlling the market, and thus controlling prices. And with ain ad ministration favorable to these great corporations, there is no tellitng to what thIs tendoiney wIl lead. So far the record of this year has very greatly surpassed that of any previous year. 'The great steel trust, with a cap)itallzation of $1,100,000,000 in the greatest corporatIon of its kind. The cattle growers lhave combined, the fruit growetrs of F4loridla, the Pennsyl vania flour' mills, and even the mtakers of tin cans have formed a great com-. bine, known as the "tin can trust," wIth a capital stock of $88,000,000. 1htthe most, marked tendency to wards forming monopolies this year hsbeen in the railroad world, and It Is now rumored that withIn the next few months Rlookofeller, Hlarriman, Vanderbilt, Gould, and Morgan will unite intereets and purchase all the railroad lines throughout the Country. Every where wealth Is combining and eoverywhere labor is combining, and ~' '~,overywhere the fight is on td the death * between capital and labor, and between ixhanufacturor and consumer. and tine-halVf t,i2 ion of dl hu- in pten ts1n sin e ths wa and is+: n ,',w pa In; he t of wen who> 1 evt in th1e' eivil tr i' re ' t la grotaw i :, an,d leSts, wh1ile thi- iinmmo:h pension rotli has evey - lay b,11ein 'ing\' nR\iore am tl tifi The followvingt li,.uare: givena by thle in. the pen:ion roll of ie l'uited notat - w aith t t iti of teill y and IE n anot1!her of thle worli. oand yV-t the total asonsint of her thIlanul peision list,i ISttes. .m,werica lhave hueardl timuc-h of th e greIat ans erushtling o.-t if ius ain ilig 't iian 's vast a.iiies- Sli whace thim-;11, in tt ti en sar n rmyl lif U.: t"t , and a ' rei e tr tof : itl0 ntu1 '. e el lila N i-d t r t'stabilisl ient, i g u: l, 0,iv, or ut wI iattI f l:,t tI0 lesst ti in c'his ctroun ry it i la:,t year ftor pensions atlone. A t the present taime the pensioni li-. of lie civil wartt coint a in a greater tnumnber' of iin mIes tatin tid the roll of .ol iei'rs in actual service on tny one day~ tduiring hit- itVire petitod of Ithe eivi iar. 'et crtet as. the list a thi- year, :iex t a ar. o: tity ix year aftt r th clor-t of m -:ateriallvy hrtiIgI." It is at little srangie that the Iotuer Sitintes otn thle n t pension oll today thirt1--i" yers after the war, is great er than tue ttal tuht of teIni en". gagt-ds in that grcat co i tr. It is nothing but. a great steail from thlse lFor the last four years Comi: ulionier ivan has beetn strivintg to uphold the law', and to do his dtyt honestly, but hotyt is a thing not, wan,tlI in the ol lic o whih hilotit holds. 'o hold h' is olie t m,and mutst be in full sytmpaIthy wit.h the piensioni sharks atnd t heir schemes for tenlin g all ehat is Possible. tJ:tt 'esult, of the tight againist hi rm wvill he watched with interest. Re frtritnig to this 'ight, The ledger says: "tthuts fat the presiteni, has man flly, wisely ant justly trefused to yield t.o tIla forbiddIng inluences which have bieeni so aggr'essively emuployedl to re imove an holiest anl e dlieytnt chief, who hats, with reirkable eourage anid lidlel ity, satft-gutartded Public iterests and goodi putblic pJolicy. Ills removal is sought in orter thait a comti"ssiotter of a wholly di tfoentt sort, shall be put, in his place, and the lootin g of the treasury by claim thgents ttand the tttt'is of invalid clais made easy. Ir isiet litnley 1 thaesterved the thanks of the country, antI especially of t ho honor'able, patriotic t4oldiers5 of otti wars whou wish the pension list to be a roll of honor, for his refusal to surrender' to sordid clamor by consent ing to remove Comminissioner Evans from his pr'esentt post of usefulness. .Thle ti sf rancihiscement of the niegro in the South ionitinutes. Tihe Alabamta Constitutional con vention has made an election franchise subject to educational or prope'rty quallilation. "'All quali lied voters must be able to read tntd write anty article of the conistitution of the UInited Stattes. If unaible to read, must own by self or wife forty acres of land In State, or' other recal estate to valute of three hunadred dollars." T1hiis clause effectually d isfiranch ises the negro for the present, and is abott the same~ clatuse as we have in the con stitution of South Carolina. Bunt twenty years from today it will be of no avail whatever TIhe~ education of the negro is goiing on rapidly, and In that period of timo negroes who cannot read will be scarcer than whites today. Then wIll come the time wvhen the race prob 1em will detmandi a sohtltin and when it mrust have a soltiion. So long as the white race Is so much superior to the black In intelligence as it is today -the two races can live together In peace. But it ie a facet observed by all thought ful men that in prtoportion as most nie groes are educated they become worse citizens, and It is a fact that the negro is rapidly being educated. And as the two races more nearly a ppreach each other in intelligence, the hardeor it will be for themi to live together, for thn negr'o will demand social equality, and this is aJhing which will never be give a him by the white people of the South. He could be given Pol itical equality by outsiders, but not sooial -equality, n t,hia he wi never have. S DISPENSARY VS\ UNCLE SAMO titit ; It i Ii tt ti tti 1 I. it" A tnt hNit r: 1"\ItIS S1 NVt; peta ,0 .-lt :t,tv' .ttr\ut1t of t tt, thei s ls.' t',1 to i e. ," : . :. ,' l .:. ilt l': l tv" 't5. the ei o iltet tal 'evei t tn b hal tof th~e State.it......titetided thatp.' thr is tith ine,. in: the ws :ts w, , lie the the State. tht ir.inges o .iI the olc io oa f of the l is intea te ihevl e\" law auil ey ahot e I'clI thein titi .lioniit of' their sales. In thle lhrief filc, withi t he coinlnission et of itr itl rue'nue on behalf of the -ate it is oittened that there is noth ies io the laws of the rnited states bel tlo ing the colletion of ist teinal ree int iaxes which, even 1 e ticdl , author it. the nptsition of a tax against a State l its instrnental ities of goern hent, and that such a'n Act conta ithug all,v pirovisionii taxinig the ilnstl'1n11_ ltal i tfes of the State Coolerniest wouid be to t hat extent tuncoiistitutijonal. It is tedtended further that the pioper aof State and the means and inst n iie1ithl ities lploe tpy it to carty its law i ito operation cainot per taxed by xe rederal t dte neirt, and an opinion of th late t dgte Coolw Oi this testion iss it('tctd. I f ;tn\ i nte rnal revenue law (if the l"niitedl States require the agents of the stat e and couty dispeulsaries of S tly Carolx a each to pay a tax to tie United States before bieiig permlittedl to exercise the duties of their ofice, it is contended that the law is nconstitutior al and woid in this partictar, because the tax which it i hposes is pnely and toaitply a ix upon the instrinietalities ta stliu the State, thsrough its laws, sek to ininine the evils of the liquor trai withi its borders. The oederal tovernent, it is held, cannot uonstit eties,vi ierfrt the aisineriinciteda tiothe opi thatitaws notresuchn a special tary Stapto agency,d by schalneedsul fucdtin prcdet the Sttoetenrcase ofl arencertainaerncires asltelassialo tthe refun of atae, such by the mtaite nancelo Couia terecosierofiial, col hectionnofreaxesoforinhenpytnt ofil itces dsrygnated tt agenec, and its bean tuitted thtphe Nastionatittoerlnnentca eigntie yettd cin isiay,i direclrin toitety opinio ta it isot shese necesr saState ni; othrwisethe aiiftinl Gernmet iit r1( taxton. uto her artencetaint tee Gontet essntiads towhe lifeo Statee sor:n as work antea lun iection of s nr h aenclo whichs been tteepss and it b eromad be ad citittens tin thei Nainalivualncataci dity,ya new~ aspta 1 ates Ieceitais Statcansties;iontoerieuire teional agoenseimighte taxe the odispenx ise.hn,the Governetnh sm equiroeds,e when thsse State and't u a ohrn tas manufa(ictie of ansky agey whic toac arie, coud th e Government( bey ity txenspn theructs ofllat underand ty,ratewb athett anused fo these purpeoss?itfia o rhie the escigh threy ybe ofable aoln to pay alo hioen mtal ii pensoeslthe Gio eaers' Goverp.. tment, tis said, Staeuad lloher intes,a cronot inlym of theome 2btit0,of tper co, and ifdesoo that the custommissould erat eciio byais the State, for ts pspems? robab, he ae evetas ih gteeb the Supree ourtal of the Unvernd Staexpnes.eGnrl oe Wanti she sdo w outlegap lne hichna rhas.nC. isii of Lsone$,cIa,ohdo pr yar."Sadn watdep nic wer," e riteIs, aga ve the tate,rrItl seemsan proable t cawre edtallil. Finalo the bree dotof the Uafntd, Ae. Ragx ity, an mh aidoI. ha Conshemption a coldnot lie. whien p a sningDr wainst (le i soldr and wao ugholy greuwre byaisyx bottles," Positivelyv guarontoed for Coughs,Coldls and all Throat and Lung troubles by all druggiete. Price 50o. SENTENCE IMPOSED UPON COL W. A. NhAlti %W.hv d4 o nty\"\ .h ti l for four ut vths ed th b e t rt i't s1 bity \S t ta with r\'"ernc to ti case. t t i tp es ire t.t,at o e Ne,l sa.Il der iv. otpo $ p.a s u e coincpa in the 1tenc ov1itf 1.111 for t our au oyots. tle II tet be rctuirel to work or to We'll stripes ltltte '.arv saidl 1 tl nt ro se to u tre f'our Ieel iul;s by c\tressilg any views I tay" crn tertain with referen+ce to tis case. I simply desire to state, however, that I derive no personal pleasure in passing the sentence of the law poh you. I take it the convtion itself will be suli cient admission to you; therefore, I will conmtenmt imself with simp~ly passinig what I conceive to be time penalty warranmtedl by that verdict. The sentence of the court is that you pay the sumnn of $i,ooo aind be con lined to the county jail of Richland for the period of four months. I will not go to the extent of confining you to labor or even to wearing stripes. I simply content myself to sentence you to the county jail taking that to be a suflicient requirement under the law as I conceive it. Take your seat." Soon after the sentence was pro nonnced the attorneys for Col. Neal gave notice of an appeal to the supreme cout , and asked for Col. Neal to be released on $2,ooo hond pending the action of the higher cout. This was granted. Iteis from St. Pants. Mr. L. I. Epting has been confined to his room the past week with an in flamed eye caused by the excessive heat tf last Monday and Tuesday. Crops are growing nicely, but are small for the time of year. A good rain would be appreciated. Miss Fannie Oswald, of Lexington, is visiting at Mrs. Bedenbaugh's. Misses Annie May liedenbaugh and Viola Kibler, students of Mont Amu-na Seminary, are spending their vacation at their resp)ective homes. Mr. T. 13. Epting, a graduate of New berry College, is at his father's, Mr. L. I. Epting's, recuperating. The grain crop in this community was good. Boinest & Co.'s thresher is on the rounds threshing grain. They do good work and turni ol wvork in a hurry. With plenty of vegetables, fruit and blackberries we are living like a -- Oh, yes, Chliips, we have a watermelon p)atch but not many melons yet. Wet weather has caused a delay. We think wve will have plenty after a while. We are glad to see our' young friend, John Aull, editing The Herald and News. John is8a talented young man anid Newberry should feel proud of him. Every correspondent of The IIerald and News should feel encouraged to aid him in the wvay of furnishing news. Yours truly, July 1, .1001. Pusmi. Atlantic Coa:st. Line Iaten.E Account Fourth of July Agents are authorized to sell Round Trip Tickets as followvs: Rate:-One and one-third first-class fare for the round trip. Territory:-B3etwveen all points east of Mississippi, and South of Ohio and Potomac Rivers, including Washing ton, 1). 0. Agents local stat,ions will only sell tickets to points to which they have rates and round trip tickets. Date of Sale andi Limit:-Tickets to be sold July 2nd, 3rd and 4th, final limit July 8th, 1901. Cheap Itateg-Cholce or Itoutes by Seaboard Air Linme Itlway. The Seaboard AIr Line Rlailway, the short line from all point,s in South Carolina to Buffalo, N. Y., offers a choice of routes to the Pan-American Exposition of all rail via Washington, or via Norfolk and the famous steamer lines diverging from that point. With its magnificient Pullman car servico and through vestibuled trains it insur. a comfortable, sate and quick trip. Round trip tickets from all points in South Carolina on sale April 30th to September 30th inclusive, good for re turn passege until November 3rd, 1901, S37.10. Tickets on sale A pril 80th uin Lii further notice at rate of $33.13 limited to fifteen days from date of sale. For' any further information address Mr. Butler, Jr,, Division Passenger Agent,, Savannah, Ga., G. MeP. Batte, Travelling Passenger Agent, Colum bia, S. U.; R. El. L. Bunch, General Passenger Agent, Portsmouth, Va. Your. truly, 0. MoP. Blatte, T. P,A, to. t"01t4 to - lu lt t)t1. Mouit,y to 11te S t Tt t' tiv ra Ilu I ,lt.ttI to I%,t,r t,a tlta '1 t ta" t t t tllar' auwl \\' \ , I , A tot tt tal lo elt t ltlige ti tt s .\,t t t bl t.\ , and1w all\' his" foa ce S there h," in the. ed t os t t ato the aightt"tt w ilat te e t t\ l+ th."e lawl byt \1. '1g e d uest (at.Itt .;l'\t a t ttut,.' 01k lega latle and MkI l t.t A itt " . ' C't ttI,t 1'\t 't'1111 l' t 't' lawyetstt' col hav don btte i t ha di C tl ' +" : " ' ti 1% ,cll ,t tt+\ l,t t'\ t . '\ ess s . 4 .I u 1-'.' .kgg and, t.h 1 Ne son. tr telne had ltheA. suppotho a! cpt l\ ru oe t o i cliet Ytand pre se nted ..'.t,' the sei te tronet way, and insistied th poin t tt l Na'.l"s'.ore that ht' h ltutnd :lt oe it e.t,n over to the bank, and f S it h adt'.' ben tel' eta t hlittit \\att11 the S tt, hadl not proven hsttto be incrret. A; .ttorney ea Blt'Ingrtu wasttsuperb in+ his torat anttitd a t ItIas att ma to ttackit en andh facs and conrrdi tionst as' het id toda tint is argelnt. II faytd to the d .teight tot ta t di no sear t Co . eal t r lai tv I td r -t n est Ga ry. It h l thlt iI toI le al battle. c ted th no i qets ton, Id have done bettei than did mtess, .tllius 1. littgs and 1'. pr , Ne se. at. t uellit oer had tho support of Slicite r '1turmond. Jlr . Nelson made al Capital argunn~t for his clienit atnd pre serted the cause in the strongest uly, and insisted utpott the point that Col. Neal swore that he had turned the money in question over to the bank and that it had been rper y spent, and that the state had not proven this to de incorrect. Attorney General Bellinger was superb in his oratory and wppeal:;. It takes a m:an: to attack ment, and facts and condi tions s he id today in his argument. le flayed the defence and did not spare Col. Neal or his witness. Judge Gary held that if Col. Neal collected the money i question, and did rot expen it for legithmate Penitentiary purposes, and then failed to turn it over to his succes and within thirty (lays, then ie was guil ty nder the statute. The ayn ent to the bondsmen was not a comliance with the statute an not a efence. Judlge Gary held that the law excused two classes: Children and idiots or the iCsane. To btlead insanity it must be thow that the arty coulw not distin guish between right andl wrong. If the party knew the oifference between right and wrong insanity was not a defence, st if he did not know the oifference be tween right and wrong it was a complete defence. WVheni the verdict was brought in and read Mr. Bloggs moved for a new trial, ans it was decided that the motion will ne heard on Monday morning. Iu the meanwhile Col. Neal is under bond an was not deprived of his liberty. If the new trial is not allowed it is generally though Wa ane apeal. to'te Suree Co r wi he tS ke. S. mayVhINS T ed hat mde sit cae whic granthm olyer oe caseminit,ion unde the l annxdme estate aNl tefet offne decased,nc( tat theye monhdi appe befr me, Wn he, Courto Proate, ge C.,onthme 5t toay o ulynxt, him lters pubdliiscation wofth the o'cll aneted feon th eshow aus fn These haeh theoet saitad adsr mionishoulld tnbulgrante nde deaseder thhadaht the a( appea C,o th 1thday of Junl, A.xD.,19f intefi'noorn,tshwcae,nd n thyoug, hythe said anra tionteoud.ntbgatd Give unr m hand this ts t dof June Ai.1)19. PROPRIHTOR OF C. . PLIIA , Nwbery P.S. C. Rentenn Tere is Writene in nent Line Stomac,siv AHots apnd frentsu (fico ovrloes up to dte.)n Glenn netr Stomach, Live JAMIESON'S Cut Price Sale! lP r i ce t t 3t ) dIy wo will Ho 1l i yot it o liii ig elioi,oi- L i it hias boon sold in Nowborry. Iloro aro Homw of (,III' >rico.. \Vo don't hve to write mtuI abot tIhotm otir p)rio do th to alking. 'ho priceH (luring this sale will b) like this: $ t'. li out prit.oH $ -.25 $cut, pricc, $ 3.90 S.AN0 etttt pric'o(iS il cut prico. 4.25 ) (,it, prio0H (.25 I1. 0 ou. lrio( 7. 1) S.150 eut lpric(os S 3.20 11 ~t) ('lt. )i'5'N7* 5 .75) cut pIrices (4.25 t4. 0 out pint( 12.rl I I.5)O cLt prices 8.25 'o havo matlo outs liko this on all colorod Spring Sutis Tie balance of our 'tildron'H tuits will bo olosoil out rogardlss of cost. Suits that soul at tImao., now .1So. Sold al. $1.2k>, now 85o. Suits that sold at $2.25, n(w $l. i 0. All othors in proportion. l)ur outiro stock of )ry (lo->s)1 to bo ciosod out at cost. Best 4.4 Homo hl'un 00. Itest. I'rintH -o. 16,c. (;ottonadeos .12e. Straw Hlats! S iraw lants !!--All go at about half prico. Shot's !- Shoes !-Our stock of Shoos bottor than over. All low, -ut are boing olos0d out. t, cost. I ,adios' Oxfords from 48c. to $2.22, worth 75c. to 2-"W'atoh our wilow for prices on suits. Respectfully, The lload to Foot Clothier. C.&G.S.M 0 ERC We are now showing a complete line of the newest and moststylish goods to be had in the market. Dress Goods, Muslins, Piques, Ginghams, &c., &c., at prices which are the lowest, considering the value,of the goods. We call special attention to our W. B. Corsets. We undoubtedly carry and always have carried the largest line in this city. We are always in the lead in this as our contemporaries have been obliged to acknowledge time after time. Thu famous W. B. Corset, the most popular in America. We lead all others in our line of Hosiery. We have all sizes, styles and prices- -Misses', Children's and Ladies'. Our Millinery Department is full of attractions for-the ladies. Latest and most fashionable styles. We cordially invite a thorough inspection. Como and see us. C.N s. m.ow co. BEAUTIFUL Organdies, Lawns, Swisses, Laces, Embroideries, &c., for Commencement D)resses. Bunting for decorations for Firemen's TlourInen.t. Elegant line Curtain Swiss by the yd., and lace curtains by the pair. All these goods at reduiced prices, Our ready-made Waists and Skirts are perfectly splendid in quality and style, wvhile the prices are so much lowecr thani you have any idea of, See them. Great values in ready-made Sheets, Pillow Cases, &c. In the Gents' Furnishing Department you will find the best 50c. Shirt to be had. That $5.00 Suit has been reduced to $4.50 for the -spot cash, but you must 4 come soon fort they are nearly out.-The "Bostonian" is as good as the best. Guaranteed. Try thenm. Money is scarce and our prices have been red uced accord ingly. Wo want your business. Yours truly, S. J. Wooten. Perfect in construction will not pack or misshape, guaranteed absolutely - --B.Y TH Dexter Broom and Mattress Ce., Pelzer, 8. C. Sprngs Hotel, nn Springs, S. C. outiern Summer Resorts. ann Springs and it has no equal on the conti r, Kidne~ys, Bowels and Blood. ne I to October 1. Cuisine and service excellent~ I everybody goes there. For board apply to ON & SIMPSON. -.Dr. W. E. Peiharn and & Gilder Weeks.