The Fairfield news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1881-1900, September 09, 1891, Image 1

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^ i VOL. XLVI. WINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1891. NO. 4. I She co"hncribj)f Mo ADMITTANCE TO GCD'5 BOUNTY dVr acd deittn: bl:L he B UNLESS CHRIST GO WITH YOU. ^aVdaT U -Yc M 5he Fajiiiu-.* That iVsj Sore In All Lniid.s | 'Veil. IMS' Iri'itldS, tl J1 l-The CoM llloa Th?t IIcj.J.1- I STi:? ..v <>t hill. ll dv?cS IF1. ^ crop ?>! suii.-l ui>a SaorJil Go laio Kjc?pt with Itis ills hunger L> 111 " KretUren?Kcuj iaiiii a Type of Christ, it duuS ru'l. cult l:0t. i vfas wcli illustrated i liiuX'KLYX. xViiiT. -3'J. Ihe cable uomsdikti. -st v. reports of piea^er harvests in Europe, ored him?ill J every *1 l"*' aud 'Mm memory of the Taat crops of tj;e World could do. ! I iipeniu^ grain *hieh Dr. Talmage saw "m and apylci during V:? recent tour iu the west, have Suites. He roused ^^55je?ibiuvd U- tcrr fcis thoughts back U> !P,u,t>f?-r M* had no patriarchal time when all the world ^though" tnaajjK'opl a Gospel lesson". His text is Gen- "Jmnlctelv'^aSliru ' xhii, 3, ' "i e shall not see my :ace, j,)WU am] writes: "I sot your brother be with \xu.' ,n:t oa a netv. jial li!a{ his sumtner, having crossed eijj-teeu ruj.. j; \ nevf wen ie Unite ! States-north, south, east coat fc^eVwus ri west?lha?e to report the mightiest ai> v. ho hud the choirs! s list tins country or any other lhal the itry eve~ reaped. If the gram nam- Us s,reiJi,lh aD(l i)r;c, 'i do not somehow wreck these har- blU.?rrli!}- ot- f^hion s wo art tib<-at Ur wi'er upon the vv}lu knew me. Incident scene or prosperity tiiHt Aacer-1 at.ct,,(. h ,.ar, j las ever witnessed, but *hlie this j'* ,1 . . IT Uitlh JL Hi i ?. |^n our own country. ou the oiht>r j pU^i0 an(: cul }.. ^ I _ Men* women and Aildren perscaded lh^t if 1 ^ ? rv * . vvuiu \i\/% am? *** 11 ^Kie'd nad ^rist mill and oveD; the asj.s a fr^nd to com<gifcl sweat and auxiety and struggle hlm aa(1 I'OJl'i, Ha '-Hi" ggl'j! Jacob the father has the last ^:g case> tilf. $101 y c B ironi the tlour bin, and he rinds neart>'- Torrigiano. Svervthinii is out, and he sajs to cll^e^> after moutu.s o: *m*. Boys, hook up the wagons .?jjja(iol;Da and the C'r? and start for Egypt and get us some- came in and ad: thing i to eat." body that looked'at Th? foot was there was a great corn- jjut one day. after ui crib i& Egypt. The people of Egypt admiration, heca : have been iurgely taxed in all ages, at I compensation the present, time paying between <0 ami >,e jla,j expected. !?o '< SO percent, of their products to th-e j c}ashed the exquisite government. No wonder in that time j The world is 1 they had a large corncrio. and it was j tjon> poor satis :aotiC lull. To that crib they came from the famine. amine in all regions round about?those who were J 3 ears, but for sI famished?f.ome paying for corn in 1 blessed >e Gf?d, there money; when the money was exhausted. cr;ijf q^e Lord built i L puying for the corn in sheep and cattle er ]alld. It is a lame I ( and hordes end camels, and when they (ll)ce measured it. an-: were exhausted, then selling Uieir o*n calculate it in our ph: I _ bodies and their lamilies into slavery. jjlteen hundred mile THE sorkonv of Jacob. hundred broad a lid lit I' The morning for starting out on tiie ^ ?s full. Jb'ooC crusade for bread has arrived. Jacob Qh!" gay the i eop.'gets his family up very early. But be n^t away aud i:ct t'i fore the elder sons start they say some- S(jum> Iiut stop a o thing that makes him tremble with emo- keeper of that con tion fro-u beau to foot and burst into j^is word, saying, *ktears. The tact was that these eldei jact, except your sons had once before been in Lg^pt to you ?? other wordiget com. and they had been ^ treated j thing as settiug from In somewlat roughly, the lord oi the corn- j ^oml'ort and eternal !ii< crib supplying thtm with corn, butsav- w;^h us our Divine i ing at ti.e cl^se oi the interview, "Now, jegU$ (jhrii^. Conv-nji f ou need no; come back here foi^any , r^ii helore we i'-. Lmore o.m unless j-oo bring something j d . , . , better t:iau money?even votir vounser . . . . brother Benjamin." " f n; . 7 Ah! .Benjamin?that very name was t-. 'e S&Sestve of all tenderness. The mo- , a C ,; K Ither hau cie< i at the birth of thai son?a ? . ,, ? . - ,... , , . . , , l tve snail lie invited it spirit (xmlug and another spirit gomir? tl, ,. , , ,, j .t - 14. . ,! oi the kiriix uud ai tl.o t?n3 the very thought of parting with llw. T ,71-1., ^.mjamin must have been a heartbreak. ^ ' Ti e keeper of this corncrib. ueverthe- Sr.? .M. less, sa-.Vto these older sons. "There ;:u" i r \ t>c touuo trial our Jici need of your coming here any , , ,, , , more for corn unless tou ormg Beoia- ? ,v , min, y,.ur father's "darling." .Now. ?>* *"*??* Jacob and his family very much needed J" " . , b.essti' tread, t ot what a struggle it would be i;0fr ?"' ?'?>' to give Tip this sou. The orientals are \ kM?:N '\u V very demonstrative in their grief, and I 1 "?nt.,uaKe lb" v hear the our wailing of the father as these -raok aha common sr older sons keep reiterating in his ears { ' the ann-'uncemens of the Ecyptain lord.! 'ia" "rc ^"u. ' "Ye?sh.:ll not see mr race aule*s vour ?a*\ "ave l:"fru *'iJ brother be with you ? "Why did'you How? * urouirhtlw im-; % tell^hem you had a brother?" said the ::;y r-} old :iiac, complaining and^chidiag them. je l': -Why, :ather," they said, "he asked us ,< all about our family, and we had no idea ct?" t,cCt'iVt he would wake any such demand udou ? *?? ui' . ^1 us ashc ha* made." k>~o use of ask- " U,;:cor3 ingme," said the lather, "I cannot, I f L'^u~" vllK , a v.'^cc"; / . wUi not. give up Benjamin." ;;Are ^u alone- ; 11 The :.ict was that the old man had lost * , ?,!ie )' * children; and when there has been he- fay3' iouahalluot; i, ; reavem.-nt in a household, and a child fac<\ uTn;ess taken, makes the other children in the Korc *esU3? * ' - . i . the point at which so i A household more precious, .^o iue aay .. -, n, r^i lor dfcyarture was adjourned and ad- *?;ted; .Tu<rr? !:s u0 1 ~ iourndc and adjourned. S.iil the hor- l . iro'u~'1 g ) Tors of the fauiiue iucreas-'<i, and louuer A,1 J11.11; 'u u:u lrc I 7 : moaned the cattle arid wider open crack- ' p *_eJ?ro ?'' I- ' v ed the/ earth and morepaiiid became the . , ticr,^UI: .:l . 1:: f ii chwki. until Jacob, in despair. crlol out **>?*,"?. M' [ 5 to his sous, '-Take Benjamin and be oil'." j ^erc. 0! Ul" , f v The oUdir sous tried to cheer up their I loa Ia; jer* . ^ latherl They said: "We have strong u^me =fl%eu U1;ut:" rearms 4"d a stout heart, aud no harm I ere.b} ^,s ^a-, ,oc' will colriw u> Benjamin. We'll see that j l?us il.au,^r' ^ he geu&b&ck again." "Farewell!" said j f,11?11":. - e thp vnt?nv niervt,) th?v father. :n a tone ! -ll,s ^4lV11* -Benjamin JC "'.cheer-:" "F-a-r-e- ^ j>y sine, com.^ * ? w-e-1-1':' said the old ruati, icr thai storehouses of heaven r: word Lus more quavers in it when pro- hi-iore'vour anxious >< I nounced by the aged thau bv the ycutiir. ',!! . *:? Well, the bread party?the bread em- ^llictiei me<l oui-. ,or*^ bassy?drives up it) front ot thecorncnb "?nae 10 t,l?t vlnici, ai _ of Egypt. These corucribs are liiied ^1SS ? . ca-iec hini Be: W& with * heat and barley aud corn in the '/?cc J I1"' Wk>. huik, f-.-r those who have traveled iu nim -^^v^m.n. T-h< ;* att! know that there is i\:[me ' %'a/e " * corrittfere corresponding with our la- f mraI:!:i' " V.K> dian ijnaize. lluzza! the journej is end- was ">011,, . S ed. 'a! e lord ot the corncrib, who islV'R n?l I \ also tla prime minister, comes down to j , iet!,'>rro*''} ol K.. - ! wnen sue aavc h..-r ch "??these.iarr.vaitraveiers,auu savs: "jjme t, , , iwiflife.WdaT. How is vour'fatherl* Is iw ??*?*?* ~ fthis lituiamin. the voungcr brother, 11?"^ th<=,s'-"' whose prt-S'.-uco 1 demanded'r" The ' paV ? "s! ?n}* ' ?ravelers ar?-introduced into the palace. ,'Pu-.!a :l L'ir . i ! They are vrcrn and Jjedusted of the way, 1, 'r.1Sl' c 1 and servants come in with a basin ol , uu ' L)u\ ! water :n one hand and a towel in the ^r'V 5ce other, and knwel down before these ; .. aDt, 01 y(:"' ; uewlv arrived travelers, washing oil' the ! ^ a? dustot the .Tay. The butchers andpoul- i \a"u ?:(lV Iufk;,J= :i; terers and caterers of the prime minis-: H ter prei'ire ?e repast. ?lr *T': V The ^uesrs are seated in small groups, ^ 1 5 olU ,10 bt ) two or Urn c at a table, the food on a ^f^V?n^al,u;r?1 tray; a!, the luxuries trom imperial gar-1 ^ {. "J ;j,s ' \ dens ami o:clmrds and a.quariums and j, f, ~ " - aviaries are brought there, and are till- f f\;i: =*- , neaven will :?e tailed ;; JOS cto-we Wd fatter. .Now is we vo?rsoui-mrt time tK to prime minuttr nhemua fh.ul K-. ,, grad# apjast Balaam, to show u. ..y , B;) Will bo 1*1 tan, now bat he has m b , . . h m hit iiancsr Oh, do! lh;s lord of , J Lthe corn crib is rented at his own tabic.! 15IK wokj.i? ^ ^ -Vi5'aad ije looks ovar to tat table or hid j My text :!#? su-^e-; gufcst^. aad he seuds a portion to ea-~u j so muuy people doiun oi then;, but sends a larger portion tj tort. You meet icnpc Beajriaiu, or. as the Bible ,quaiaUy puts are in atetl of sonic v it, ,,ir>e:.jamla's mess Wo? live tiaaes so There is ?uu!eth'u-r :n much a.-any of theirs.'"' 13e quick and their state, or in tiic i: send word back with the swiftest camel j tioa that demands syn ?i?- ? ! tlial : l!k; must of the. woriu's sympathy My friends, liii'iiiii sumptuous-1 amounts to absolutely nothing. People or tarnine. I ilti n?>t mean mut- j iio to the wrong crib or they go iu ihc spread, ami t dtdivrauca wrong way. When the plague was in 'NiRht ??> jounced l" us on It-.'iiu: a great mauy years a*o. there for a good \vl :;t see iut face un- wtr eighty men who chanted them- J0U+',IU' ,e" iih vuu.; " selves to deata with the litanies of Greg- choice betwee lis wrld is famine j orv the iireat?literally chanted them- "X prefer the' not yield a ?iu-j selves to death, and yet it did not stop 'Messiah.'"* 1 iU'Lioti. it is dy-1 i.ho plague. Ami all the music of this t\veen harmoi n. The lucL u.>it | world cannot halt the plague of the hu- (j]^ will vou i-i.rf ! m tn htuir:. start, for thfc ii lLc lil'v.* ?;l the 1 come to some one whose ailments you peristi an .!! the w^rlu h ,n- ate chronic, and I say, *'Iu heaven 30U Cauaanitisli f ilsi; for iJial will sever be sick." That dues not lov face exc< lo v.iis applauded i^ive you much comfort. What you }?11i.lt d iu the I'aiu-d I *ant is a soothiuu power for jour pres- IF it D( up nati )Ji iuio I r.ut distress. L>?t children, have 30U? e qual. And >et, i I come to \ou anil tell you that iu ten j There u > ? >,? supposed him eu-j years perhaps you will meet those loved ! t this world was ! ones before the throne of God. ]5ut I his sou!, he s-ls j iherc is but little condolence iu chat.; To the Edit never :u my liie 1 One day is a year without them, ienjiier: There it ilid not rai:? >?ud I years is a small eternity. What you yver-pioduct' i. c.n?. iu a shabby want is sympathy now?present helt>. I i;Pen touched and thought 1 come to those :?f you who have lost have f-een io e wcuid keep iu-j dear Iriends, and sa\: '"Try to forget sour farmer not burst forth in j'hem. Do n >t keep the departed id- "jf cotton in t out with it. all the I wuvs in your mind." How can jou f.,r- is doomed. I vji-jiu I knt'T suid :g.a t!a:m wheu every li^are m the ear- I outset by tne 'or consciitfn to j i>?: ami every bo-'k ami evrry picture | commercial n '= km-ine*- to j aim tvery room calls out t cir utrne. with the Gulf c.-i iu .i o .Suppose I come to >ou and say t?v There is a sa; > il l.-. I could way or'condolence, "God is wise." '"oh," "-lx cents cot minutes with ! >'?o say, "that irives tue 110 help." Sup- hirsayearne overturned and j Pus<? i come to vou and say. "Gud, from -"fcime iield." j br.vkcu, tuou^ii I ^ <-"-ruiiv, has arraiigt d this irouhlr." Texas, with ir.rajt'd. I coi?d I' y?u 3U>'. "that dots me no &.;0d." so^- made abc ith Art'old wire'1!i Thru I say. "With trie s*i:t re-et of ton crop this ] m*'oriuM*' wii'V U>ra-Vc,r direct to the corn .-rib for a t0 say 'n iiv< 3 'i.-in in Mn j heavealy supply/' You go. You say, her present j Hi TiY . ,v... i "-korJ, ^*lp me> Lord, comfort me." fcalt on Texas .: \ \r,t"(;U j l>ut no help yet. .No comfort >et. It because we c '..n1 tweiiiv tauus- i aji (jarj^ What is tr.e matter? I procession? lut-ii one. lain, have found. You ought to go to God i aut ic States ;:e to set up as a j and say: -'Here, 0 Lord, are the hi/rher each yi r ? ?1 " -? t ?.;,k awav under 'tiv neujrioornoou; woiuius 01 mv su-u, ?uu A i-m,6 bread." That; me tiir wounded Jesus. Let his wounds requires abou . .orld's comccfifin pay tor my wouuds, his bereavements year, and this p.?y. The n'o:ld|ior my bereavements, his ionelirit-ss for held us in lle( rd iJvrou uiut it i '"y loneliness. his heartbreak for my ferringhis se 's last momeui ho j heartbreak. 0 Goal lor the sake of the Mississippi. a:a! sit down hv 1 Lord C.'iirisc?the God. t.'ie man, ut bemoaning >i appropriate to!the jienjam*n? the brother? deli ver ujy thoughts and ' "The i51eecl:n^!soui' () '^e-sad ?f the wearv 'ions, 'he -culuLor ' 3 ! *oot-ease my fatigue. O Jesus of the Surely the * ~ , . "; aching head, heal my aching head. () the rui"S of U i,j m q',. liJj! -Jesus of the Bethany sisterfCroll avray trance with n Ii,e l0va'j the stone from the door of the grave." ri0t he dismay Hired it. hvery- j That is the kind of prayer that brings 'ook. Is ther , w,{w m.ecsta;y.1 hHp: and yet how many of you are gee- sissi^pi who c i thai toil aud all j tin* no help at all, for the reason that as his chief < k- he did uot ^et i th<-re is in your soul. perhap3, a secret cents'or even r.?r 'ik w .rL- i trouble. You may never have men- a gigantic am AAlll/) PC ock amalhtami Ironed it to a single human ear or you I mav have mentioned it to some one >yrJ >o?>r .wiwn-V-1 w5l'-) is r-?'v o0ne UWiiy> anci tliat ffreat 1;1C lar?est el* "(sorrow is still in jour soul. Aftrr sas because 01 0.'a fa;;e* I Washington Irving was dead they a -?S3- ^em die earth; not .or j ^ouc^ a mtie t,ox that contained a and cow peas x thousand. lint, J ^raid 0f hair and a miniature and the co^ton uelds d is a great corn- j r]amf- 0f Matilda Hoffman. and a mem- fnci sir * one 1. It is in auoih-1 orauduin of her death and a remark tooniilatosa place. An angel J something like this: "Ti>e world after . e n?xt ten as i'ar-as I i-an i that was a blank to me. I went into states will noi ase tluit comcnb j the country, but found 110 peace in sol- suPP!y t!he n s Ion-' and litiecc itude. L tried lo cro into society, but arul , uV\*Hia ?tu hundred fab-h, l- found no peace iu society. There has lor all nations, been a horror hanging over m? by night, <^ve < ''? 'fb1 ; * ?'? will start j j * b? aay' and 1 am alrald t0 bfe 1'endleton,. "ror'fr0-^ I FALSI-: AND FOOLISH PROMISES. lirlshToT *" j llow manv unuttered troubles! No Pvtttvopf icrih there comes h,Jtliaa ?as ever heard the sorrow. ou ?hau uot jee j Qj.^ troubled soul, 1 want to tell you r,rohahlv the 1 oroiher bo witli j there is one salve that can cure the ^nnr.AJ fn_ 5. there is no auch wounds of the heart, and that Is the Sll' i i taveu pardon and j salve made out of the tears of a sym- =_ Trn^ij^h i. K,.*?-?fr i ?N.aKAfw? Taoiio A *iH vc.t* vAtnM n"f vnii . ^__w^ i.ai.>jco v?I pa' nvjviu ^wwf- .,vv ' '" * w*" '"" inis country irother the Lord will not take this solace; and you try Mortgage and without him we I chiord, and you try morphine, and you sas city> have it;h i*ie t u-->crib Itr}" strong drink, and >ou try change ot interest in Poi '\',.n'-n011 t'or 'tie scene, aud you try new business asso- in{? iu the de 1iw?f ^1. ciations, and anything ana everything EngJish anci but connni, r;Uher mn taKe lhe Divine companion- the KiChmond ail ^e r^'^r'^Lijip a[i(j sympathy suggested \)j the jn^assurance "pen jclore our wor(<s 0f ray text when it sajs, "lou aa"0ther greal hnl; be given us. s;iHji not, see my /ace again unless your tenjency of t ) sit in the palace mother be with vou." Oh, that you cuuntry istosi table; and while might understand something ot the ern p0rtS( and portioning from height and depth and length ana i vaiue to the ^ r tables, he will breadth and Immensity and Infinity or the building i and there it will God's eternal consolations. j commercial ci niaiaiu'j mess is I go further, and find in my .subject j Newport 2sev is, for so it oii 'ht a hint as to the way heaven opeDS to The America .. b.i? the deDartine spirit. M e are told that Vno-iiah , \z and riches and j heaven has twelve gntes, andsoraepeo- ,he t * pis infer from that tact that ail the "hirh n ,.n!,,{T j people will g?> in without reference to <tt I>rorv>. ? - y.,., vL- th?r past life: but what is the use of If l" ' 11 * y having a gate that is not sometimes to i,!,nrtin<y* n be shift? The swinging of a gat? 1i.m- %** ? ;;u A. plies that our entrance into bwtven is \v,Ut <:U ;v!til y?ur conditional. It is not a monetary eon- , t('thi m you say. oition. If we corne to the door of an f it-' ! , J v cr o: God. exquisite concert we are not surprised ? eivy ut' God? Is that we mast pay a fee, for we know i>?sr a. bar lor tne ad- that line ear*bly music is expensive: Detroit 3 i respect to char- but ill the -oratorios of heaven cost loon a'scensit ' 1 Tmroinc ; vwi uavs nothing for its- cmnnri* this f lir,i i music. It is all free. Ther* is uothing frightful trn* ' ,.;h .,! i. v iLj P11101 tl;ut (j0',r for er'tr??ce: Ann Arbor, J v*:r c. V ' but i h<j condition of get ting into heaven ascension, pe ?"J, S:V3- i is our bringing our divine Benjamin trapeze. Wde 10 dinner re pi jS, > ^ joii^ Ii us. Do you notice how the earth he 1 >ico irom \vi? i.n | dyin< people call upon Jesus? It 1 ,ar. The en see. Miy j'-aruon.:!^ j 1S .,le vis.ihI prayer offered?the prayer prt'hend the a ine Brother, tl.e j offered more than all the other prayers man had almc ?u.'? Oli, that is I put together?"'Lord Jesus receive my j The body a many are disjoin- {spirit." frightful vel inercy iro-n (rod I ():.?>' of oiir congregation, when asked Jiojjan struck Christ. Coining ! in tii-- closing moments of his lite, "J)o coming in co ct'i'ieii. Coming j you know us?" said: 4;0a. yes, I know* great was t jecUu jvou. Cod bie<K> you. Gcod-bv. Lord pianks were ?-is -ren s'-ruio'i Is- receive my spirit;" *nd h* was [>lo0(j spurted ! wlifu Oh, yw, ill ibt! dosing moments Xot a bone i i *i; (,, ?3i>* i ' ?,,r ww must have a Christ to breakage and .s u ..e . c.i]i v.pyn. if Jacob's sons had gone to- vond reoOi>nit: .iere uo other j war(J j.;?vpt, and had gone with th* * Hogan Jeavi :vcn ainoair wen i v?,.y equipage. aud had nottak'-ri -tiie victim of saved. O anx- j aiomr with them, and to the 0f i?rof. Hogai sinnei! (.) ^ lost j question they should have been obliged jrl Campbell's t u> (io is to i.ave | to answer: ''Sir, we didn't bring hin:, y>t :i couple aioii^ with | as lather could not let him go; we dldn t n^ver returns ) the ^ate. all the i *'unt to be bothered with hini.' a voice i will swim: ojh n hroin within would have said: "(iol _ lUntit ml. Am I rir-iit; away from us. You shall not have any Kansas Ci iat-ru' U i >this supplv. You shall not see ray Passr-ngei Agt ji i fa'.-'- l.ec:.use your brother is not with j Turlington at :id will: a 7jr=r-^ >'oU" . | rmiay receivt aoai. Aiiernard man * extkkjiity,god* r:xv , iroru him at ao o? ! i,, Aq/lI U v.b couse up towatd tar door | train was held U '' V"-. heaven :i- though we conir trom : tier bandits tiJ (!' "? ail luxuriance and brilliancy of sur- ly dre?st-d ?okt via o. ri:y i aiu.' roswdingj. aod knock for admittance ton olhce at ^ ua,r.:;c , e and it is iound that Christ is not with inquired for y iJighi. Haui!." us, the police of heaven will beat us that Baxter's t the ?>oa of Pain? back from the breadhouse, saying: i sas City, the n c'ue! in that hour. | ''Depart, I never knew you." If Jacob's \ jne of the ban 1M over iuio the i sons, coming toward Egypt, had lost I fifteen years a as nothing e<:in- j everything on the way; if triey had ex- j for 8^0 "in an e s ol i ?od when he! petided tneir last shetcel; if th?y had lot warded to The omuipotcnt! u>? utterly exhausted to trie corn- peared and ha : '.i,j 1. s j <Tit>.s of Egypt, and it had t-een found '.n* i ,? if.r. i that Den jainia was with them, alllhe TheS '>Mn '* ' , , , ... | Mvrnnntv 101 Su p'.cii look I s'uf':J)0us,'s WOIUU nave swung vucu , - ? m sian-i;ir' ?tt iiie I L'efore ers Gambier . f , " \ r)"' j ! -\nd so. though by fatal casualty we o'clock this rn |;.vr \ ! H.ay be usherwl into the ttornal world;! head. The (j ' ;f IU. | though wo may be we^kand extiaust?-<i j irooi Sydney i .iCi-a^s.oi: :<)r v:>." .> t>y protracted sickness?if, in that last j out. The Gi >on of S>n j moment. we can or;ly just siaggc-r and j in, and a pani k>est cm?i..-H- of j laiu' and fall into the gate of heaven? | singers, most "rredauLe sound j it .-reins that ?Jl ;h* cornciibs of oeav- j in tneir Derth; In vonr pra\ i.-rs ! -n li 1 op?n tor our nbed aud al! the I deck. The E inierinu". bis i?or- j paiaces \rid open for our reception: and j Gam bier's pas you rem.sc to ?b iti.e Tord of tnat place, seated at his ta-! tore she could ad the palace*. oi {and theanyeis of God seated ac their bier sank, cai trul barred a"-a:;st atui Gne martyrs seated at their ! passengers, tlf from tt.c iTu-oue "^dail our gloritied kindred seat-1 and six of the ifc amoumenieni ie(' aL our table, ttie king sh;;li pass a j were unable '. r '.m. > ' I-ortioii from bU table to ours,aud then, j the water. 1 A ' j wniitf we think of the fact that it was j ~~Th j Jrsuywho starieo us on the road, and j Skingkieli .V.THV !y wkaa. -testis who kept us on the way, and | lirush Cre*k " l' 1 a/lrsi if I ;?ric.i? for' Prar.owco ]?< , .J r->;o v. UV JL<?OC ? li vv* | * * ~ ." is> ciiv :east.a ft .i\ , Qur soul) we shall be glad if he nas srei i1 freight trains -ei an* rca? com-:.. f liie truV;Ui 0f his soul and oteu satis-1 ed, killing tbi - pie: u.ue or iluni i t4lJ(i J10t {,e a? ail jealous if it be ! both trains. inJ o; condolence.' joiuju that our divine jWnjamin's mrds Ilaston, engic their health, or iu ! js tunes larger tiian ail 'lie rest. bridewell, en : domestic coudi-j lUii: anointed of the Lord, 'hou art ,Harry M. Joh snath y. And yet | worthy. , you see it is either Christ DKSKIjTPD lll<\ WIRT f there were two banquets l^OLliiBw IliO HLL o one of them only you u might stand and think prof. HENTZ PROVEN A VARP.1ED liie as to which invitation er accept; hut here it is MAN AFTER ALL. starvation. If it were a n oratorios, you might say, Hl!' ffl,t Tarns Up iu Coiuw>i?i--she Creation, or IpreiertriC Appears Over Her Own Nitiuc? A S:td Jut here it is a choice belv and PvPrlastinff discord Tale?f D?nertl<>u-<-Some Cooclu^iye Kvi 'live or die? Ivill you Jence. Egyptian cornerib, or will tid the empty barns of the COLUMBIA, S. C., Sept. 3.?Mr. W. amine? e shall not see \y Hentz, the young man fro:n Xewepi your brother be witn berry County who only recently went out io Jacksboro, Texas, to accept the DN'T PAY. QUIT IT! position of professor or Latin and mathematics in ihe Xorth Texts Bap,.d to K&iao Cotton ?t S.v.a ?>?,Mle?e- &""?1 f in ?? ??*?<>ingly unenviable position. cents. A few days ago?August 12?a regum of the News and Cou- jar marriage notice appeared, announe, ,, ing the marriage <>f Mr. Heniz to a miss is another phase of the Eva Henderson 01 Jliods. Thai notice Ion of cotton that has not Prof. Ilentzsaw \r. -lis Texas home, and . upon, although it may yesterday The State published a card the thoughts of many of ri<>m him denou.cing the notice as a Thft cultivation falsnhnnri j-.n I savin* hp was Sf COmba he South Atlantic Stat6S nied by no one away fiom Dardngton. landicapped at the very 'fh.s was thought to be the la3t of it, necessity of purchasing hut yesterday tf.e following cime to lanures we eater the race The State oflice, and telis ' States at a disadvantage. a tale ov deskutiox. ring among farmers that Here is the communication: ton and one hundred dol- To the Editor oi The State: fn The groes cannot grow in th-3 State of this morning I see wh ;re my husbaad. W. W. Ilentz, formerly of . her four 1'eet of black .Newberry, S. C., now of Ja?. ksouro, >ut 25 per cent of the cot- Tex., denies taking a brid* with him to ptist year, and 1 ventura his Texas college. Alas, how t: ue! lie - Years' time will double ma behind. An* one can ind the rield. Is it fair to call.1 truth of my statement, which is that J or any other Gulf Stata \\\ w. Hentzis a married man. having i ;annot keep up with th^ met rr.e by appointment at the ?:ome or Labor in the S^uth At- my mother in Florence Conn y, also is getting scarcer and the home of my graridf<ithe . g. i. ear, our lands are wasting Wavne, D. 1)., ^.r.d there had t is K^v. cotton cultivation, which flenry Hill, of the same place, t-> marry t thirteen months in the us on Wednesday night, August 12, despot which has so loni< 1891, afterwards residing with r;.e from ;cy chains is now trans- Wednesday until Saturday. During at of empire across trie that time my mother and oth r relaLet him go, and instead tives made up nearly 8100 for mi, which our fate let us turn our my husband persuaded me to let him . tdforts to other produc- keep for me. I suspected noth;f:g and let him have it. men who stood amidst He left me .Saturday afternoon AnS65 and worked out deliv flrust 15.18U1, promising to ret iru beone to help save God, need fore night. Instead, he left me lor ,-ed at this present out- good?deserted me without a penny, e a man east of the Mis- knowing I had no way of getting any an say truly that cotton more money to follow him. I have ;rop will pay him at six known W. W. Ilentz for the p; 3t year seven cents. It will be and a half and during all this time I ] Iron bound combination have had to meet his demand, g; *e hi in tVi? nrnHiii^tinn n? tn t.uv lite Viillc xt-H mvn J\J wic/ js. ? 111VUCJ IU ynj iltu ... .. -.V. iave no right to cramp hare bought most of his cloches. I orts of Texas and Arkan- jiave letters trom him to prove m! I say ir few bales are made at in this column. I also have letters from ust go to grain and grass him to my mother to prove hat he and stock, and reduce our Went to Florence with expectations of !own into cotton patches, marrying me. God knows 1 fish he s at that. Dots it seem had not done so, and had left rr ? aione j that before the dawn of jn a public nouse where 1 have been turv the South Atlantic since he met me over a year a. :<>. and t make enough cotton to have made the money that lias cioih^u lills within their limits, him aIui paid bis bills duriag th s time, mcially they will be far j. blush to acknowledge my sha..ie, but ' present status, over and do so la order to explain fully to the ular increase. nnii!i> hnn- f.hff nrnfessor of the iJantist Cheek-up. College of Jacksboro, Texas, ha; taken August 25. advantage ot me?a poor mi. guided itiooiT/or port Rojm. giri that was already thrown on the . \.,r. on Th, \r ?? world. Why did he marry me tc- desert 'U thiZ? <, JtL* me* Simply to obtain the fe-.v hard liSSSi f earntd dollars -f my pooi relatives. n?fnv ?52,\t fhIP?n" 11 W*9 bUt little' it?8 trUe' bUt 1 n f/S? * see 00 other reason, as the whole Kf !f in a^air was planned by him by his bv the' Jarvis Conklin letters'that any one can ste by takiDg iril tbe t*1118 to cali 00 me and looking at nAntrJm^ tb8m- is ea^y lor Mr. Heutz >o deny, J 1'nra < r th, e , nir but it would be hard to prove his lying nf' thjr ni; statement. Ask the Kev. II. 11:11 if h? Western !n fluences and did DOt marry me, Rosa Hinds, to W. ;S, 21 W. Hentz on Aug. 12. 1801; also, ask iVith F? f/'h aUT one residing in the couutv >,i Fior d-en-wSet D?rt. TheiaSfiU^S ISJ "hp fnrcitrn tru'il* of thf? ! "L1U5L1U^ wu "1,1 uco" awiwJ lit 1S12,n fh *lth him than ke, my husband, has with '"e, I remain as he has left me, -:-hrowa Jfif. S ,lra?'nS?i ?"> but hlS Wlfe\ hole houth. &s it rnc&ns ait*-* w \\r itv\ ! / i]) of a number of great . T^jfv5* ' rfon^'P<-m ties along the coast from Tiii;m f rnr\i ; >*s and Norfolk to Texas. lllh FOl.M). n Association, Limited, This would not have been puolished jompany which founded but for the securing of the apparently liddlesboroueh Ky., and undeniable evidence found belo w. The *arly 100,000 acres of coal State representative at once set out in In# to develop a new line search of "Eva Henderson, and at a r that part of the Soutli house on Gates street she was found. . . >___J <ha io a crirl of r*fhf?r fttrlkinfl" :i.DT5ear p a neavv coai anippiug ? ?" ? - import Royal, as the Nor- ance and does not look ov*rt wen-y years ;ern and the Chesapeake of a?r?. She told her story as ab-.ve, but oads have done at Nor- with more completeness. ewport News. Attached to a chain around ber neck was a gold medal bearing the name of i?d to th? E?rth. "W. W. lientz," and showing thi-1 it had lich., August 20.?A bal been won at Newberry College. On her >n, at the Exposition linger she wore a sealrin* on th inside afternoon, ended in a of which was the inscription '\Y. W. ?edy. George Hogan, o? II." I'rof. Ilentz, it'must, be ememMich., aeronaut, made an bered, attended the South Carolua Unirtormlng while on the versity and graduated from there with n jne thousand feet from hiv*h honors in the class of '90 It was ost his grip on ihe trapezn while here that he met the girl, brcame awd did not seem to com- infatuated with her, as the stn 7 goes, ccident until the doomed and has bre# her constant at en dan t >st reached the ground ever sice. "While in the Unive~aity he hot through the air with was rrgarded by both faculty ?: n<i stuocity head downward, dents as a model young man. the earth on River street, those tell tale letters. ncact with the sidewalk. The girl produced a pack of !rttt:r3, he impact that two inch ami when ihe chirography was put broken and '-.piiutertsd. alongside of that in the card t in by 10) feet from the corpse. Prof. Hentz yesterday it was imnossibie n the body escaped th? to tell one from the other. Ti rre are the head was mashed be five of the letters, signed, variously," W. ioo. \V. Hentz, "YV. W. II." and "VThe : ? a widow and one child, first Is dated Newberry, April 1.5, and is the tragedy was a brother to Mrs. Hinds. He tells her he nasi*u, who made an ascension cured a position to travel and sks nrr airship in 15ro<>kjyn, X. t-) come and live with himself ai >i Jl"sa. j of years ago. and who and gives plans for their futujr'. The 1 l..t'or ia H-jtwl ('nlum i>ia. :s!v 17.1 -- and is also to Mrs. Hinds Ii reads as afion by h JlaadH-. foliOW'3: ty, Aug. 2(5.?Traveling Dear Mrs. Iliads: I wrote vcu fome>at Baxter,of theChicago, time ago that Itosaaud i would -;e down id Quincj Kailroud, yei- aeme time in August. I did 5 or be-rj xi in bis mail SOU, stwien from you, so write again to kuo-v if you i the time a Burlington would like to have us come. It maybe I up and robbed !>y fron- ;he last, chance you will ever ha*e to see fteen jears a^o. A poor- >jer f,-.r some time, for 1 have b<-en i walked into the Burling elected, a profeasor in a big eo.lvsff in i t. Joseph yesterday and Texas and will Ikavc it) about ti v - \v--fcs j Mr. Baxter. Being told to take charge of my work. would j leadquarters were in Kan- i^e to come down with her ami marry lan explained that he was m your presence, so that you t\ ould b^ i dits whe robbed the train better satisfied. 1 know I can support, go, and handed the check her. I will get 8700 per y^ir . f nine nvelope, asking that it be months. They will pay me ST'S at the Baxter. He then disap- p11(i 0f each month. Write me a: lY-ma-1 a not been seen since. " ria, So. Ca, at one*. v..u\u. I hip Wont Down. The next is from Pornari*. July 21 .? . >)C, of~1T_ acd is to Roaa, telling her tnev will and iL'by collided M i ''T*?J rt_.,structions as to how to proc^r- . it is KS&'SfSSU'S ^ToVX,r- iiufbar'.', r ,"Ju',;v ibd the Easbf was bound \ ' ,"X tmbier's side was crushed ?ontem? why h. 1.^ w.i v?. <>?"aur,L,?.u,?Ar,fh. .s.^ ssrer. Ihelast is a iortg onMrom romaor whom had bim as'efp na' Au*ust liL ]t teliH thfc S'r; to tiike , . { ' hJ f everjthiny she has, and how to procetd. asby rescued many of the " &>?'<? ??? a yo,L man isengt-ra and crew, but be- ^ iv^n6-0!" ri c TKU-h thnni Hi! thP (;Hm- rhp88 facts arf *nen art t!)r-v ar'*' rvin* down 1 v? s^ooa ",lh a 3lncere of for the ^ ^ . saioo misguided vounsr man's family as well o?ew The Eas^s boats as himself- but the? should be known *1 in in justice to the woman "ihrowa oa the to Hud any survivors in WoJrW."_Tbe ^ate. "r?e Men IvuT^r *'rost ,n >orth Uftkola' ), Mo., Aug. 29.?Near Minneapolis, Aug. 27.?a special! on the St. Louis and 6an from Church's Ferry, X. D.,says: Heavy ! Dad, this morniug, two frost last night did damage t-.? ?rteu j going at full speed ;Co!ld- and uncut grain. The thermometer j -ee men and demolishing registered 28. Ice was formed on he&is \ Those killed were Georga of wheat in many fields. Farmers tried I leer of train No. 206, C. i5. smudge fires, but some tlr.uk i hey did j gineer of train JS'o. 183, not commence scon enough, .-ome of I nson lireman of train .No. them waiting tili almost freezi: g point! NO DANGER OF A DUEL. SNEEZING TO ! K.ilHuli 1Voi>!? Kidicule the IiK*a of KIIh O'Connor l'rostrat< Col. I'olk Fi^iitiuif, M?!ady, JiALKlim, X. C.. Sept. 3 ?During the j,A.NCASTEK. ^ last week dispatches have been sentout n'/'nnrmr 4 ?i;.rhr .t;h , from this city by correspondents of a herseifneSiy number of >,orthern dailies about a pro- fi , , sneezed air post-d duel between Col. L. L. Polk, , 8Le aJe?2efl fl[ president of the >.' ational Farmers' Alii- y*., ^;?1^ i"ie 0 , aace, and the editors of the News and , comP*c Observer, on account of the scorching the child got sleep onlv - iln.ifl/l li? oi<li!ii?l?l fYlOflm articles wruen are appearing in laai pa-1 per i'rom day to day attacking the per- litile nourishment, and s sonal and political history and ambi- Ella that even her reo lions of Pol&. There is not the rewot- sured. tst probability of a duel, however, and The attending physici the reports weie read with much amuse- bailed and his medicii ment by those who know the alliance little. The strange oase president best and who havo never re- interest ol other doctors, garded him as a "fighting character." | u, 5nnnire ahout iL The idea of his sending a challenge Do Wn"sn^lnir }< anyone caused many a smile among ?ne oegan sneezing u Ms acquaintances hereabouts. V at 5 ?- V ,OCi* , wa.6 n Hon. T. K. Jernigan, oneoftheedt- any coid* The sneezing tors of tbe News and Observer, when a minute's cessation asked about the matter today, express- with the exception of a i ed surprise at the reports sent out, and when, exhausted, the that he did not anticipate a "challenge" heavy sleep. from Col. Polk. and certainly was not Early on Monday n losing any sleep thinking over the pros- again began sneezing, a pects of being shot. .Mr. Jernigan is a day with a two hours ii man of very quiet manners, but of un- pronl n0cm of that day doubted courage, and if President Polk that ni ht m \neezed is-spihn for a light he will undoubted meat?a?pause. a hypo< ly b? >cvo:rimodattd it he makts appli-1 ,??c ((inn, cation to that gentleman. But r. is not nior^hia was then. aan - - I hpr til nnfii Tt believed by those who aref*miliir.rwith ! ;?i. ?7: the Colonel's lighting qualities *,nat it | 0 viill be found necrMarv to keep him in- j ^'or t^*? ^oufs 3-1( Li mated to prevent his "spilin','' and Then the sneezing b so there is no prospect of a duel. and it continued the gri what the colonel says. day. Wasaington, Sept. 1.?President She would occasionally i'olk of the Farmers' Alliance returned a fe-.v moments. She 1 to Washington today, without having pain in her back and h passed through the dangers ot a duel the sneezing was more with a North Carolina editor. Mr.Polk tfthers. During the ?e said to a Stir reporter today: "1do not ,d s<.ari;t,ly ^ ber think anyone is thinking of noting a the anxious motl duel. The whole story is the invention ,.1",r~ of a very sensational reporter. I have Ji? ? strangling received dispatches and lttters from all sn ez*^ reached - i iioj/i u- ^vinin.r pha ov?r the country begging me to snow i v.^,. ? my moral courage by refusing to li^ht I tended the child wu-s i a durJ. .Some or' the'letters have come i such an enemy. It was from Vermont. If any one wants to ifreliet did not soon con tight a duel wit.h me i have not been in- A heavy iniectiou of formed of it. The thing is a lot of the last resort. This p nont sense. and she slept soundly u Speaking of the Alliance, Mr. Polk m0rnin" When she < said tri.it it was growing stronger all again b" 8lieezing ? St-ir ,eh-a". ,'^t aaoek, and from that tta otiv. ior thir?e uays w<?s left awa\ m -he j . hefter Thp ?nf?lls < rear. 'l?ie Alliance is getting no set-1 ? D?tter. lne^peds, back. If any of the old parties come (luen,j,aU(l of shorter dm out and takes a *tand squarley on the . J cease" altoget Alliance platform, he says, that party | This 13 the third atU will get the Alliance, but every mem- j bad, and, for the time it berofthe Alliance will light any and j severest. Two years ago all parties oppo^r-d to them. This is I in this way, but then thi * ' *"* I <v_ 1 tneir piatiorm witnout reservauou. uuucu iui iw uajj, ^ the girl was reduced to ? RIOT IN ia ANB MURDER. A 'year ago she was at " time. Then the mala ll.iulit-rifcrt Committed br Dictator lJal- days. iuHc?dn'e 3I?iceuarU?. Dr. J. W. HcSS Was ,r ,?-i- - x ? 01. He savs that there is u( V ah-akaiso, Chili, aspt. The medical practice to read comparative quiet and good order which The a[rl hag beea gu, prevail in V alparaiso is not universal in riiaores 0f t_jle n0se, but s the smaller towns. It has been louad for j>our week3 d necessary to get the assistance of foreign the earl v part "of her ill war ships at .Corouel, where riot and hemorrhage, believing t disturbance are rampant, yesterday sneezing would cease. morning ine urtnuuu war smy and the British gunboat Daphne left Had to i>?ci hero for tha* place. Governor Tillman a 1 The new government is also makiug ceived the following let hurried preparations for the restoration ^ Augusta. of order.'and will put dowu rioting *ith Gov. R 11. Tillman: a firm land. ' Deaii Sip.: Tuesday, The begiDDiDg of the rioting took L, . Caro m; place whea news of the defeat of Balma- "iPi?? coda reached Corotiei. Two regiments Resent as the guests of o Laimaeeda s troops had just leached ?>board of directors u that place from Coquimbo. asking you to favor us ' These mercenaries, when they beard dreS5- Your acceptance of the rout of their party leaders, imme- ^vith. this invitation w diately renounced their allegiance. Ijge. Yours respectfull When their officers tried to restrain Patrick Wal hem the mutineers shot fiem down. The Governor yestei They then swarmed over the place in a follows, declining the li riotous crowd, having been joined by a Columbia, S. C., lot of coal miners. Thev sacked houses Hon. Patrick \V alsh, At and burned them. Any person who u-AI\ -R: four tried to protect his property or the hon- "f!^n1ilsVhinVl' i^6 8 or 01 his household was shot down with- h< na 1tw , , south Carolina Day, on. out quarter. Ail the horrors of a own and Oliver an address captured j\ storm were .perpetrated. sure you it would give i Members ol the Junta arrived at san- 0ur general assembly Uagr? 3 estcrdav. * day and my official dut: There is the strongest feeling against from leaving the city. Minister Egan. Admiral Brown is be- With assurances of gri lif-ved to be acting under his instruction, of your kind invitatToi The recall of Minister E^aii will, it is very truly, B. 1-.H thi' first, domand of the new <;r?it ?rlr?in Sfor government train the Uuited States. London, Au<t. 20. ? \ ery little quarter will be shown to tremendous hurricau?? pr< anv of Balmaceda's followers who may out fJreat Britain. Ever be. caught. graph wires are prostrate It has been discovered that the late possible to obtain anytl dictator, on one .occasion, ordered no the most meagre io'oru less tban fortv-iwo young met),.many of amount of destruction them only boys, to be shot for compliei- fearful wind and sweepic ty in an alleged plot. about London, and tl jliniuess i., once more in swing in Val- places that have been h paraison, Hud the city is recovering its liavs teen dragged oni ordinary appearance. It is long since j);y their roots and the su -h a feeling ot *ecurity existed. hav^ been ripped up and No detinue new# has been obtained of streets, lanes and bj-w P.aliMHctr'liiV whereabouts. castle the tents of the fi< ri?i KU^Th. N -n?. * l)l?' ,Hk,e S?UW? ~ . iul exhibit which thev hi Xi:\v Y<>i:k, Au*. 3 ?mis morning t .. , , I V; vuung-st r,M? ill the convent at almost entirely de8troy< Williamsburg, which is * branch of the ^ron\ fcouuport, in ..an bi^- I> 'iuiiu*^u Convent of the JIolv on the Irish Sea. reports Trinitr. >:st?r Angelica, awoke with a esriaa barque Gerion he stait. ~ oft'that place. The crew A roujfh hand *;w resting- npen h*r, saved. Numerous oth< and she could just nrake out tneform of ties are reported. It Is a man. lie w as leaning over h*r and the restoration of the t pressed hei" down on tne b?'l in antici- will come the news of a pation of her attempt to escape. 1 lie au along the coast. girl gnvff one piercing scream, and then, s witlTthe strength of terror, managed to a K?vrj?rd of 8 break from the fellow's clutch. Charlotte, X. C., The nun ran toward the Sister Supe- H. Green, Col. A. li. An r;or'.-i room. On he' way the man over- Haas, of the Richmond &0. K nor. aim. tnrusiung ncr mc wirn ine state ramuim wall. cov?-r?iJ her face with kisses, un- and experts from the Ft h?-e?h!.rf her cries or her struggles. Baltimore and Ohio rail !?y this tisn** the Sifter Superior and Statesville to-day to ma the rest of th?* nuns, clad ouly in their tion of the bridge and 1 night robes, had run out of their rooms terrible disaster at fhi to l^arn the cause of the outcry. Richmond, and Danvill When the ruffian S.** the.Sisters about reward of S10.UU0 for tfc him he r?leaatd tne first one, rushed at a miscreants who remov second, insulted her and then sei/.nd the caused the wreck. third. The Sisters were in a state of gr?*ai excitement and rushed about be- Charleston'* c?u rr:!df-rr-'. CllAliLESTOX, S. C., The. Si?ter Superior made her way to News and Courier will ] the ground llonr. and from a room threw row its annual review o a box at out* of the winnows of the par- commerce of Chariot sonage and awakened Father ZenUraf. business of the city foi The priest., without waiting to fully closed shows a net increa ? r^x-z-.K-tir onrt iia_?;fpr)Pi5 over the ttade of 18S0 ^ 1 CIOa J V I V4 ? v>u.? *.mvvv..-? - to the building where the Sisters lived. trade for the year 189 Just as he was appro ?ching, the nun's 554,001, as compared t assailant came out and ran across the the previous year. Cha lawn, ^calwl the fence and escaped, moved every trace of tri The pru-st rired at thy m^n, but missed live years ago, and sh him. 831,000,106 in its trade sines that time. T!i?? Ship Went Down. halifax. X. S .Sept. 2.?The steamer mccune ami mcaiu Dunnn-rry, of Belfast, which sailed jacksonville, fla., iron; Xew York, August 26. for Ant- special to the Times-I'd * * *r:? i, wrrp, with a cargo ot grain, sanK aoout ram, .ansa., oo-si^o i-u??.aj eight hundred nnle.s east of New Yoric counter between Lectu on the morning of the 2'Jth. She had a and Editor McCune, re crew of twenty-eight men, commanded Alliance factions, McA or Opt. Mc.Morran. Eight of the crew.^wsjshed McCune. Xh( are lost. The others were taaw^oout out ws^^isnce matter in a life boat for two dSysTand finally serted th$t McAllister 1 picked up by the steamer Hans and liance to Wall Street an Xurst, which carried the uien to this li^d about another matt* port. with ilcCune's persona 5?ai*h. tariff for cotton. ;d by a, Strause IMPORTANT ACTiON OF THE RAILROAD COMMISSION. Sept. 3.?Klla ^ ^hlS Short and Long Haul oa the South Caroto aeath. lor UOSt ceutinuous- llnaaudC., & L.. Koads-A Fertilizer i raaladv began Tariff Conference Called. ;telv nrostraiea when it wa3 in- ^ Columbia, S. C., Sept. 3.?The i. She took but Slate Board of Railroad Commissioners 0 exhausted was vvas iQ session all day yesterday and ovary is not as- Ia3t night and the meetiug was certainly the most important that the ian was utterly board has held in some months. Among les availed but j^e results of the meeting was the fix- 1 has excited the *D= a standard tariff on cotton aad a who have come ca^ a conference with the phosphate manufecturers inregard to fertftizer^rist Sundav night iffs for next season. *. V ot suffering irorn ^ . continuad with- city yesterday mormng and at once bethe whole night SP'-*a hard day's work. The first matshort two hours ter considered wa3 that of the freight girl fell into a tar^' ?' South Carolina and Columbia, Xewherry and Laurens railroad. lorning the <?irl invitation President W. G. Childs, nd kept it upVil ?*tlie Columbia, dewberry and Laurens ;terviil of sleep. roa(^ and General Manager C. M. Ward, until 11 o'clock of the South Carolina, and their attor _ npv Tnaonh W_ "RnrnwAl! "F!sn._ werft Wiiooui a ino- ?->? ? -?r- ^ Jennie injection present, as was also Attorney General linistered. which P?pe, m behalf of the commission. The icsday morning, question was as to the requirements of awakened very Section 1443 of the General Statutes in a whs extremely reference to the leasing of railroads and egan once more, Providing that when two roads compter part of the bined the shorter and longer hauls were regulated by law. That is, to say, the r have a rest for casing road had authority to make the xjmplained of a tariff uniform. Through Mr. Barnwell cad. At times tIle railroad men admitted that this was severe thau at a correct interpetration of the law, but vere spells she as^ed the commission to so construe the breath. Many proviso of the act of 1887 as to place ler thought her ^.e matter m tiieir discretion conjointly to death. with the railroads concerned to make its climax on seP&rate tariffs for the roads. In other doctor who as- words, the South Carolina officials lelpiess before vvanted to retain the tariff already fixed plain to all that ^y them on the Columbia, Mew berry ae death would. and La:irens Koad. morphine was The Attorney General orally anut her to s^eep, pounced his opinion, which is embodied ntil Wednesday :n Ibe following opinion he subsequently ;ot awake she banded to the commission. it it was a mild opinion is addressed to "Messrs. le she trradually I -D* Uuncan, chairman; E. P. Jervey I anH IT R Thnmss. cnmnmincr the rail jrew more mire- ? ? T e 0 _ ation. On Fri- ,roacJ commission of South Carolina. Coher. iumbia, S. C.", and reads as follows: ick the girl has Gentlemen: I herewith give you lasted, was the my opinion on two questions submitted she was afflicted t0 3T?ur commission: 3 sneezing con- 1- What is the effect of the lease of When It ceased *be Columbia, Xewberry and Laurens i mere skeleton. Railroad by the South Carolina Railtacked a second wa3s Vie^ ot Section 1443 ot the Gendy lasted three era.' Statutes, so far as the regulation of freight on leased roads is concerned? her physician. ^questionably the section in ques )thing known in Itl0Q requires mat a ieasea roaa saau oe 1 such cases. t operated and controlled so that it shall bject to hemor- charge or receive no greater compensable has had none ^ou (or carrying, receiving, storing, foroctor hoped in warding or handling articles of the same .ness for auch a *racter or description for a shorter ,hat with it the '-ban a Jonger distance lor one continuous carriage; and such construction of the section in question is admitted b? ino- the railroad authorities here concerned. ew days ago re- 2. Does the proviso appended to dec- * tion 1443 of the General Statutes by act a , Ga., Aug. 14. of 1887, amendatory thereof, authorize ? the railroad commission of this. ?tate, ? l in their discretion, conjointly with t5t v W nrp ro cvfpnd fn said corporations, to fix different rates V w avitation to be of t0^ compensation for freight traffic ^ the Exposition oa eac^ 8a*d hitherto independent mite with me in liQes divisions? with a short ad-' my answer to this question I state and compliance that this section of the general railroad -111 greatly ob- law of the State deals with the subject y, of rates freight traffic on one continuous Sir, President, line, so as to prevent a greater charga or rday replied as compensation for a sbcter ban a longer ivitation: distance, and d.rects that a contract by Au?. ?o, loJl. lease or otherwise by one railroad of fh? auother, shaft so operate as to make the two or more railroads oue continuous iuu iuy staix uu ? Exposition oa line-' and tlie Scetion as found la the November 24th, General Statues remained without altera'to hand. I as- tioa fro-". 1882 to 1887. But during the ne pleasure, but latter year the general assembly added meets on that a proviso to that sceuon that reads as ies prevent me follows: "Provider, further, That it one cor?at appreciation poratioa shall use, operate or otherwise a' * am> y?:irs coatr*l, wholly or m part, several lines k. Tillman. or divisions 0f hitherto independent m-swept. railroads, wi;hia the State, the commisU1 night Ions a sion may, in their discretion, fix differivailed through- eat rates of toll or compeusation for ywhere the tele- freight traffic on eacn 01 tne said mtnerto ed, and it is im- independent lines or divisions." liug more than By this amendment the general asaatiou as to the semblj of this State have so changed caused by the the powers of your commission that it 15 rain. la and is perfectly legitimate for you to so act, ic few outside bearing in mind, however, that the proeard from, trees viso does not direct your commission to t, of the ground so act, but simply vests you with disroofs of houses cretionary powers in the premises. Very ! hurled into the respectfully, Y. J. Pope, ays. At Xew- Attorney General. )wer sho*- were Xo final action was taken by the and the beauti- board. id enclosed was standard cottox takiff adopted. id. A dispatch The matter of fixing a standard tariff icaster County, on cotton which shall govern all the that the 2sorw- railroads in the State was discussed all le been wrecked the afternoon, and in the evening the were, however, board adjourned without having reached ir minor casual- any conclusion on the matter, being of l'eared that with so much importance. Last night, howtlenraph service ever, another meeting was held, and it erious disasters was decided so fix a standard rate in order to adjust the cotton crop for the l0 qq'0 present season. At the conclusion ot ' c, _r t tV the meeting last night Chairman Dundrew?, and Sol" b*ve <Je; i and Danville Cld?d. that we Wl11 *dopt a standard coinmissioners tarifl fsr all roads doing butiness In the nnsylvaola and State, but I cannot yet say what it will roads, went to be. Heretofore there has been a separate ke an examlna- tariff for each road, and the adoption :ho c-ause of tne of this means the equalizing of the rates rd Creek. The to all points in the State?the putting s has offered a o? ail on an equal basis. It will reduce ;e arrest of the the tariff on some roads very consider" " " -A eti tne ran mac ably." A FERTILIZER TARIFF CONFERENCE. liuoroe. During the morning the matter of Sent. 1.?The Phosphate or fertilizer and cotton tariffs 1 publish to-mor- was taken up. A committee from the f the trade and Globe Phosphate Compaq- consisting of 011. . The total President Iluiet, Superintendent Robert- y the year just son and Dr. Bates waited on the comae of 817/J35,001 mission and preser-ted certain claims as -90. The total to the tariff on fertilizers. II is proO-'Jl was S9Sr posed to put in a uniform tariff on all irlth **619,717 lertilizers on all railroads. The Globe ineston has re- (jorapaDy wants all discrimination e earthquake o. diramsti Columbia stopped and a just and commerce rate to accomplish this end. The Board 1 joyit/iaH 1<j?i nitrhf. a stmseonent UUVLUVU iwww v ww ?, meeting to call a conference of all feriilister right. zer manufacturers in the State on the , August 2*3.- A 23rd last., in this city when the matter lion from. Du- will linallv be decided.?State. ti a personal en- " irer McAllister la kach o'hert presenting two Buoiixguam, Aia., Aug. 27.?At a llister severely family picnic at Biossburg today Misses i trouble grew Sallie and Claudia Marson, of this city, s. McCune as- aged 17 and 15 respectively, were lad sold the Al- drowned while bathing. The older got d that he had beyond her depth and the younger went i;r in connection to her relief. Xeither could swim and I conduct. they drowned In each other's arms. < HUH