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S^T' urTnmn - 1 ??tMgM MYStE^-SIO VHEll. The carriage iite was over And though I turned aside To keep the guests from seeing. The tears 1 could not hide, I raised my f?ce in smiling, And Jed mv lltt.'e brother To greet my father's chosen? But 1 could not call her mother. ' She is a fair young creature. With meek and gentle air. With blue eyes bright and beaming, And suuny silken hair, I knew my father gave her The love he gave another, But if she were an an-jel, I could not call her motlu r. They took my mother's picture From its accustomed place, And hung beside my father's A fairer and younger face, 'i hey made her dear old charrik r The abode of another, But I will not forget thee \r,T rvrtrn mv mother. Last night I heard her sinking A song I used to love, As its dear notes were hallowed J3y one who sin^s above. It grieved my heart to hear licr 'ihe tears I could not smother, for ever}- tone was hallowed Uy the voice of my mother. My father's in the sunshine And brighter days to come, They have forgot the shadows That darkened our dear home Ills heart n? more is lonely. But 1 and little brother, Will still be orphan children, God gives us but one mouirr. j ONLV ONc VhRDlCT. Rev. Dr, Talmsze Gives WMrilr? to the Impenitent. Brooklyn, Juo?, 17.?Ilev. Dr. Talmase, who is now oa his roccd the wnrld iournev. Las selected as the sub- j jcct for his sermon through the press today "Another Chance," the text beic2 taken from Ecelesia3tes x?, 3, uIf the tree fall toward the soath or toward the norths in the place where the tree fallelh ' . there it shall be." There is a hovering hope in the minds of a vast multitude that there will be aD opportunity in the next "-orld to correct the mistakes of this; that if we do make complete shipwreck of our earthly life it will be on a shore, up which we may walk to a palace; that, as a defendant may lose his case in the circuit court apd carry it op to tbe supreme ccurc or uuun of chancery and get a reversal of judg% ment in his behalf, all the costs being thrown over on the other party, so if we foil in the earthly trial we may In the higher jurisdiction of eternity have the judgment of tbe lower ccnrt set aside, all the costs remitted, and we may be victorious defendants forever. My object in this sermon is to show that com? iron sense as my text declares that such an expectation is chimerical. Ycu say U.at the impenitent man, having got into *' ~ * oooin y thw disaster. uie nea.t wum axiv? uwi-, j will, as a result of thai disaster, turn, the pain the cause of his reformation. Eat you can find 10,000 instanc?s in this world cf men who have done wronsr, and distress OTertook them suddenly. Did the distress heal them? Xo. They went right cn. That man was flung of dissipations. "You must stop drinking," said the doctor, "and qait the fast life you are lead* ing, or it will destroy you." The patient suffers paroxysm, but under skillful medical treatment he begins to sit up, begins to walk about the room, begins * " *"* A I r\ V??k crr\OQ to go to DU81UCSS. H.uu; IV, back to same grogshops lor his momicg dram, and his evening dram, and the drams between. FM down again. Same doctor. Same physical anguish. Same medical warning. 2iow the illnjss is more protracted, the iiver is more stubborn, the stomach more irritable, and the digestive organs are more rebellious. Bat after awhile he is oat again, goes back to the came dramshops and goe3 the same round of sacrilege against his physical health. He sees that his downward coarse is mining his household; that his life is a perpetual perjury against his marriage vow; that that broken taeariea woman u? so unlike the roseate young wife whom ha married that her old schoolmastes do not reccgn:z?her; that his soas are to be taunted for a lifetime by the father's druukenaea?; that the daughters are to pa83 into life under the scariGcation of a disreputable ancestor. He is drinking up their happiness, their prospects for this life and perhaps for the life to come Sometimes an appreciation of what he is doing comes upon him. His neivcus system is all a tangle. From crown of head to sole of foot he 53 one aching rasp, ing, crccifying, damning torture. Where is he? In hell cn earth. Does it reform him? After awhile he has delirium tremens, with a whole jungle of hissing reptiles let cut on bis pUiow, ana nis screams horrify the neighbors as he dashes oat of liis bed crying, "Take these things eff me!" As he sits pale and convalescent the doctor says: "Now, I want to have a plain talk with you, my dear fellow. The next attack of this kind . ycu have you will be beyond all medical skill, and you will die." He gets tetter and goes forth into the same round again. This time medicine takes no efiect. Consultation of physicians agree in saying there is no hope. Death ends the scene. That process of inebriation, warning and dissolution is soiDg on within stone's throw of yon, soing on in all the neighborhoods of Christendom. Pain does not correct. Suflenng does not reform. What is true in one sense is true in all senses aDd will forever be so, and yet men are expecting in the nest world purgatorial rejuvenation. Take up the printed reports of the prisons of the United States, and ycu will find that the vast majority of the incarcerated have been there before, some of them four, five, six times. With a million illustrations all working tb.2 other way in this world, people are expecting that distress in the next state will ha salvatory You cannot imagine any worse torture in any other world than that which some men have suffered here, and wiihout aoy salutary consequence. Furthermore, the prospect of a reformation in the next world is more improbable than a reformation here. In thi? world the life started with Innocence of infancy. In the case supposed, the other life will open with all'the accumulated bad habits ei many years upon him. Surely it is easier to build a strong ship oat of new timber . than cut of aa ofd hnlfc that has been srround up in the I breakers. If with innocence to start with in this life s man dees not become godly, what prospect is there that In the next world, starting with sin there would be a serapb evolutea? Surely the sculptor h&s more prospect of making a fine statue out of a block of pure white Parian marble than out of an old black rock seamed and cracked with the storms of a half century. Surely upen a clean white sheet of paper it is easier to write a deed or a will than upon a sheet of paper all scribbled and blotted and torn from top to bottom. Yet men seem to think that though the hie that besan here comparatively perfect turned out badly, the next life will succeed, though it starts with a dead failure. "But," says some one, "I thick we ought to have a chance in the nest life, because this life is so short it allows only small opportunity. We hardly have - ? time to turn arcund between cradie and , tomb the wood of the one almost touching the marble of the other." But do you know what made the deluge a necessity? It was the longevity oi the ank L tfdlluvians. Thev were worse in tbe pecond century <>! their lifetime than in the ?rst hundred }ea~3, acd still worse m lbs third ceutury. and still worse ail the way ca to 700, 800 and GOO \ears, and the earth had to be washed and scrubbed and soaked an "! anchored clear cut of sight ior mere than a m?nih before it could be made fit for decent people to live in. Longevity never cures impenitency. All the p:c;ures c? Time represent him ?t-n An? >>n? T never tier Willi Si SWytUO LV V,Uv, A. UV.IV1. ..t... any picture oI Time with a case ot medicines to !;esl. iececa sa>3 that Nero for tiii Crst five year-3 of h:s public life was set up for aa example of clemency ana kirdness. but his path all the way descended until at G8 A. D. he became a suicide. If SCO years did not make antediluvians any belter, but only made them worse, the ages of eternity could have co effect except prolongation of depravity. "Bat," says some one, "in tie future state evil surroundings will be withdrawn and elevated inllueaces substituted, and i:eccs Cipurijciuuu ivU'- CUUULUawu aun glorification." But the righteous, all their sins forgiven, have passed oa into a beatifis state, and consequently the unsaved will be lett alone. 11 cannot be expected that Dr. Duff, who exhausted himself in teaching II'cdoo3 the way i to heaven, acu Dr. Abeel. who gave his life in the evangelization of China, and Adeniram Judson, who toiled for the i redemption cf Borneo, should be sent down by some celestial missionary society to educate those who wasted all their eartblv existence. Evangelistic : and missionary efforts are ended. The entire kingdom of the morally bankrupt by themselves, where are the salvatcr? ?r,flnenr.es to some from? Can one speckled and bad apple in a barrel of diseased apple3 torn the ctber apples 500c! Can those who are themselves 1 down help others up? Cao those who have themselves failed in the business of the sonl pay ihs debts of their insolv- 1 enti? Caa a million wrongs make ons j righ; ? Poncropoli3 was a city where King 1 Philip of Thracia put all bad people of : his kingdom. If any man had opened a primary school at Poneropoii3, I do not i think the parents from other cities would have sent their children there. Isstead 1 nf ommflmpnt in the other world. all the 1 asscciauori3, now that the good arc ] evolved, will be degenerating aad down. ; You would not want to send a man to a i cholera or yellow fever hospital for his health, and the great Iszaretto of the : next world, containing the diseased and i plague struck, will b9 a poor place for J moral recovery. It the surroundings in i this world were crowded ot temptation, the surroundings of the nest world, after ; the righteous have passed up aud on. i will be 1,000 per cent mere crowded of i temptation. The Count of Chateaubriand made his little son sleep at night at the top of a i castle turret, where the Triads howled I and where specters were said to haunt ; or.r? th?i m nth fir pr.d sis IIUV wuv? ri tt4>v M VVMvr ? ters almost died with fright the son teil3 us that the process gave him nerve3 ] that could not tremble and a courage < that never faltered. But I don'c think J that towers ot darkness acd the spectral i world swept by sirocco and euroclydon will ever fit one for the land of eternal ' sunshine, I wonder what is the curri- ' cuium of that college ot inferno, where i after proper preparation by the sins of ] this world, the candidate enters, passing | on from freshman class of depravity to 3cphomore of abandonment, and from i sophomore to junior, and frcm junior to senior, and day of graduation come, and ( with diploma signed by satan, the p:e3- j lceni, ana otue: pruicsaiuudi ucmuuiaw ] attesting that the candidate has been ; long enough under their drill, he passes up to enter heaven! Pandemonium a j preparative course for heavenly admis* ; sion! Ab, my friends, satan and his 1 cohorts have fitted uncounted multitudes for ruin, but never fitted cne soul for ] happiness. ] Furthermore, it would not be safe, for ] this world if men had another chance m the nest. If it had been announced that however wickedly a man might act in this world, he could fix it up all right in the next, society would be terribly demoralized and the human race demolished in a few years. The fear that if we are bad and unforgiven here it will not bo well for us in the next existence is the chief influence that keeps civil: z-iitfon from rushing rack to semibarbarism and stmibarbarism from rushing into midnight savagery, and midnight savagery from extinction, for it is the astringent j !mnr?soir.n nf oil noffnna {"!h**isHan find 1 heathen?teat there is no future cbaace for tnose who have wasted this. Multitudes of men who are kept within bounds would say: "Go to, now! Let me get all out of this life that there is in it. Come, gluttony and inebriation and uucleanness and revenge, and all sensualities and wait upon me. My life may'be somewhat shortend in this world by dissoluteness, but that will only make heavenly indulgence on a larger scale the sooner possible. I will 1 OTenase inc samis at lasb auu win euiet i the heavenly temple only a litlle later ( than these who behaved themselves i here. 1 will cn my way to heaven take i a little wider excursion than those who 1 were on earth plou?. and I shall go to ; heaven via Gehenna and via 3heol." 1 Another chance in the next world means i free license and wild abandonment in t this. < Suppose you were a party m an im- I portant case at law, and you knew from consultation with judges and attorneys ] " ' 1.1 L - .3 2.? j *i.~ mat it wouiq oe irieu twiue, auu ux i first trial would be cf little importance, but that the second would decide everything. For which trial would yoa make ths most preparation, for which retain the ablest attorneys, for which be most anxious about, the attendance of witnesses? Yoa would put all the stress upon the second trial, all the anxiety, all the expenditure, saying, "The first is nothing; the last is everything;." Give the race asEurance of a second and important trial in the subsequent life, and ail the crenaration for eternity would be "post mortem," post funeral, 1 post sepulchral, and the world with one ? jerk ba pitched off into impiety and god- i lessness. 1 Furthermore, let me ask why a chance i should be given in the next world if we i have refused innumerable chances in i this? Suppose you give a banquet, and you invite a vast number of friends, but one man declines to come or treats ycur invitation with indi2eren.ee. You , m the coarse of 20 years give 20 ban- J quets and the same man is invited to j them all and treats them all in tbe same ] obnoxious *vay. After awhile you re- i move to another hcuse, larger and bet- ; ter, and yen again invite your fritnds, ' but send no invitation to tbe man who 1 declined or neglected the other invita- J tiens. Are you to blame? Has he a J right to expect to be invited a-ter ail the , indignities he has done ycu, God in ; this earth has invited U3 all to tbe ban- J quel cf his grace. He invited us bv his ; proyidence and his spirit 3G5 days of j oT7?r^7 Tpnr wf?.knew nnr riwhl. hanr? i from our left. If we declined it every : time cr treated the invitation with mdif- i ference, and gave 20 or 40 or 50 years ] cf indignity on our part toward the bancceter, and ot last be spreads the ban- ] quet in a more luxuriant and kingly place amid the heavenly gardens, have we a right to expect him to invite us again, and have we a right to blame j him it he does not inviteus? If 12 gates of salvation stood open 20 j years cr 50 yenrs for our admission and . at the end of that time they are closed, < can we complain of it and sav: "These i gates ought to be open again. Give us ; - another chance?" It ths steamer is to sailior Hamburg and <*e want to get to Germany by that line, and we read in every evening and every morning sews- i paper that it will sail on a certain day, for two week? we have that akvertisei ment btforc our eye3, and then we go down to the dock 15 miEutes after It has shoved eft'into the Btream and say, ' Come back. Give me another chancs. It is not lair to treat me in this way. Srcioi up to the dock again, and throw cut plack3, and let me come on board." Sued behavior would invite arrest as a msdman. And if alter the gospel ship has Jain at anchor before oar eyes lor years and years, and all the benign voices of earth and heaven have urged us to get on fcoirri, as she might set sail at any moment and after awhile stw sails without us. 13 it common sense to expect her to comeback?. Ycu might as well go out on the Highlands at Xavesink and call to the Majestic after she has b;en three cays cut, and expect her to return as to call back an opportunity for heaven when it has occe spsa awav. ah neaven oii'ered as a gratuity, and for a lifetime refuse to taks it, and then rush on the bosses of Jehovah's buckler demanding another chance. There ousht to be, there can be, there will be no such thing as posthumous opportunity. Thus our common sense agree* with my ttxt, "It the tree fall toward the sculh or toward the north, in the place where the tree falleth there it shall bs." You see that this idea lifts this world up from an unimportint way station to li pitt'.lVJiLUL Ui OlUJtUUJUO iO^UwO uuu coake3 all eternity whirl around this hear. Bat oae trial for whici all the preparation must be made m this world or cever made at all. That piles up all the emphasis aDd all the climax33 and ail the destinies into life here. No other chance! Oh, how that augments the yalu5 and importance of this ;hanct! Alexander, with his army used to surround a city, and then would lift a sjreat light in token to ihe people that if they surrendered before the light went out all would be well. But if once the light went out then the battering rams would swing against the wall, and demolition and disaster would follow. Well, all we need do for our present and sverlasting safety is to make surrender Lo Chmt, the king and conqueror?surrender of our hearts, surrender of our lives, surrender of everything. And he keep3 asreat light burning, ligbtofsroa* pal invitation, light kindled with the wood of the cross and flaming up against fcae dark night of cur sm and sorrow. Surrender while that great li^ht coatinae3 to burn, for after it goes out there will be no other opportunity oi making peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. Talk of another chance! Why this is a supernal chance! In the time of Edward VI, at the battle of Musselburg, a private soldier, 3eeing that tbe Earl of Huntley had lost hia helmet toon off his own helmet and put upon the head of the earl, and the bead cf the private soldier uncovered he was soon slain while his commander rode safely cut of the battle. But in Dur case, instead of a private soldier offering helmet to an earl, it is a king putting his crown upon an unworthy subject, the king djing that we might live, rell it on all points of the compass. Pell it to night and day. Tell it to all earth and heaven. Tell it to all centuries, all a2;es, all millenniums, that we Eiave such a magnificent chance in this world that we need no other chance in the nest. I am in the burnished judgment hall Df the last day. A. great white throne s lifted, but the Judge has not vet taken it. While we are waiting tor his arrival r ?r>-i ol avii-if Q in f tOT"l L Vv7UIV4VM?.V-. "What are you waiting here for?" says i scul that went up from Madagascar to a soul that ascended from America. The latter says: ,kI came from America where 40 years I beard the gospel preached and Bible read, and from the prayer that I learned in infancy at my mother's knee until my last hour I had ?ospel advantage, but for some reason I 3ia not make fie Christian choice, and I im bere waiting f:>rthe Judge to give ne a new trial and another chance." ^Strange," says the other. "I had but 5ne gospel call in Madagascar, and I accepted it, and I do not need another chance." ' Why are you here?" aajs one who Dn earth had feeblest intellect to one tvbo had sreat brain, and silvery tongue, md scepters of influence. Tne latter respone s: ' Oh, I knew more than my iellows. I mastered libraries and bad earned titles from colleges, and my same was a synonym for eloquence and Dower. And yet I neglected my soul, iik', I am bere waiting for a new trial." "Strange*" says the one of the feeble ;arthly capacity. "1 knew but little of worldly knowledge, but I knew Christ rod made him my partner, and I have no leed of another chance." Now the ground trembles with the approaching chariot, The great folding loors cf the hall swing open. "Stand sack!" cry the celestial ushers. "Stand sack, and let the Judge of quick and lead pass through!" fie lakes the throne, and looking over tfcethorogcf nations he sajs: "Come to judgment, the last judgment, the only judgment." Bv one flash from the throne all the his Lory of eacb one flames forth to the vision of himself and all others. "D.vide!" says the juge to the assembly. "Divide!" ?cho the walls. "Divide!" cry the the guards angelic. And now the immortals separate, rushicg this way and that, and after iwhile there is a great ai?le between ;hem, and a great vacuum widening and widening and the Judge, turning to the throng on one side, says, "He thai is righteous, let him be righteous still; and ie that is holy, let him be holy still," ind then, turning towards the throng on the opposite side, he says, "He that is mjast, et him be unjust, still md he that is filthy let him ce Slthv still." and then, lifting one hand toward each group, he declares, "If the tree fall toward the south or toward the aortb, in the place where the tree falleth there it shall be." And then I hear something jar with a great sound. It is the closing of the book of judgment, rhe Judge ascends the stairs behind rtie throne. The hall of the last assize is ileared and shut. The high court of sternity is adjourned forever. Musical Homes are Happy Homes . Have you ever noticed it? Call to mind the homes of your friends who havo a ennd Pinnr* nr O reran in thp house. Are they not brighter and more attractive than those where the livine art of music never enters ? To be sure it costs to buy a good instrument, but it lasts many years, and will pay its costs many a thousand times 3ver by interesting the young folks in their homes. Don't make the mistake, though, of Investing haphazard. Post yourself thoroughly by writing Ludden & Bates Southern Music House, Sav3hnab, Ga., the great music house of the South, established in 1870. They have supplied 50,000 instruments to South sra nomes, ana naye a reputation xor fair prices and honorable treatment of customers; and they represent the leading pianos and organs of America Ibey take pleasure in corresponding with you, sending free catalogues, etc Write them. Lois TrittoD, the last slave sold in New Haven, died Sunday night at her tome in that city. She was bom in Halifax, X. S., Christmas Eve 1799, and was a slave up to 1825, when she and her sister were sold on Xew Haven &reen to Anthony P. Sanford for S10, tinder an execution issued on a former judgment against herowner. ? ECBMai..Jn 11> mntMBBi A WAR OF WORDS. TILLMAN AND BUTLER LOCK HORNS IN DEAD EARNEST. Stormy Meotlrgj 8z Chester and Lancaster?Gre&t Excitement and Seme Fear thit Trouble Would Arla^ But Forlunately Everything: Passed off Peaca&bly. Lancaster, S. C., June 21.?The meetlcg at Chester yesterday was red hot, and it is a wonder that there was not serious trouble. Governor Tillman was tne urst speaker, jtie saia ne was glad that his term as Governor was nearly out. Ke said he had a hard and stumpy road to travel, but that he had cleaned out everything in the road for the people, and that he was there asking to" be sent to the United States Senate. The Governor said the farmers were being legislated into the poor house by the national government. Things in this State were kind of straight now, although they needed some changes. He told the people to x-t. iTA vvatca ice legislators. jae saiu uicti- iui thirty years the laws of the national government have been made in the interest of the classes against the masses. Most legislation is aimed directly at the farmer. The result is a few millionaires and sixty million paupers. He said the people had been bamboozled and had sent men to Congress who sold them out. The Governor said that if he were sent to the Senate he would try to turn things upside down. The Governor said he wanted to go to the Senate because he wanted to do something for the starving and down trodden farmers. A majority of the Senators now in Congress worship money and bow down to the golden calf. Lots of them were millionaires. The people sometimes tore things upside down in the House of Representatives. but the monev rower is en trenched in the Senate". Monopolies and trusts control everything. He went on to say that trusts and combines buy Congress and buy Legislatures la some States to elect Senators. They have invaded South Carolina with their money and are trying to buy you. He spoke of the flock Hill Coxey army hauled free by railroads and jumped on the Richmond and Danville Road again. He told the whole free excursion plan to the delight of the audience. He said the blame for it lay among four?Butler,Cleveland, whiskey or railroads. He said it may have made Butler feel good to hear his friends cheer him, but it made Tillman feel bad for Butler. He said: "I would beat T* -- :r V ? * *ws.A ijUUer 11 J. weuo uauix lu VAUu.mu.ia auu never opened my mouth. (Cries of "Yes.") but I want to get out with the people." He said Butler had not gotten rich in the Senate, but bad rubbed up against millionaires so long that he half way believed himself to be one and was incapable of representing the people. About this time there was a single cheer for Butler. The Tillmanites yelled: "That's mighty weak." Tillman brought up Butler's support of the nominees In 1890 and spoke some about Hampton. Butler had resented in plain terms the rising up of the people and said that it would - ? -nt ?*- _1 - amount 10 cnaos. jc rom mai cnaus cue Governor said arose Clemson and Winthrop, and by it railroads and Coosaw were whipped into submission. Butler is not in sympathy with you. He has been away from home too long. As to what Butler had done he had distributed a few seeds, which Butler himself admitted wera of no account; He read Butler's letter to the Democratic Executive Committee and said it was ambiguous. He said he would leave it to the committee to do what it pleased. He was wliling to abide the result of the Democratic primaries. When he srot ready to leave the party he would ~b3t two-third 3 of the party went with him. (Loud applause.) A BITTER SPEECH. Senator Butler was then introduced and spoke substantially as follows: "WheD I began this campaign I announced that I intended to say nothing that would provoke trouble or excitement and Governor Tillman,in his first speech, said he wanted issues and public measures only discussed. Yet at Yorkville, where he had the reply, he put an insult upon my character that I ?? a- J ~ ?. permit no man living 10 uu wnuuui resenting. (This provoked some confusion and tne crowd began to look out for squalls.) Gen. Sutler raised bis voice vehemently and declared he proposed to have a hearing and if he punished Tillman he must take his punishment like a little 1 n. Governor Tillman charged or *ather in a meaner way than that, by insinuation, innuedo and suggestion, that I had a corruption fund from Wall Street or elsewhere with which to buy my seat into the Senate. I say in reply that he or any other man who says so is an infamous liar. When he has charges to make against me as a man or as a Senator. let him come like a man of cour age and truth and specify, and not indulge in the innuedo of a blackguard. The man has never lived (Voice: "Tell it.") and never will live who imputes dishonesty to me. Governor Tillman may go to the Senate, but he shall not go there slandering me. Let him go on his own merits, and not by misrepresenting and villifying better men than he is. lie thinks I am not in sympathy with the people of this State. Voice: "Were you at Brandy Station ?" Ye3l was, and I am here today, and I will be with the Governor evsry day. I trust I have not got some of the defects of his character whereby he accuses a man behind his back" and the next day denies he said it. Kef erring to the Governor's remarks about the Coxeyites at Rock Hill, Gen. Butler pointed to some one in the crowd as one of the Coxeyites who came from Edgefield, and said that the Governor would no more dare to say to that; man that he was a tramD. if * he were on equal terms with him, than he would undertake to fly. Tillman had insulted these men bacause they had gone to Rock Hill without his consent. He had been bossing this State so long that he thought he had ajright, title and interest to do it. Regarding the Governor's remarks concerning his not having spoken in the heated campaign four years ago, Gen. Butler declared that Tillman did not tell the truth when he said the committee had invited him to speak in the canvass. He said: "I was systematically ignored. Gen. Hampton was invited and went 10 ii.iK.eu uu aycaii. auu immau o uijnmidons howled him down and tried to disgrace that old man. I did not go to the meetings because I was not invited and it appears to me it was a part of a design to keep me from the people. In *arxc% rx.-j 3 Km* tttaa ioyz 1 leuuereu. my aeiviuca, uui y?oo not permitted to speak. Some one asked about Hamburg and Gen. Butler said he was there, but didn't see Tillman. He had been told, though he didn't know how true it was, that when the shootinz began Tillman couldn't be found. Tillman said he was not in the war because he was too young, but some of his (Buter's) couriers were younger than that. Tillman had claimed the credit for Clemson College, but the people knew that men like Tindal and Simpson had as much as anybody to do with it. Tillman was always attacking somebody while that somebody was away. At Yorkville he had the indecencv'to lue Col. McBee's wife into his speech, but he would no more fling an insult of that kind in McBee's face on terms of equality than he would attempt to pull up a tree by its roots. Gen. Butler said he had nothing to do with outside men being taken to Rock Hill; he didn't know who arranged it and did not care. Tillman admitted yesterday that some of his friends came on the same train and on free passes. Voice?'Given by your friends." (Jen. Butler then exhibited the famous "Bass jtfo.1," oyer the Richmond. ana uanvme, given to uovernor mini an and family. Some one asked him where he got it, and the Genereal replied that it was nobody's business where he got it. Turning to Governor Tillman, he asked him if he denied receiving this pass. Governor Tillman?I do not ana I know the man who hauled these men gave it to you. (Applause.) Gen. Butler went on to say that when Tillman "was caught with this pa3S, like a thief with stolen goods, he gave It up and threw himself behind his wife." Taking out of his pocket a copy c" the State dispeneary report, Gen. Butler noi/^ Ka fTTontn/l +r\ oo T7 t V? Q f" ho V?oH OC*JLV4 UO nau^u WU OL?J I/UMU UV 4AMV? heard do breath of .'suspicion against any of the departments of the State government. In an interview in the Xew York Herald, Governor Tillman said that he alone was responsible for the dispensary. He says if he goes to the Senate he will not go junketing around. Why did he junket, in Cincinnati ana the West to buy whiskey to ram down the throat3 of the people ? Cheers and counter cheers trough on a good deal of confusion, andGoverner Tillman arose and assisted the chairman in re3t8ring order. Continuing, the Senator said he had not gone junketing while in Congress. Thirty days would cover every day he AM Kio Amn QAArtnnf II dU. UCCL1 <2UCCjUU UU Jiio u tt a uouvuuu since he was Grst elected to the Senate. Heading from the report of the dispensary, Gen. 15utler said that the assetsiaccording to the reports, footed up S280.347.37 and the liabilities the same; but instead of that-, the former really amounted to only $260,(534.10, a shortage of $19,000. Where is it, said he? Can Governor Tillman account for it? Has any of it struck in his pocket, to be used as a campaign fund to bribe you? I leave it to him to account for that, and if he can, nobody will be more delighted than myself. Gen. Butler read from the reports, saying that the purchase of wines was shown there without giving prices or quanity, and yet they call that an honest administration of the public funds. There is over $5,000 marked down nere in tms way ior oue quanmr, giving no explanation, except the gross quantity of all the various kinds purchased. How much of that ?5,000 is to be used as a corruption fund to buy his way into the United States Senate? A Voice: -God knows." I wonder if he stays there for six years if any money will stick to his pocket! Speaking of the Governors statement that any Reformer who got office under Cleveland was looked on with suspicion as having been bought, Gen. Butler pointed to United States Marshal Hunter, and said that be was appointed by Cleveland, that he was a Reformer and asked the crowd if he was bought. This was answered by cries of "^ever!" and Mr. Hunter said he defied any man to say he was bought. Ka Irnonr nf Anltr VJCli* iJUHCl oaiu uc auuvi v& uuxj vuw appointment given this State at his request. It was well known that Cleveland did dot incline to him on account of his position on uoance at tbe extra session. Answering the charge that United States Senators had raised money to help him in his canvass, Gen. Butler stated that his brother Senators had voluntarily offered to do so, bat that he had declined to let them. The man who said he had a corruption fund for that or any other purpose was a liar. He charged Governor Tillman with having perpetrated a deliberate slander on the United States Senate. There was less money among the members now than in ante bellum times. These men would not be purchased half as quickly as the man who made the charges. There was Gordon and Walsh, Morgan and Pugh, Berry, Jones, Vest, Cockerill, Blackburn aad Daniel and Lindsay. Southerh men against whom th6 breath of slander was never heard until today when thi3 man made his_base charges. When l asJtea mm 11 ne wouia put his chances on voting in a separate box he pretends that he does not understand it. If he dare submit to a primaay I will beat him three to one before the people. But when I have got to contend with the rings arid packed conventions he has built up I am at a disadvantage. And I quote his friend and associate Senator Irby, when I speak of rings in the State House. I have a theory about that dis pensary and I believe it was put through by Tillman to be used as a political machine to send him to the United States Senate. Under that law he had a right to appoint ten thousand constables to be his political workers, and we read in the newspapers tnat wnen tne decision of the Supreme Court, declaring the law unconstitutional, came, he said it paralyzed him. I don't wonder. It broke up his political smoke house. The Legislature gave him $50,000 to start the dispensary with, but instead of that he tooK several hundred thousand and exceeded his authority. I have Known the clerks in Washington to go two months without their salaries, because Congress had not appropriated money therefor. Cleveland never dares to exceed an amount appropriated. The system of accountability under that dispensary law is loose, and over S19,000 is unaccounted for in one quarter. The next time the Governor charges me with having a corruption fund, I would rather him specify it. Voice: 'Tell us what you have done in the Senate." Butler: "I have dons my best. I don't know whether I could satisfy you if I brought on the millenium." (Laughter.) Gen. Butler made light of Governor Tillman's professions as to being a farmer, declaring that he had plowed twenty furrows to the Governor's one. He had not seen where the Governor had benefitted the State. I voted for him twice, and I hope the Lord will forgive me for it. He said the Governor's brother. (Congressman Tillman, had dignified his office and had not gone about standing .and villifying men as the Governor had. The Senator said he knew the causes of depression better than Tillman did and he had more chance of correcting thfi evils than Tillman, because he had a settled line of action, while the Governor's scheme was only abuse. He wonld not undertake, like Tillman, while professing Democracy, to pull down l&e pillars of Damoacry on all our heads, The Democratic party had its faults and he had been disappoined in some particulars, but some of its pledges had been carried uot. He hoped that the party would next time put forward a man at the head of the government who could do the people's will as Mr. Cleveland had not done. The President had no right to veto the seigniorage bill. In the great struggle Gen. Butler declared he would be found always on the side of the people. To his own personal detriment he had stood for the people. When he concluned Chairman Barber stated that the Governor wished to make a brief explanation, but Gen. Butler said that he had himseif made tbe same request at Yorkville arter the Governor's speech and it had been refused, and he preferred that the Gover nor ta&e ws cnances at we ucai meewu^. TILLMAN REPLIES TO BUTLER. At this place today Governor Tillman replied to the speech of Senator Butler made at Chester yesterday, and which is given above. When Tillman was introduced he began by saying that he had done more work than all the Governors since the war and he wanted to be sent to the Senate, because he believed he could be of equal service there. Replying to Gen. Butler's remarks at Chester yesterday, he said that every imaginable indignity had been heaped upon him and that it was blacker and fouler than had been made against any man. "You took them," shouted Yancey Sherrard, a well known drummer. *1 will tell you why I took them, you cowardly hound. I will meet you ?- *- - >? i:?.i wnerever you want to, repneu tuci Governor. '-JL took them because I am Governor of South Carolina and I cannot afnrd to create a rios on the public platform." Zlr. Sherrard made some reply tbat was inaudible on account of the noise created by the crowd, which became agitated at this sensational incident. Scores of men jumped up and gathered about Mr. Sherrard and various cheering and hurrahing ensued. A number nf ladies left their seats ouicklv and 1 moved away, and the Governor called to them to return, that nobody would 1 be hurt and^ that the "few little pup- i pies barking around here can have their tails and necks both cut off, if they want to," 1 After quiet had teen restored the Governor continued his speech as fol- : lows: Gen. Butter's pretense was that 1 j had insulted him. The insult was that ! I said at Rock Ilill that 800 men J had been hauled there free to hurrah for him. I had ridiculed them as the 1 new Coxeyites, the tools of the corpo- 1 rations, and 1 said that somebody had 1 money to spend and that there was a * corruption fund, and that somebody 1 had the disbursing of it. I said if he ( did do it let himsay so. If the railroads did not do it let the superintendent, '< who is here say so. "There is no doubt that Wall Street, ; through Cleveland's mnuence, nas ] raiseda corruption fund to buy your Senatorship. If he felt aggrieved, as I an old neighbor of mine, couldn'c he have said to me, "Did you mean to say i that I am responsible for this?" This is the way he" should have done if he ; had been a gentleman; lie was glad of j an excuse to assume the attitude of bulldozer and of saying things by innu- . endo, which he knows the men of j Edgefield don'c take. If an insult is i offered in Edgelield there is a fight or i afunerai. Gen. Butler had declared < that he was to pitch this campaign on < a high plane, but in an interview at ; Darlington for the Associated Tress he < characterized me as a bully and braggart, yet when I met him at Ilock Hill ; i aaaressea myaen aoieiy iu tuc issues, i His speech was made up of innuendoes < aad personalities. . i At Yorkville he confined himself to 1 the issues and at that meeting I ex- i posed the new Coxey business and 1 < intend to keep it to his back a3 a nris- 1 tard plaster, until it is explained. ] From henceforth I shall denominate ' him as ''Coxey JButler." (Laughter < from the crowd and "That's right," 1 from Gen. Butler.) 1 thought we had . too much State pride to show ourselves i that way before the world, until the i General disgraced himself by accusing i the Governor of being a bully, brag- j gart, coward and thief. He don't make ] these charges directly. He out-innuendos innuendo, if there is such a thing i r?/-\oo4K1o Than ho his month : TV uvu MV ? and put out his tongue to see if it was ( bitter, it only stunk from the foul ] words. i The Governor said he beat Sheppard j for Governor 1,600 votes in his own ' county and he would beat Gen. Butler ! more than that there. I can afford, said he, to show records 1 with him, both public and private, but 1 I will not speak of all the things noto- ] riously current about his private rec* ! ord, because 1 don't fight that way. I . bslieve him honest, notwithstanding j the Chadwick lottery in Charleston in ' 1874. We forgave him that mistake, ] notwithstanding we lost our money \ and he is supposed to have made a great deal by it. Soiliog another will 1 not make oneself clean. I defy him, 1 the world, the flesh and the devil to Dring anything against my private ? record. The young man who says I ] took his insults, and I suppose he was ] a Coxeyite, and a fair sample of the ] An th/i oof Phootfir 1 LUC 11 UUlICUcCU UU LLU3 OUCklSKJL C* U V/VfcVMUV/*, j to curse me, I tell you the honest trutb, my pulseneyer quickened the one-six- < teenth of an incn. < As he made the remarks Mr. John s Dunnovant, who had been at the Ches- 1 ter meeting, jumped upon the stand < leaned over the stage railing, and told < the Governor tnat he wanted to ask i nim a question. He was very calm. ] Before he could propound his question the chairman and several marshals ] hollowed out to him to get down from the staud and not interrupt the speaker. Dunnovant insisted on putting nis i question, but a dozen persons clustered < him onri atfomnt.pfl fcn dra<r Q1VUUU UJ.U UUM W?vw>w Jf ww , 0 him from the stage. He persisted that he simply wanted to ask a question but that he didn't care to be pulled down. However, he finally sot down on the ground in som* way and an excited crowd gathered arouad him as he was very determinedly telling the marshals to take their hands off of him and let him alone. During all this commotion Governor Tillman started to resume his speech, saying he had no man going around with him to act as a bully; that the , people were his protectors. About this time there was a sort of .incipient . volcano raging behind the stage where . the Chester man stood in the midst of ' excited friends and foes. He sung , out that "if Tillman told him to move, , ^ "? ? ? * ? 1 U?a a?n mm, ue wuuiuu u gu. At this ;i number of persons shouted "kill him" and it looked as if the volcano would belch forth fire. . People began running to the rear of the stage, while DuLnovant. stood cool and deliant tellinc; the marshals to nke their hands off him: that he was doing nothing. Governor Tillman sung out that he did not know who he was, but if they had aay law in Lancaster, they had better take him to jail. Some effort was eventually made to do this, but Dunnovant's friends stuck to him and a clash seemed imminent. "Where is Butler?" shouted some one. "Eight down there in the thick of it, bS lit! iuwaj's *a wm;u i/uotc u uuuy.i, shouted a voice, pointing to the lionlike form of Gen. Butler, who was standing in.the midst of the excited crowd doing his utmost to pacify them. By that intervention of providence which is sometimes thrown between life and death, order was restored and the Governor renewed his speech. "Gen. Butler may just as well understand," said he, "chat such unseemly and disgraceful conduct is not going to phase me one iota. He is the beat man. lam not. I am not goin? to be intimidated. They have talked so mnc.h about killing me that I think I am going to live as long as the Lord intends me to. I will now take up some of Butler's false ssatements. He says that the executive committee aid not invite him to speak in 1890. I can't prove now that they did, but the records will show that the invitation was ordered to be sent to him. If it wasn't sent he can't charge me with it, and bis statement that I was in a plot to keep him from speaking is unworthy of him. lie says that [ asked Strait to aid in fighting him?. Pshaw! The man who has handled Earle, Orr and Sheppard doesn't need any help to handle one more lawyer. Col. McBee is here and I will repeat what I said about bis wife at Yorkville. I simply said that some newspaper had said that his wife ougrht to leave him because he had allowed me to sleep io his room in his private car goiDg to Washington. Turning to Col. McBee, the Governor stated that he had made this remark in perfect good humor and inquired if he considered it insulting. ; Col. McBee arose, his stalwart form straightening to its full length, and looked the Governor squarely in the eye, and told him he would tell him exart.lv what he thouzht about it. Said he: "This is a political campaiga in which I have no interest. I have not attended these meetings and do not expect to attend them, except where I may have business, and Governor Tillman I say to you now that so far as Mrs. Mcliee's name is concerned you must keep it out of this campaign." Col. McBet utteced these words in a determined manner and with emphasis and he raised a torrent of applause. Governor Tillman started to say something and Col. McBse told him Lhe did not want any explanation. ? , The Governor?I will discuss you some more yet. Col. McBee?But don't you dare say anything about her. Governor Tillman then s^-id- A.11 right, if Col. McBee considered he had used htrname unwarrantably he would apologize for it. lie went on to say something about Gen. Butler having made reference so his wife, and Gen. j Butler immediately replied: "I apolc gize for that." There was some little excitement during this snappy dialogue, and a great many persons closed up around the stand. Governor Tillman said he would repeat to Col. McBee's face that if he, as superintendent of the Richmond and Danville, was responsible for these men beini? carried on free passes, he would declare that it was an interference with the liberty of the people by the corporations. The Governor declared that the statement-. mar?A h\7 fi-en Rutlftr. when he ield up a pass at Chester, yesterday, chat it was the original pass No. 1 issued to him by ''Bunch" McBe?, was [alse. Cel. McBeedid not have the Driginel pa9S. "I have it myself." There was loud applause for Tillman it this. Where did Butler gefc it? said he. Elis friend, ilcBee took one of his passes and wrote a duplicate of it. Cel. McBee: "I will bet you $5,000 hat if- in rhf> nriorinal nass." Governor Tillman: "It is not. J saw ia my drawer, last year." Col. Mcrise: "I will certainly Dreak FOu for the money on that and will prove it by your own correspoadence." This brought the cheers for Col. McBee. Governor Tillman went on to jay that Cel. McBee was a kinsman of Gren. Butler and they were as thick as thieves. I will characterize his conduct as I please, said he, and until he denies that he took those men to Rock ELiil I will stick it to him as being responsible for it. The Governor then took up Gsn. Butler's statement as to the shortage 3f S19.000 as shown in the State dispensary report. Ha declared that the mountain had labored and had not even brought forth a mouse. On the very opposite page of tue report rrom wmca Gran. Butler read, it would be seen tbat this 319,000 was an omission of the printer and was inserted afterward, f he report was made up by Commissioner Traxier and he never saw it until it was sent to him. Yet Gen. Bntler accused him of stealing public money. (Applause for Tillman.) Ttie next time Butler made any charges against him he had better see if his rock was not a lump cf cotton before tie pitched it. Tbe Governor said the second section of tbe dispensary act gave him authority to use more than the S50300 appropriated for starting the dispensary. Under that section the motley from the county dispensaries was turned over to the State Treasurer to be drawn by the dispensary commission when necessary. Holding up the law, Governor Tillman asked Gen. Butler if he, as a lawyer, denied -lis authority to use this money. Gsn. Butler replied that he would read one section and answer it tomorrow. The Governor said that Butler had imitated bis friend Haskell, who had brought up his war record and intimated that he was a coward for not going in the war when he was an invalid, [t was not generous in him to do so. Shame on you, said he brave soldier that you are! Gen. Butler denied that he had done " I 30, ana <jrOvernor xiumaa repixeu mat, ie had a very treacherous memory, meaning Gsn. Butler's statement that le ought to have led the military to Darlington. The Governer said that his enemies were praying for him to go there in Drder that they might kill him. Jefferson Davis and Lincoln did not follow ;heir armies around, but stayed in their :apitals directing their troops. The Governor s<ud he could prove that he rode down the street at the Hamburgriot with Gen. Butler. Gen. Butler said he remembered nothing about it. ml-- ? 4-V.o nt o I JLlitj uruvemui auuutcu wg iu?> ui u Eillman being a coward, when six Tillnana had given their blood for their jountry. Kef erring to Gan. Butler's statement is to the large amount of money that ae had spent, for lawyers' fees while je had been Governor, Tillman stated le had only spent ?9,000 altogether, while Smythe alone nad been paid ?15,XX) by A. P. Butler in one case. As Jan. Butler was such a fiae lawyer the aeople had better make him Attorney j-sneral, though Buchanan, down there in Columbia, "could black and sell him 13 a lawyer." The Governor declared that the rich sorporiiiions 01 tae couuiry uwutu iuc federal judiciary. Every judge now appointed was put there by Wall street and thev never put a man there who would not stretch the Contitution in the interests of the money power against the people. He scored Judge Siinouton and said that the only reason that he decided against the llichmond and Danville was because the Legislature had memorialized Congress and because in his message he had blistered his back all over. Ten days after he had shown Simonton up as a tool of the railroads, Cleveland had put him in Judge Bond's place. He was just the kind or tenow that they wanted there to control things. Gen. Butler knew all about Simonton's tyranny and invasion of State rights, but he never opened his mouth in the Senate against it. He just said: "Simonton Is the kind of man 1 want. He is 'Bunch's' friend. Pass him along." The Governor declared, so help him, God, the people who had tried to get the Agricultural Hall in Columbia would never get it. Before the Supreme Court affirmed the decision in their favor, Secretary o? state Tmaai would be out of office and the litigation would be kept on for a hundred years. In regard to his meeting Ben Terrell atSpartinburg, the Govenor said he still occupied the identicial position tha' he occupied in Soartanburg. lie asked Gen. Butler what had bacome of him at Batesburg when Tom Watson anDihiliated him. Butler: "Ob, he used me up." The Governor went on to say he would not call iiuuer nia rriena until he had apologized to him, but that after he had given his back a few more battings he would be a right sort of a good fellow. Discusing the dispensary, the Gdvernor said tbat they now had a net profit of S90.000 to turn into ttie State treasury. In the town of Abberville the profits from the dispensary amounted to more than they had ever had under any other system. There was 84,600 to be devided between town and county, and what the county got was just that much picked up, as it had had never gotten any money from whiskey before. * vi r? f- oil OUine UUC 1U LUC UUWU oaiu man an of the clod-hoppers would vote for Tillman ana the Governor replied that the general had better quit the race then. Touching Gen. B title's rem irks as to the purchase of wines by the dispensary without giving the quantities In the official reports, the Governor said that these wines were bougth for the hotels at Charleston and Aiken. There was vouchers in Columbia for every scintilla of liquor brought. J3=er had been brough t by the car load, and he asfced lien, isuuer now ne coaia tea how many gallons there were. Gen. Butler said he did not kaow, and that it was not his business to run it. "Well, you had better let it alone," said Governor Tillman, it is being run mighty well now. Regarding Gen. Butlers proposition fnr a canarat.o Sprt?f.r>ri?l hriY t.hfi fiflV ernor said the scheme was to buy votes and put in that box as they did last time for Sheppard. Tni3 ended the speaking and the crowd dispersed. ri - . - r;- 2*:. , Tillman sod Dr. Cm: -.3l Columbia, S. CM June 16 ?Theooi L*u"3 G-'obe-Lemocrat is said to cons ol ru < xprcssion of opinion from Go7eicb- .1 Til' nan rpg*rding t^e ustimelineadid the Rev. Dr. Cave'a address m RSt. v5?\-aiot^d in May. Governor Tillman tain not l>ke the interview, and gave me this statement tor the press: V ' I have not seen the Globe Democrat JC and do not feel altogether warranted in denouncing that as false which may not have appeared m that paper. All I have ~<%a got to s a v is that it is another New York Herald fake if each a thing has appeared anywhere. I have not s-nt any each Hj leiegram or even eipreaueu auy ueaw meats like this, and while I did not read D , Cave's utterances I yield to no man in admiration for the men who fought for the "Lost Cause." That cause was 1'ust, and the Confederate soldier is my 5HQ hi2he3t type ot a patriot." He also sent this telegrem: Globe DaaiocratjSS. Louis; Have you published as coming from me a telegram v.-:;' purporting to say: l<Ju3t so long as such infamous utterances are allowed to go on uurebuked just so long will oar Northern brethern keep their distance?" 3 (In reference to Dr. Cavea'a Richmond address) If so, you have been Imposed ^ $1 on. I have not received any request x M for an ODinlOD. and. therefore, have*sent \i none. Please answer. B.R. Tillmam. U Xo reply was received this eyenlng. T. J. Shepard, of Brunswick, a junior at Emory College, Georgia, selected a-* bis subject at commencement this week: "Tillman in Maintenance of Law," and painted the Governor of South Carolina in glowing colors as a hero of the first water. 'ASSET! PAYS THE FREMI 4 8% -a? Prim f* 6aidil' end fer i JtaicgM asd Sea Whit Ym Cm Sail -'<:C? "jo* jgs A lits. *i; price*. mm $69?r|f?$37 Just to introduce them. . 1 No freight paid on thia Or- ^ f-V& gun. Guaranteed to be a f%'i rood organ or money f ^*51 funded. ? P[op(i. i i?!<>??.nt Plush PARLOR SUITS, con*i*tiB| i>; Sofa, Arm Chair. Rocking Chair. Dlvaa, -I .. r? - > <^/> 4 WAPtK Win rfANTM I: to roar ds^ot for $88. ?- ?? ?. This No. tWIK JIM ^mi^ml =?i *j Prtoe(ISa Ago sxwnra Kwsas with all attachments. for delivered to your depot. *:^ VThe"regular price of this ? BUGGY is 65 to 75 dollars. H HH The manufacturer pays all i the expenses and I sell them ' 1 Qfl to tou for ^42.79- W\jM uia jaarantee every on* a terrain. No freight paid wa this Buejy * ^ "AW LnXW.** y?? fiepot J l-l frgl^rhi paid for ilflo . Send for cat*!or><* of Furniture, . * J (Stoves, Baby C?rrifc*?w, Bicycles, oxgaat, ?- a UotL Tea Seta, Dinner Set*, I*my. *9., aa4 \ 1 BAVK MONEY. \J L.F.PABOBTT"L53L,Sr 1 Stnral ancTctfr fl eral Plantation D&o, have earn oel an/ miter Srtrzl I 1MB "? U Only 190 for a Superb M asck a { 3 ^ Haxlin Organ. 4 seja Keed*, < ? lo Stops, Rich Case. $5 cash era and S3 monthly. Reduced j 3=a from $115. Writ* Us. < a Beantifal Sterling Mirror Top * ? jL only$60. 4 sets Reeda, 11 Stop?. j M ^ Write Us. * rfl Lovely New Styles at $65 and! S $75. Write Us. zi? Elegant New Pianos only $225.4 ;?j UfliraiErnL at the Pricz. Ca I WHITE US. ?ji Tremendous bargains in nearly J ;J? new Pianos and Organs, used ' ?S a trifle only. Writ* Us. Jig II you want a Piano or Organ , ??| now is the time to boy it 3* sight. Waits Us. ( 3 Write us anyhow. Trade is (S3 dull and you can't ask mors ( qnestionH about Pianos and I Sa j Organs than we want to an* I X| , ' J swer. Try it, please. < ? ^ llItlMS.M.H.1 ' ' ? [ SAVANNAH, GA. B NOW IS THE TIME ~ 4 TO PLACE TOUR ORDERS FOR 4 Threshers! Ana l bell tne isest m tne Marsec. wnte te me Before Buying. Shingle Machines, -Stave Machines, Brick Machines, Planing Machines, . Swing Saws, ^ Band saws, Gam? liip Saws, j and all kinds of wood worki&g machines. 'Jrisfc Mills $115 to $250. %". Saw Mills $190 to $400. ^ > Watertown Engines and Boilers. ^ v TalbottEagines and Boilers. Seed Cotton Elevators. Cottoh Gins and Presses HIGH and "LOW TIT? ITJjj. 1 COLUMBIA. S:C,