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THE NEWS AND HERALD. s? highest ? - ? sometimes er.c WIXNSBORO, S. C. They luxur,ate der, aiid this, t boasted civiliz: WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3. : : 1887. / mi century. The to correct these a. rt. ft ivsr> ilk, j _ _ V sditoes. patriotic, and d it. L. McDOSALD. ) . ' ? , praise-of all thi It is rumored that Ohio's Governor, out the world. Foraker, is about to resign, and the During the [ genius of history pauses, with pen - Many fact poised, inked and anxious to record the . incorDorat fail name of an Ohio man tba, re- ? signed an office? Mta Californian. vil)e Li^ht aQ John J. Ingalls has been chosen 000,000 capital President pro tern, of the benate in n.ston, Alabar ftf -tnhn ShprmsR. who has bouth Haltimo ILiC/ piavt- v* vvum v..w? , resigned. Ingalls is the bitterest par- 000 capital; 1 tisan and probably the most brilliant Iron Company man in the Senate. As a master MO capital; Ui of repartee, of sarcasm and of bitter lcurn and Ga personal vindictiveness he is the equal $1,000,000 caj of the famous John .Randolph of tory, Ghaitan Roanoke. five blast furn one at Calen A contemporary thinks that the vjjle ?a an( ? --ix-t frv ' ' . College boys ougnt not to oe w gas xnacnme publish a paper. We are of the op- sheet-rolling posite opinion. The boys may not xtineral Comp know bow to "trim and hedge" and 0(30,000 capita "straddle;" they may "get down Company, Me sometimes on ine wrong side of the ^aj. Spoke fa< fence," but they usually express their $100,000 capil honest opinions upon men and meas- jng mills, Be ures, and this is more than their big capital; saw u brothers of the press outside the Col- ta,ll00ora} $150, lege campus usually do.^ Let the ?"and",'n,* cficir joi.i Nf nature free seventeen turn curbcd expression 01 * lul- Arkansas, tw< truckling spirit of a servile age. Alabama, tw( The Salvation Army have been Georgia, two made to leave Columbia. The conduct Texas; a!s< of the crew became obnoxious to the nies?two in! decency of the city. They were "re- Alabama, aud quested" to leave, and they left. The to the t0P of 1 only wonder that we have about the matter is that the "invitation" was ?Qapt. TUlnw not given long oeiore it was. rne though length "army" is made up of just that sort of article next wi people whose societv a self-respecting especially our ,, , a pretty fair sj community would for many reasons V?uliR<^In the earnestly desire to avoid- We don't measures in want to see them, and if we don't ture. ?Lauren mistake the temper of our own- peo- There is m pie, very little hospitality will be intolerance. ' wasted on them here. bent of his ov Senator Youn Bismarck is still master of Ger- , . , , _ he is a farmer manv. The advocates of representa- , . , .j condemnation tive government have failed. The ^ result of the recent elections have set- eCfie" - 0 s tied this beyond question. The friends a" !IS ,C1 ew ? , shoe pinches, of progress, however, may, upon ^ ?crew? taking a retrospective view, find much .. . , , A . , "spirit'' whic reason to congratulate themselves. ,, ... nru - . lV i Senate which When a spirit of hostility to the rule ,. . . . , . * . one which is I of the autocrat has once arisen among ? . . , rT 1L , ., ,. , * Patrick Henry - the people it never dies out. The .. ., 1 r it come. Mai trouble which Bismarck now finds in jnt0 tke crashj carrying elections will never diminish. rp. , There are a and if he lives long enough he will the ?crew? tfa, find that the German people can get ^ an(j t^at along very well without him. are th. Demo^ We can sympatnize with the suffer- adjuncts," for ers from the great earthquake which formulas of t ha? jast been reported from Europe. one fe,,ow w "We know something of earthquakes Columbia son: from actual experience, and if we have we take not suffered as much as people in "m?veraen other places we have, at all events, 'masses uPor experienced the terrifying sensation spokesman of that comes with the consciousness th*s way we si that the foundations are giving away. ,, T . f *' My views re In experiences such as these the suf- union have rer fering and the anguish of a lifetime I spoke at Bin ? ~^^ has hannpnpH uiav uc uunucu iuiv a ujuuicut. ? .?r rv..,? There is nothing which so much shakes ^heTreal^iii ^?t one's conviction of the stability of unwisdom of things as to feel the earth tremble as most deplorat though it were in the mad grasp of a bulk of the pi giant. A feeling of otter helplessness thT] seizes the strongest. measnres" few This whole pension business is of noUurrender: course just simply the climax of mad- people to a ness. It causes us to fear that the stroying the la devil has in reality been "loosed for a try as a first st little season." There could be no tell- * wmch so mu< mg where the havoc would end were cafferiu" and it not for the courage of President I have been as: Cleveland. He shows at everv oppor- twenty v< .. ... ~ . .. rmniQfpr T h tunity taat fte is tne President of tue f^p"?hirty year people. He has vetoed a bill which cessiVe "Premi proposes to increase the allowance of legislation con a colonel who receives already a pen- sympathy for ] sion of seventy-two dollars per month, aud i-ea as eve . / *; , ' ltv of instruct and he reminds Congress that such a men prefer the bill cannot be justified, while the great of the Imperia body of disabled privates who bore conspiracy the real hardshipsof war receive hardly mcut-? one-third of this amount. Sensible suggestions are at all times refreshing, bright was the and it is to be hoped that obtuse Con- tbis ?ener gressmen will take this reminder in caUs>e *re'a good part. If the madness must go Irish PeoP'e> on it were well to inject a little metiiod g?verument 0 into it. English states ?? ?r - ^ IA>Civil UpiSU tut Two years ago a phosphate company has been an a in Georgia offered premiums for the cate of Irish ri largest yields of cotton on soil en corn law agi! riched with its fertilizer. The results Mr. Gladstone strikingly demonstrate the virtue of common with 1 what is called "intensive" tarming. den, he cham] The four winners of the prizes in Irish people. 1886 live, two of them in Troup and cares nothing two in Campbell county, and the His opiuion. th yields they show are, respectively, stone's scheme 8,833, 10,793, 10,809 aud 10,887 pounds may be reliec lint cotton, ou five acres of gruund. been known This is ninety bales on the whole twen- shirk a respons ty acres, or an average of four and a half bales to the acre. The successful planters used an average of 767 pounds The canse of of phcsphare fertilizer to the acre, seeuo to be i This material cost about $15 per acre; been passed in but, even after this expense is deduct- the ballot in m ed, the money yield of the crop is Senate of the J more than four times that of ordinary the very decid planting. The average yield of cotton has passed a in the South is about one-half bale to fact that the g the acrc. the vote was tm pretty women The "convict lease system" has Xew York p; betn so much abused in Georgia that damages, and 1 Gov. G?>rd??n has recommenrird to the the House of Legislature its total abolition. A good State will savt. deal opposition i< expressed against of the common this reform which the Governor re- bill beyond ho] commends; many prominent men in suppose the pr tbe btate are engaged directly or indi- in the galleries rectly in tbe leasing business, and too much for ibeir small souls are not a little stirred sedate Senators up. It is a matter of small concern to and more imt tbem that thousands of convict3 die in lower bouse bi the stockades from neglect or ill-treat- Will he not, meut. This is a side of the question cumstances, foi that never has nor never would cccur (?) and go alon to them. The convicts are "leased" is our predicti and turned over to the tender mercies pire Slate ha; I of a brutal guard, while the lessees being a pioneei / offices in the State? S Senator Yon mans and His Critics. ized, had \ low universities, etc. j Therc seems t~J"e a disp0sitiou in a?cient in the profits of mm- ; certilill qilarter3 to criticise with some which oarre, oo, in the teeth of the severity the conduct of Senator You- ?Iowt ition of the nineteenth j mans ja the last Legislature. Senator t!\at WC1.C 1 effort of (jov. Gordon , youmans is a farmer and his chief ^ e dou t se< " ' J ' - - should have f abuses is humane ana 0ffeuse scems t0 }mve bcen th;lt ne ae. leserves the unqualified ; clined tQ adopt ^ max$m Q{ Tm, of shackles t 3 good people through-: ism and follovv in ?he train of of New. Is _ "Moses" Tillman and his noisy satel- ^ia:s ^110^rn c >ast week the Traders' j lites, the self-constituted leaders of -^iackles. ^ brers' Record reports i agricultural classes. He refused to bou,,d ,icr ion of the following'j?iu the little knot of would-be re- mau^al ,alj ; in the South: Nash- : formers who, during the last session chaincal CI d Heat Company, $2,- [of the Legislature, met every night in diversified li ; Car Company at An-j the dining-room of the Columbia ai*e the tlie t na, ?1,000,000 capital;! Hotel to decide how they should vote people, this re Car Company, $200,- on the measures that were to come up ral out*row Consolidated Caal and f for consideration on the next day. tluced 1 ? - - --- .1.. o scales upon Chattanooga, $2,500,- He preferred to go nuu me ocuato litedStates Crude Petro- and after a full, fair and exhaustive kindness to s Company, Baltimore, discussion to cast his vote as the public a weU-snsl )ital; stained-glass fac- good seemed to require. Intellectually schoo,s- ^ ooga, $250,000 capital; superior to the methods of certain of; broken a,'cl aces?one at Rome, Ga., j his associates, he was also morally ; same daunt i, Ala., two at Carters-1 above the practices of a demagogue. ! Pulsively to 1 one at Gadsden, Ala.; j He could not support measures that he tJon inte works, Chattanooga; 'believed to be foliy, or accept the so daringly mill, Atlanta; Pawnee leadership of men whose competency '')as set itsel >any, Ashland, La., $1,- he had serious grounds for question- rehabilitate 1; Consolidated Mining iug- the develop imphis; $1,000,000 capi- Senator Youmaus is not the only tics, mental ctory, Lexington, Ky., "Jan in the State who could not accept' Theoric r? - I the late leadership that made such des-! .ai; x>us5ciuci issemer, Ala., $500,000 psrete efforts to force itself upon the; lill supply factory, Chat- people of the State. There arc mauy .the P^enom ,000 capital. Among the men in the State who turned away in ^rst an(* 01 '?'.v.nt;o.iS are four flour disgust only to reflect that the phenome-! are Ci I ,lct?ry at Chattanooga. I non * o ? as ? t,,r0 ?er couijiuuim turec in aecaaence of the present composition : which i* cc :> in Tennessee, one in ?f political iorces. i internal he* > in Florida, three in The parties now who are inclined to ! Peratare tf in Louisiana, aud four criticise the Senator would do well to i move<* by > four railroad compa- weigh in the balances the men and the ! thl'?wn ot North Carolina, one in [ measures which he rejected and see if j fissures. 1 one from Chattanooga they are not "wanting." There is no ' matter i Lookout Mountain. use for auy more dogmatism, or as- j atin? vacni" k.7ir T . , suming the fact at issue. When we 1 8n(* which ; iu and* his6crewatf t0 question the opponents of j of ths eartt ty, we will publish his Tillmanism let us question Tillrnanism \ Producing j sek, so that our readers, itself and its indefensible methods. j tending th farmer readers, may see ^ * ; Cannes and imple Of the spirit pre- The .Dependent Pension Bill. j Ieer at 1 last Senate regarding the and then ro the interest of agricul- The pension question rises higher in j a m0vemc! [sviUe Herald. importance just now than any other ; throughout Dthing so intolerant as which claims the attention of good i principally The right to follow the men of all parties. It threatens to j The othei rn opinions is denied to deplete the national treasury, and pro-; en011 js the lans presumably because tectionists, claim agents and dema- J jno. 0f the ; and he is held up to gogues are all in for it. The President' earth cools because he had the is sustained by the press in his veto of o-oes on ai neer at "Capt. Tillman the pauper bill with a unanimity that tinues mou This is where the is quite remarkable. The following arc clet>ress< It is the "sneers" that from the World is of a pith and vigor thc earth ( don't relish, and the that is seldom excelled: j formed h prevailed in the last The action of the House committee wrinkles of dared to "sneer" is the in voting unanimously in favor of . Hnn:d< Woii oc passing the dependent pension bill .o be crushed. Well, as oyer -h(j President>s vet0> and the course, the < said about the war, let attempt to bring the pressure of the theory, are L*be other neonle can o~o snl.iier inflnenep. lo bear unon f!on ng business too. gress in behalf of the measure, show lllu^ >1V1C4 ?ood manv things about that the victory is not yet won. Be- 1,1 aes?la"Oi at some people wil' sneer lween, th,e c5aim age.nts hun?ry for over the sh " People wiK sneer feeSj the demagogues intent upon get- been knowi; aerswill smile at. "We ting votes, and the beneficiaries of war t|ie heart of racy and all the rest are taxes interested in scattefing the sur- f , . . .. example, is one of the plus, a determined effort will be made visitatu his political faith; and to override th? veto, ; <innngthe J , It is the duty of all patriotic and 1/03 200,00 ho resides down below pru(Jent citizens, without respect to Yeddo Jar lewhere, a Mr. Tindall, party, to sustain the President in his , * s pains to point out that courageous stand against this reckless weie klllet' It" is not a war of the and radically wrong legislation. The Pekiru Da ,. , A. reasons which he gives whv the bill 2o,000 weri i the classes. When the stiould not become a law are unan- peru ^ a corporal's guard talks swerable. They can beoverri?W o?Jy . pi^w-h mile "audibly." by the brute force of numbers acting ? m m without regard to principle or to the at Charlesto ^ardinw the Liberal re- rights of the people. The bill puts a j the extent o nained'unchanged since Premium upon pauperism and offers a i the souther ningham in Jufv. What bountv to Iraud. it eliminate, patn-j sine? has confirmed the otlsm frora the motives that lead men j ^ expressed. I attribute to defend their country, and leaves i iuc ? he Liberal partv to the *^e nation in the future at :he mercy have no 1; its leader, and to the of mercenaries. And it would add ?nmi<r?, ia L-i >le abandonment by the from $25,000,000 to $50,000,000 a year , irty of its position and *? a pension list that already cxcseds clnsi0n that : leader's invitation or by $15,000,000 the entire cost of the have perisl 3ey talked and voted on Government before the war. Porto Maur understood, accepting If there are old soldiers in danger mune? not < >pnlar minister. I dare ?f Vec0IT"no papers let us build more . , the interests of the Irish nat">nal homes?all that are necessary NVDlcn "as conspiracy bent on de- ?a?d take care of them tenderly dur- were severs nd-owners of the coun- their decling years. We will sus- Three hnn ep toward severing Ire- taiu tije most liberal provisions of this churcb whc igland, a conspiracy to natnrc- But let us not pauperize the flnf1 . ;h of Ireland's present Pension list by offering inducements to T uuanyi demoralization is due. the survivors of the war to swear fortunate vi< soci3ted very intimately that they are unable to earn that in- lage of 800 jars with this popular definite quantity?"a support. Let house cruinl ave spoken for Ireland QS u0\ degrade the crippled veterans, ]pa<5t ... s. I have implored sue- wounded in battling bravely for their . *UI,e-lD1 ers to do the utmost <*>nntry, by placing above them on the ished. 1J e-? roll of honor recipients of "outdoor The terroj iu uy iui iicjamu ixiy i* * m * [relandisnow as warm re|it ^ . , . 4. . inspired mi tr. I believe the major- The President s veto was the sturdi- has been rci ed and thoughtful Irish- c.st r'?bt ** '.tat !ie. has performed w . nrntectinn and insticp since his induction into office. He IS e * 1 Parliament to the rule sustained by the press and bv public common hs under an Irish ]Parlia~ opinion. He should be sustained uj1 them and ai bright. Congress. ment they ft 'lishmen perhaps Mr. dieating the - , f. . _ . Was Slavery a Curse ? ? . , : first?certainly the first One misf ation to advocate the In a late issue, the Nashville (Teuu.) quakes are nd. He spoke fur the Lumberman styles the title, "New by repeated le condemned the mis- South," a misnomer, insisting that destructive f Ireland, when other there is no reason for applying that to alarm th men did not dare to term to the present conditions exist- damage for s unpopular theme. He ing at the South any more than for ward. Th ible and life-long advo- saying new North or new West; and : afflicted reg ghts. In the day of the our contemporary is not alone, but he J be imagine nation, at a time when refers to other journals as coinciding ! interests w i was still a Tory, in with him. It is a red flag that arouses ! demoralize bis friend Richard Cab- his loyal spirit, for clearly the epithet \ that a long pioned the cause of the marks to him an invidious distinction. they recove He is a statesman who He sets in it recreancy, humiliating their occup; for the popular side, concession to "patronizing Northern ! erefore, upon Mr. Glad- friends," a servile, truckling spirit, in : Good j)0ne b for an Irish Parliament short. He dubs those who use it' The inxmei i upon. He has never "thoughtless parrots who have no ?colora<> to dodge an issue or notion of the meaning of the term." charity Hos-p ability, however great. He scouts the idea of the war having * . " ? . j done so much for us. We had already rived^roin^l ien in Politico. , * , f . liUUt 1 started upon the industrial movement out its good woman suffi-age would now so strident in the land; the war apply^to M? idvancing. A law has checked it; if it had not been for the La. Kansas giving women war we would have been far ahead of i ~~ unicipal elections. The what we are now. That is, men and ^ a f ( State of New York, by women would have bent themselves to have recently ed majority of 20 to 9, work without the spur of necessity, ?h.e astoundin ... , , . f , . ~ , fnends who h similar measure. The ease and luxury having had no effect physicians a; alleries at the time that in enervating character or engendering nope?sufferii taken swarmed with a distaste for the drudgery of business by^D^Kinp is submitted by the affairs. The big plantation would sumption, the ipers in mitigation of have been divided into smaller farms, cou^hs^Coh he promise is made that as now, and wealth distributed. Rail- Trial bottle Representatives of that roads, that carry light and freedom ketchin s Dn i the peace and dignity aud aspiration wherever they go,would its Fin wealth by burying the have netted the land, and the 6uuth ^ :>e of resurrection. But with its contented slaves, would have hava ? ettv women should be I marched normally on in the career of regular practi again? If this proved material prosperity. i Hereof i? 1 the sober judgment of I Verily, our thoughtful contemporary i Westmorela > how can the younger has thought?but we lose our bearings ^ J * t 1 ITT pCiltllCc V> ltl )ulsive member of the with him. We thought the bitter ex- prescribed it 2 expected to stand it? perience of the war had opened all t^ted under such trying cir- eyes to the fact that the fetish whichfeve'r wjtb n :get the common good we worshipped, deeming it the source : or stimulant, ig with the tide? Such J of our prosperity, had fatally sapped j satisfactory.h on auyhow. The Em- the foundations; that African slavery! The above 5 always been fond of and progress were incompatible; and deniabl^evid in legislation. that the South had been revolution- Calisaya Tonj )een violently wrenched THB drink question in* England. ! habits of life and thought A Review Of Convivial Customs in Early i ?n ?<? _ Times, and legislative Restrictions on $ 1 all hopes Of prosperous : tlje Sale of Alcoholic Beverages. 9 WMfMH| habits of life and thought ! An English exchange remarks that the awetc^ >und up with thissvstem : drink question has been adifficult prob- CAPTTVT , 4 ! lem from the dawn of English history to ? why our contemporary | ^ pres6nt day. j his back up at implication The earlier pages ol our annals record ,A ' : ; lpon the Old in I his title j ihat the Britons were to their j, . , _ meals, which consisted chiefly of milk : e*ntf r c, it not a fact that the bouth i venison. Their ordinary beverage 'arjt control )ff not imaginarv, but real ! "was water. They occasionally indulged i tjie mj \ r I In a fermented drink made from barley, j esty,fairnex*am c , toney or appies, ana a iree use 01 it, i partu*. and wc was Lbe prejudice against i never failed to make them ill-natured use tlu* certijlca* or, the contempt for me- i and ready to quarrel. signatures atUici ' . _ n 4. During the Eoman rule in this country _ iiployments, lor all the -^ine and other intoxicating drinks were andicrafts and trades which ' freely consumed. The bush, which was rffSv >asis of a reallv prosperous i f?r ^es the sig^ af? inn' [9 traced t0 i ( - , the Romans, and to them also we owe ' */ ^ antipathy being the rat u- the national custom of toasting or health : th of the caste systea in- ! drinking. ! Tt.or, rcprPTOAt! The Saxon peri<^ wM one in which in- | ^ 0 " , .. "j temperance prevauea to a lea-nui citeuu i her eves, too, which cau;ed j it is stated on reliable authority that | the immense advantage of even the clergy spent days and nights in j We the underi . , - I drunkenness and debauchery. will pay all PrU Alined s\stem of pullic King Edgar must be credited with do- 1 State Lotteries The shackles have been ing a noble work in the reformation of onj-r counters. the scales have fallen. The ^is countrymen from the baneful effects .... . of strong drink. It is remarked by the Pre? less spirit that sprangim- ]jev> pr. French that the King nearly j. arms at the first intma- anticipated by a thousand years the leg- ! rfcrence and asserted tself p , in the unequal coitest, Dunstan, says Strutt, "he put down j *-res.r f heroically not onlv t? the 1 many ale houses, suffering only one to j .nprecedi -rn nf thf> r-nnnfrr "hiT tn ' exist in a village or small town; and he u ovekhal: )n ot tlte conntrv, Da to, aig0 ;arther ordained that pins or nails ment of its utmost cajaci- j shouid be fastened into drinking cups Louisiana St and material. ?JFeic Scuth ' or horas at stated distances, so that , ? whoever should" drink beyond these Incorporated ;s About Earthauakei marks atone draught should be liable to Legislature for severe punishment." i purposes?with ! two theories in regad to Archbishop Dunstan was equally zeal- ^jcA?fS; ? ous in checkmg intemperance in the s ,, )0U a Ult - ? - r ,?i Bv an overw ienon 01 earcnquaKes. rue j churcb. we maKe a iew extracts as ioi- [ frai;ch;,c w i.-> u ,ost prevailing one | fg luscd bv the percolation of j. church. I '^lU orda Lot ugh the crust of the ea*th, "Let men be very temperate at church ! horsed by tht pa mverled into ste... bj'he fakes and pray earnestly and suffer ! ' R , . , , there no ormklng or uncleanliness. | ^ " it and raised to sucu a btn- ? Let priests beware of drunkenness j pl"cc ^lonthij lat rocks are melted ind and be diligent in warning and correct- ! Drawings reg its action, and at tines ^'a.e Bcop nor in it through volcanoes or any wise act the gleeman." L driving clas 'his results in displacements Tbe Danes to a great excess, j music, new ot i 1 J t i.1. ^ i.! - i-U 1.2_^ . J I f f 1 oo^ OAO.-* ... ana uuruig me urno tueir Jhoiige uuuuuieu : " iooi-<.w?? ilong the inner crust, ere- the throne of England drunkenness cast j CAPITAL ims which must be suppled a blight over the land. ^"NOTICE are supplied by the sinkng The Xormm conquest brought about LAliS* 0XLY. V . J ? many important changes in social life. Tenth' Si. is surface in some pla?es, Sobriety was not the least of the virtues l a. wavelike movements*- of the Normans. , , irono-h oreat areas At Coming down to Tudor times, we find T ?k>xd pi b_ f,reat aieas. At ^ almost similar statute passed to the Autibes the sea fell tfcree stringent regulations of Edgar. In the ^ l vrge rn moment of the chief sh>ck last year of the reign of Edward VI it | ;V1|GE pi, ?se six feet which indicaed Y3* ena,cted "non-e i rizes oi ?se s>ix ieet, wnicn inuicaea tavern for retaihng wines unltss li- (j0 at altogether of nine f?et censed; and that only in cities, towns 1Go do that portion of the eaith corporate, burgs, post towns or market 2uo do ~ . , , towns or in the towns of Gravesend, 500 v-i0 affected by the shock. Sittingbourne, Tuxford and Bagshot, on 1^00 do * theory is that the pbenoro- the forfeiture of ten pounds. And there ' aitiio i.. .1 , , shall be only taverns for retailing wine ; . result of the general cool- ^ every c^y or town except London, -^-PProxi t ftOrth'c Clii*f0A0 Ac + tnnvr hnva f a*4t* fo varno In Vnrlr ' lvv (10 vwl ? ?o tu?. inJULKjU. ixiajr uavo ivifj > aa* av*m, _ . 1 ; a process of contraction eight taverns; in Norwich, four; in West- u0 ?? ... . . . minster, three; in Bristol, six; in Lin- :01-0-pm-,?o ori id as this shrinkage con- coln> three; ? Hull, four; in Shrews- 2:1' r , ntains are formed, vallevs bury, three; in Gloucester, four; in i 0niy to the'ort Jd and the tODO?ranhv of! Westchester (Chester), Tour; in Here- Orleans. m auu me lopu^iapny oi, for(J three. jn Southamptoni threo; in . For further iar( changed. Some idea ran) j Canterbury, four; in Ipswich, three; in | ^11 address, i of this change by the Wim-l^ster, three; in Oxford, three; in i ^irieSr^cur the rind of an apple after CamUri ge' four; 111 Colchcster> three' i pense) addressed > have evanoratod Of and in Newcastle-on-Tyne, four." > nave e\apoiattd. ^ ut it is chronicled that this legislation orM.A.DAiPf changes, according to either was the means of reducing the consump- Wa?h j at times gradual and at tIon ?' intoxicating drink. r it. Thev sometimes result Make r. 0, g tidal waves which sweep A Press-Reformer. and address ] ores of the sea and have! Frankford has a woman who puts Dr. neworle.' i to convey large ships into ] ""7 Walker completely in the shade, ? rnu j , writes a Philadelphia correspondent. RpnVTFTVTP citv. The most dread-j jfot satisfied with bloomers, she has aa(jEarly ^.b0a )ns of the kiud occurred i adopted the male costumo in its entirety, I is a guarantee oi eighteenth century. In ! from the regulation trousers to the most rity, that me chi 0 persons were killed at m^scuJIjJ,e1?of S01"bi;ei'<;S- She ^the draw a Mfii j t-o. wife of T. K. J- Elliott. Mrs. Jb:I;ott to guarantee Prlz )an, and in 1/31 100,000 | jeaned azainst the door-post yesterday other t by the earthquake at afternoon aud enviously contemplated the unwar>\" ring the present century the red brick sidewalk across the way. s fhn n cuadon ?T?a ""w" the chin. Her sleever were roneu up 10 ji ft If IT ere. There were 96 killed the elbow, displaying a rather nicelyn, and we shall not know turned, but sinewy, forearm. A white f the fatality in Italy and imPrcssio" of J 7 Struggling to overcome tnc effect of the ? n portions of France for masculine trousers. She looked between Many of the villages 35 and 40 years old, and her jet-black isitation was most serious hair was cut short like a man's. Her x APPEAL1] slegraph connection, bnt ^ was tall and slight but not thin, 1 sentiment! e r ' and from a pleasant, intellectual face my tailor-made iowii to warrant the con- shone a pair of luminous black eves, It's to your c 1 .1 ,i j?i earners "bv it several IUUU&BI1U pei'bUlAfc [ uecpiy act ux mv nc.m, ii.-n, ^iw.u?- ^ ? led. In the district of nent check bones 5?"beyond ft izio, composed of 106 com- -No, lani not Mr. Elliott, but Ins cloth to know i*.v, w fvct wu wife, she said, with a stn:le that re- it. Only one < Dne escaped. At Bajardo, vealed a row of line white teeth, and work knows ro 1,500 inhabitants, there then led the way into the ho-.isn. clothing is care: il hundred persons killed. tirst Put th? trousers twelve j j ,?a,.a ,-,,nr, . years ago, continued Mrs. hlhott. "I jour shoi..<t: r>. dred were killed in a n0^re lo inrtiiuie ? dn? n^rm " >se wall swayed to am. fro among women, nor have I induced yOU plainly whs soilapsed, crushing the un- others to imitate me. I wear men's 'feel safe in trad ctims. At Bussana a vil- clothes because they are the most com- Can you fare , ,, . ' fortable. It was a loner time before I Could I do it if inhabitants, near.;* "very ventured inlo the strcct in I1I:vic attire, ?fnufa bled to the grouud and at but after becoming accustomed to it in ^hg in^rk ird of the population per- the house I overcame my nervousness. your money jf , 0, yes, I was laughed at and hootcd.but beautiful stock l-which these scenes have that did not discourage e. I have sells at. wmcn t ese see es nave teen arrestetj njne 01. ten times, but ast have been dreadfnl. It. ?i,t7?t-c*?ii^wi tn rm T for>l TO Tit IVLLVjr V\4 4A4W WW -~ -WW that I have a pcrfeet right to dress this here earthquakes are most way- Jt is not a ridiculous costume like ?? ive the greatest dread of Dr. Mary Walk.r's, and nobmlyco.ik from ?our yc1aK . ? . , . tell that I was a woman if thuv did not wm <m at a nrie re panic-stricken the mo- scrutinize my face. first you will ha :el the least movement in- "Men have stopped in the street and buying them. aDDroach of one made bets on mv sex. Was I ever ask- here, but prefe hi-tnno ic tiiot mi,?n ?,n, ed to decide a wager? Oft?n. Whv, I ?1nes?" s.u s an ortune is that when earth- , , A ? ... - the best oppor violent thev are followed ^a^ had men run after mo m the s.ice season to securc violent iney aie ionowea and after confess:ng to having made a \o such barman subsequent shocks, not so bet they would request me to tell them before. These as the first but still enough whether I was a man or woman. No, cut in the lates ? i j mv husband docs not object to mv dross- until the last n people aud cause much * ^jg -way. We came from New y?ur choice. I weeks and months after- York. My husband is a southerner, and , these suits v e alarm throughout the I was born in Bangor. Mc. We lived and DEAN8 Sui ion of Italy mav therefore Boston fifteen years, where during a hoys' suits. . , .* , . part of that time we published the volct. I he loss to business can0y a ]?bor paper. My husband was ill be immeose, and the editor and I ran the business depart- you wjn flu ion of the people so great ment. We took the Volcano to New YEOMAN and time must elapse before York, but, although it was bright and anwn-the nove ... 4-^ sensational, we had to suspend. The j ceived .a line of :i ^ ,ouuik/tcu11j .v *Volcano lived seven ypnrs, anil might be w7?FJL, r itions.? i\T. Y. Star. in existence vet had fiiv husband been endowed with some of my energy. ? ? . "Then we went id to the cologne busi- This line of * r y i ?Sj\ ' ^" i" ness *n a sma^ way, and afterward appreciated, j S cametoFrankford. We buy the essen- fine cents'shoe: ion re?aruiess ot luce, reh- , extracts and mike onr own ^ ^ukenphast a r sex?by the time-honored ?ai ous anu extiacts ana make our own f : ,, ,, ity of New Orleans, La,, u a cologne, ?hUe my husband sells it by stock (JIotl i the history of modern times, the bottle. We might have got along ^oods etc. b ;d largely by the revenue de- better had I been able to give more at- where! You w ,he LouisianaiState Lottery, tention to business; but then I have six trading here. I MSSS&S: little children, and they need a gr,at A. Dauphin, New Orleans, in frocks todlIlell jn> Jol. lowed by a prl of five years. Both were mmmet ireatly Excited. nice, cieau-iuujuug uunuieu, uuu uwu; uu I |M 1H \ I )f the citizens of Winnsboro dressed. t # ifXilXlUi. become greatly excited over 4'Do you intend to make this little g facts, that several of their one wear trousers?" Mrs. Elliott was ad been pronounced by their asked. 3 incurable and beyond all ??Not unless she wants to," was the ig with that dreaded monster repiT. "She lisps that she's going to -? r j? I's New Dferovery for?Con- 'wear desses when I det's big, and not MRS. E. : onlv remedy that does posi- P2-11^ h*e niamma, ana she may 11 throat and lun" diseases, nave her own way, although the time Is, Asthma and Bronchitis, may come when she will realize that free at McMaster, Brice & trousers arc more comfortable than * * tt ig btorc, large bottles $1.00. * dresses. Women are foolish for dress ing the way they do." e Qualities Admitted. ? i m seen belew Westmoreland Col. Nicholas Smith, the great Ameriscured an admission from a can professional beauty, is a native of nnvsif.ian -whioh nnta * r., xr,. " ? ~ sneiuv WUUH. uuu ?? *vo win ?/ t a (< # ' |(' w > on their celebrated Tome, xiie liiuisvilte Ast says that in his ^AKbM. !> nd Bros., Druggists, Green- youthful years it was his daily habit to FARE BEST illow me to offer you my ex- stand before his imrror and exclaim: "I 1 Calisaya Tonic. I We thank thee, 0 God, for this magnificent- GOOD CC in a great many cases of ly handsome face." ty with marked success. In I a case of typhus malarial " TO T ?Ittaes%rS?ni?SueS FBESH GARDEN SEEDS. T HAVE made amis and has been perfectly AXD OMO?f SETS, the &S is from a physician of exten- . fr?m Orl ie and reputation, and is un- Just received. patronage issolii ence of the excellence of ful'y received, ic. MciiASTER, BKICE & KETCH1N. Feblxlm I gyijg | Established 184^ FKIZE, $150,000. ! ! certify that ice myertise tfor fill the Monthly and raicings of The Louisiana : 'inpany, and in person man- i JL i~l hi I the Drawings themselves, ] ne are conducted with, hon 1 in fjoud faith toward all authorize the Company to : ?j^-iytt n i tttth itt ws?sesff HEfS mil MM! PUBLISHED TRI-WEEKI AND WEEKLY. . Commissioners. signed Banks and Bankers , zes drawn in The Louisiana j. he Only paper published inhish vnsni hs> rtrPMrttAfl fit ? * " the County. J. H. OGLESB Y, i. Louisiana National Cank. ? . W. KILBBETH. Pre a. State National B&ak* TTT p vf Q . A. BALDWIN". iLKiYia. few Orleans National Bank. vT^T1.rTOi/.rrAv, - Tri-Weekly, - - $3.00 in advan< JNTED ATTRACTION! J ' f a million distkibtted. "VVeekly, 1.50 " " ate Lottery Company, j Subscribe for your Coun in 1868 for 25 years by the ;t, . J n Educational and Charitable | Paper. It gives you all tJ ;i capital of ^1,000,000 to infot*rYiaf jrtn pon^ernino" affil fund Of over $350,000 has; iniormauon concerning <Ui*i *d. I in which you have an intere helming popular vote its: , mi i. i. mile a part of the present j flOu yOU Will DC Spt tO CO on adopted December 2nd, ^ WQrth upon ten/ ecer voted on and en- \ ople of any State. { SAMPLE COPY SENT ON A scales or postpones. . jle Number Drawings take rUiualiUii. r, and the Sexni-Annual ularly every six months ;mber). I> OPPORTUNITY TO ri'XK THIRD GltAND >S C, IN the: academy op ILEAIS'6. TUESDAY, MARCH Monthly Drawing JOB DEPARTMENT, Halves, $5. Fifths, 52. .1ST OF PRIZES. jrizk of si;>o,ooo. .$150,000 Having increased the for iizeof 50,000.. 50,000 T 1 T>. azEOF 2o,ooo.. 20,000 of our Job Department, \ X 'S;SSS:: 3$ are now prepared to execu ? 1,000.. 20,000 all kinds of job work neatl 500.. 25,000 ,, * . 300.. ;{o,ooo upon the shortest notice, ai So;; SiSS at the lowest possible figui so., so'ooo We will gladly furnish pric XIMATION PKIZES. list on application, and gua n Prizes of ?300.. $.30,000 ,rr ~ . do 2oo.. 2o,uoo antee that you will nnd tl loo.. 10,000 same as i0Wj if not lower, th< lounting to 5535,000 any other establishment of tl rates to clubs should be nude ; i j ,i o, , o i ice o* tue company la xew j kind in tne otate. bena )r: nation write clearly, giving i VOUr Orders. POSTAL NOTES, Express jJ NewYoMc Exchange in ordi- ! closins out m injjton, D. C. , Money Orders payable Registered Letters to . UNS NATIUNAL cAMt, New Orleans, La. > T7 -p Thar the presence of >x^ix Generals Beauregard LADIES' G07MISBI mces are all equal, and that mmmmmmnw ww v bly divine what numbers will .1 parties therefore advertising :e3 in this Lottery, or holding impossible Inducements. are ily aim to deceive and defraud Feb) aiis I] It? On and after thii date v will offer our entire stock ro the strongest Ladies New Markets, Ru fou know in asking to try , suits and ray low prices, sian Circulars, bhort W rap iwn interest. You will be in the satisfaction of long T-plrpfc secyrity of my guarantee. cu?, le ability of an expert in what is in it by looking at >f long experience in tha ,, rw^ w to ferrit out whether tho SL ^&?? . H. fully made. You may be a )t. 1 take both risks from t bargain l know?to make You will find an elegant L quality and the work; tell . * it sort it is, and make you r +1, i . iing here. these goods at as well as that anywhere? I did not have confidence ;cturers that make these ments? You shoot wide of miss getting the best for UZUH&7& PI J!T2v93? rou buy without seeing my of clothing, and what it E MOTHERS. ;t this opportunity. I have tntity of knee pants suits to eleven years, and they e that will astonish you: at ,ve hard work to keep from I will not name the price Wt B.V now offering bit r you should call and see d Jearn the price. This is i- __ tunity you will have this *^1 lines. ; a bargain for a mere trifle. us ever offered in this city suits are well made and fi; lllfW.fl D| |\T|)'P t style. Now, don't wait ' 0, K!i lA&ll I loment and expect to get f you do you will miss it, rill go with a rush. When p?n J i to see the degremont ^all and examine our stoc its, the latest novelties' in of BLANKETS. Thry w HATS. .1 Xl.rt Tim IU uit: latent z>Ljica. XJJC theDUNLAP BLOCK are lties in this line. Jubt resilk hats?Broadway style. tor the celebrated Danlap CLOSED OUT, SHOES. j.kxIs must be seen to be ;''ea,Vfounnfh^.'eThJ and it will pay to call an nd Broadway lasts are tbe and see this magnificent price them. ling, Gents' Furnishing r ill saveVirae^and money by I M'MISTEK. BRIGS ft IETCHII iespectfullr, * M. L. KINARD, PASMTR3, COLUMBIA, S. C. M* 11 5 tORO HOTEL, TAKE notice J. Boswell, I AM ready to renew subscriptions to tl "oOUTHERN CULTIVATOR AN Proprietress. DIXIE FARMER," or take new su scriptions. ENDERSON You will soon need COTTON SEE PLANTERS and CULTIVATORS. , , hare them for you. Also, SMOOTHIN Manager. harrows and sulky ploughs. , Janl5fx6w JAMES PAGAN. AMPLE BOOMS. DISSOLUTION NOTICE. THE undersigned having dissolved t 7 mutual agreement the partnershi heretofore existing under the firm name < IMFOBTABLE ROOMS. J?'Hf" JE5SriN^&K?9*+hereby giTe a tice to parties indebted t* said firm th< they can settle without cost such indebte* HE PUBLIC. ^aLa5Jjim?( VVWUCI IICAb. AlbCL UiatUcilC bUCli UUWC arrangements to furnish accounts and other evidences of indebte* h Sugar, Mola>ses, etc., at ness will be put into the hands of aa a ;ct prices, shipped direct torney for collection. eans. A share of your R. n. JENNINGS, sited. Small orders thank- C. E. LEITNER. J. E. BLAIR, January 6,1887. Strother, S. C.? Jan25tx6n? | THE WINNSBOKOBli^^^S^H H. A. GALLLABD, | ATTOllNEY-AT-LAW, WINNSBOEO, S. C. I Office iu building of WinnsboroNational Bank. 1 A. S. DOUGLASS, -^J ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, No. 6 Law Range, a 1WINNSBOBO, S. C. Jd Practices in tlie State*and United States flj Courts. . OSMUND W. BUCHA2SAN, JH ATTORNET-AT-LAW, y No. 7 Law Range, ^9 WINNSBORO, S. C. fl Practices in all United States and State jrf?nt!nn trt mrooration and insurance law. in ? w. l. Mcdonald, s attorney and counsellor at law. WINNSBORO, S. C. Office up stairs in The News and Hebald building. * J H. n. Obeab. W. C. Rion. 2e. obear & riox, attorneys and counsellors at law, Nos. 7 and 9 East Washington St, ^ WIXXSBOItO, s. c. ie ; Offices same as occupied by the late CoL James H Rion. 4 s^> J E. McDonald, C. A. Douglas a y n- Solicitor Sixth Circuit j Mcdonald & dofglass, attorneys and counsellors at law, Nos. 3 and 4 Law Range, WINNSBORO, S. C. Practices in all the State and United States Courts. v j e. b. ragsdale. g. w. ragsdale. ^ RAGSDALE & RAGSDALE, | attorneys and counsellors at law, d No. 2 Law Range, ' J WINNSBORO, S. C. CS JAS. GLENN McCANTS, V ve. attorney-at-la w, te >"o. 1 LAW RANGE, WINNSBORO, S. C.; id ^"Practices in the State and United j States Conrts. * E Iff ARRIVALS, in ie m TIIURBER'S 34 and 41 COFFEES, Sugars, different'brands, jp Rice, different grades, J Hecker's Oatmeal and Farina, Decker's Fine Flour and Buckwheat, ^ Prunes, Raisins aud Currants, Canned Goods ofjevery kind,' Mackerel and Codfish, v J jjj New Orleans Syrups, ileal, Baeor and Lard. 4 ' i JUST RECEIVED. NEW CROP GARDEN SEEDS, with jM many other goods, all of which will be sold at the lowest prices for cash only at S. S. WOLFE'S. V ENTERPRISE of : MEAT CHOPPERS 1 For Chopping Sausage Meat, Mince Meat, Hamburg Steak, Beef Tea, Hash, Hogshead Cheese, Tripe, Codfish, Chicken Salad, pulverizing Crackers; mashing Potatoes etc. Ot Enterprise Coffee Mills, Wood Pulp Water Pails, warranted not to swell or shrink, and will not taint water or milk. Victor Flour Seives, Clothes Hampers, V Fire Dogs, Tongs and Shovels, and many other novelties for the convenience of M housekeeping.. H STOVES >i Cheap and good Stoves. Repairs for stoves ou hand or obtained at short notice. Fire Backs, $1.00 to $L25; Grates, $1.00 to $1.25, etc. , Another lot of Corn Poppers. r A 3-strinjj Velvet Hurl Broom for 23c. Spokes, Rims, Ilubs, Polos, Shafts, Neck Yokes, Etc, ' J. H CUMMIN GS. i 8. -SALE k AND FEED STABLES. 4 re 1 ^ We have on hand a lot ot good work Horses and a few zi good, smooth young Mares. Also, a lot of well-broke Farm Mules, all of which we offer to the public at prices ! fttof tTTlll | ^ uiai Hiu SUIT THE TIMES. ll Ca]l and see us before buying, ^ and see if we are not pricing b- them right. ? A. WIIXIFORD * SON, ^ D WINNSB0B0, S. C. I C, BART & CO.. Importers and Wholesale Dealers in % JE" R. *J K T, ^ 1 M m o- UHftKWSS'l'UJt, S. W., it ** Are receiving by steamer and rail from the )r North and West full supplies each week of ? CHOICE APPLES, PEARS, LEMONS, POTATOES, CABBAGES, ONIONS, NUTS OF ALL KINDS, Etc., Etc, r1 0" OrdersTsolicited and promptly fi lied / Norl7x6m 1