The Fairfield news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1881-1900, January 30, 1895, Image 4
- i lllWl??C3
KlWliM OF COMPASS. k -: A ciurc!,:- :
-max. means \ eiiezueia,
Ecuador and Bolivia.
p^_ :^REV?- DR/, TALLAGE AT THE NEW That means the lorrid zon
r ?VORK ACADEMY 0? MUSIC.
. ~ liable gardens, the music <
. ::H? Preaches a Purely Go>j?el Sermon gr0veS~ tlie lands, the seas
"' ' A'hnTTT><-?in^'"Tt? Information and Pull of by Ili<fht look Up to tl)
? - cross, which in stars trar
^Ho?nent I*>gic-A Fev.- liemarKs About heaven as VOU L
Reform. all the way from the Sa
t ft. rn , , lands to Australia. "The;
j^r^,'i*:5i^EW' YORK. oan. -0. nearty from the south."
^r" Jalm^e at But I must not forget tl
' of Music. 2sew lorx, takes in another cardinal
\uT?H6tt KflfA>?D IOC7 rWI T r? rWKiClATl AT ti i . V . .. !
1 - aT^srairiiriarrodSa's ss
':-, ;5 metropolitan pulpit, was addition- ,r0;.]fi tu.r ' J, *
&- ally emphasized by the immense throng presses o?ie as the Vactth
IS' *tin him thiSt ?fternoo?> a.nS Lnark div^elv biased
Sr.- - to ' -m orchesfrS the world for God. The b
J ' - , ..rhe ?ye lo<> between Janan and Chins
^ -SBSSailSSngkSiSSSSi of o.?positio?
the of the long meter Doxol- eVen-where.1" We hold up
m?& sgj- i-ue subject ot Dr. Talmages , 0^OVO,?Q?+
^1 ;iT> * r /~^ ?? amazement at t-iic mas^
IW^diseouzse was Points of Compass ArtW<ls tW(,h nhrlssti
and ore text Luxe xiii. 29, ihe\ shall never go into such
gg? come from the east, ana from the west, Wo fr?-o-.-r "FW Pillow
^g^^eiiorth, and the south, aad the fact*that during- the
at down. , . north and south rejoiced ^
. ^Theman "who wrote tnis v. as a,. one were 10,000 more wounde
gg^. time a practicing physician, at another 0n the opposite side. Wa
?5^^?s^meataientea painter, at another time p;.- t],? Tnitp/! Qt.
ptttegr^ preacher, at another, time But one |o<5
^prs^ranmspired reporter, joe come fr0m the Japanese-C
^fSSpfjd inspire all report- those regions will be
r' -: From tneir ben drops tae neakh +o civilization and Christi
poison of nations. Tie name of everbeforc. When Missio
^2s reporter was .^ucranus. lor snort ^ before an assemblv of ]
ie was called Luke and m my text Xonhamoton, England. ]
^ althou<rn stenography had not yet | ^,^1;,-,^ rtf 1
kegii born, lie reports verbatim a ser- iau<rhed him oiit of the hoi
of Christ which m one paragraph Calcutta now on the east
the round world into the light goaibav on the west tliei
. ' They shall come neighborhood but direct]
from the w est, and rectjv feels the gospel p<
from tuesoutn,and juggernaut, which did its ;
- shall . for centuries, a few weei
Nothingmore-interested me in my blw^lt out from the plat
v v " recent journey around the world than )ias r vears ^ecn kept urn
V- to seethe ship captain about noon. a curiosity, and there was
\* whether on the Pacific, or the Indian erentiallvto o-reet it. At
or Bengal or Mediterranean or Ked 6m of c?rist?n?souls in In
a nautical xn- advance guard that will 1<
strnment to find just where -.ve were m0OO-O&). The Christian
- , < ? 7) Ka,?W,U"' and Peking and Canton ,
thougn uie <?ptam tells yon mere are vance JTd that wfl! lead,
o2 pomtss of divison ot uie compass 000 00(f f c;; ,.Th
car3 in the marine s compass, there the east/' The last
are only lour carcinal pom.s and my jIohalI!medanism ,vin be ,
v, te^ls&an-tiie north, toesou h, a christian church. The
ie west: .So1 ^k! out **' dliist temple will become a
fore us the raai> o* trie -world to see tne i- i , , extent
of the gospel campaign. The l?t tOd ?I
n xt A -Gi-vi/-"! /~v "U/\ rI ^ ill pitched into tlic fiiB.
of tlie field to be fcwcn is | The Christ who came fro
north because our gcspet is an,| ?;,, vet bi ? ,, ,
V^motiouaijospel. sad toe thm arelug'a <
far north are a cold bloociec,! race. , overcome and "reat or
*"% icebergs and eternal ? d ^ h gefore t
m snowsand everlasting winter Green- j t, A
f landers, Laplanders. Icelanders ?b- d h bntcherv oftheTi
enans-tnen; vehicle is .he sleuge ^ throne on t?e banks of
I the!r "P?';11 russoon crumble! The ti
W thicVest iurs at all seasons, their .exist- d , the Ur.
W en.ce c, lifetime battle with the -cold. * * t v
& m - , -l v -4.1 aoa ernnieiu anu o-reat b
f The -ranter charges ugon them rat. 5ermanv ought t0 iotone a
I, sroras of-ic.ele and strikes hem rath t; f jj, c^vil,zed natior
S ygg? of ha!l a?a,??f?a5 tl,em:wltJ it is not .requisite that an.
V oatterinfr ranp 01 glac*ei. there to avenge the wholes
/But already trie huts of the Arctic , - , ,
^ I'r^L \l. i FrG ?f Armenians, it is req
of kgliteousnesy^^to be g^itinople th^ nations an
^^^^^^^fthsijvperborers' '"Do\rn from ??e ^a^?.^srn A?r 1}^
8??*!^^!^' and 0\ er 12,000 natrves s-;onai.jes are a constant rel
^^^^KveT>ciie>'ed.and been Daptizea. me ':ia>
W&gLtnte* have kindled the light of
i|lllps?he gospel all ap and down Labrador. ? * Tf ' , ,: j "
gg^he'bsSshmi&mhasgathereddisci- *
? KSfi
T ,1 "t * i."V_ T > ' cllT\ JMOlI&U XlO, TV ?10X1 3Slv<
f rstes0f ecSbl;P delfvetng * ? f .?* *
one sermon nine times in the same /TV''
day to as many different tribes who fl?itil0ut on ?ray of
listen ana then <*o iorlh to builci To write the name of Jesus tl
schoolhouses an J churches. To poir. t to words bot b bright
Alaska, called at its annexation And see the pagan bow in pra
William H. Seward's folly, turns out ^ a11 my soul's delight.
to be William H. Seward's triumph. In all those regions arem<
and it is hearing the voice of God men with the consecration c
through the American missionaries? jc>. vjox, wno, em oar King-10
men and women as defiant of arctic sionary work in Africa, sai
hardships as the old Scottish chief who, low student, ' 'If I die in Af
when camping out in a winter's night, and write my epitaph." ""V
^ knocked from under his son's head a_ I write for your epitaph sa
pillow of snow, saying that such in- dent. ;*Wnte,;' said he, "tb
atdgencein luxury would weaken and 'Let a thousand fall before
disgrace the clan. The .Jeannette given up.' "
went down in latitude 77, while De There is another point of
Lon?r and his freezing and dyin? men pass that my text include
stood watching it from the crumbling shall come from the wes
and crackling'polar pack, but the old means America redeemed. E
ship of the gospel sails as unhurt in between Atlantic and Paci
Icsf-ltnrlA 77 a<? in m:r 40 decrees, and to be brought within the cir<
- the one starred flag floats above the ness and rapture. Will it c
tqggallant^_in Bajjin s bay and Hud- worldly reform or evangelis
90irs sSaltand Melville som^T^he it be law and gospel? lam
/heroism of polor expedition. which jl wave of reform has swept;
made the names of Seba^ian Cabot and land, ancLali cities are feelii
Scoresby and Schwatka and Henry vantage of the mighty n
Hudson immortal, is to be eclipsed by Let the good work <?o on un
^ /the prowess of the men and women municipal evil is extirpated.
who amiathefrosts of highest latitudes About 15 years ago the dist
v,;* are this moment taking the upper editor of a New York daily 1
\ shores of Europe, Asia and America said to me in his editorial ro
for God. Scientists have never been ministers talk about evils
1 'able to agree as to what is the aurora you know nothing. Why
-\ borealis,_or northern lights. I can tell go with the officers of the'la
\ *' them. It is the banner or victory lor piore lor yourseii. so mat \
T Christ spread out in the northern night preach against sin you can s
i I heaven. Parciallv fulfilled already what you have seen with"
\ \ the prophecy of my text, to be com- eyes?" I said, "I will." Ar
| \ pletely fulfilled in the near future, pany with a commissioner
^^^VThev shall come from the north." and a captain of police and
text takes in the opposite of my church I explored the
j. TThz-y -Pr* 1+ c?r\ -ifl-* nt rill v~l aq n
PSjCUIio Ui LXIC CI.HI1 JL a!^ icii OV/ClCiJ. vvfT *w v
pias though high temperature, tempta- New York and preached a
tions to iethargh and indolence and sermons warning young me
hot "blood which tend toward multi-1 ting forth the work that mu<
form evil. "We have through my text j lest the judgments of God v
got the north in, notwithstanding its city with more awful subn
frosts, and the same text brings in the than the volcanic deluge t)
>... - south, notwithstanding its torridity. Herculaneum and Pompeii.
^ i' The fields of cactus, the orange groves I received, as nearly as
% and the "thickets of magnolia are to be member, several hundred c
surrendered to the Lord Almighty, newspaper abuse for underte
The south! That means Mexico and exploration. Editorials of
all the regions that "William II. Pres- tion. double leaded and with
" cott ana Lord Kingsborough made in great primer type, entit
j, -familiar in literature?Mexico in Fall of Talmage," or "Talmt
strange dialect of the Aztecs: Mexico the Mistake of His Life," c
>-- TT r< AVifV, TcfJIl 7,*,
.? : ~^COH<?U.ereG ov xicnium vvnw iv wc j "un v?.v u
- more gforkuislv conquered: Mexico, i in full sympathy with all ro
with ?is capital more than 7.000 ftvl for municipal purification,
gjk' abcg?6 the sea level, looking down upon But a movement which e
lis th^entrancement of lake and valley crime exposed and law execi
j? at^u. plain. Mexico, the home of na- half way. Xay. it stops Ion!
|li tffions yet to be born?all for Christ, gets half way. The law neve
?%g?The south! That means Africa, which ed anybody, never yet chan;
^^^Oavid Livingstone consecrated to God body. Break up all the hou
l^^^vhen he died on his knees in his tent iquitv in this city, and you <
exploitation. Already about 750,- the occupants to other citie
^^^^^converts to Christianity i's Africa, down all the policemen in Is'
??sS?S^^^uth! That means ail Uici^Jauds and white ir -u\ges their
ijli^ronesia and other is- York today is the transforrni
JI munerous than you ^ can j>f the gospel of J esus Christ
wrecked nrjar one of Sing, out because they love (
those who arrived in the heard, nor have you heard. <
clubbed to death "by the ing except the gospel that pr
the other boat putljaek-^cegenerate the hean aud'b
^kpehovr saved, "ifears Mluence of that regenerated
| HKIHDIB^nfine of the very-cre"w; entiy the life. Execute the."
"with others, on j certainly, but preach the gos
in - .thre
riie south!;half -work and will not last. Iu New ' FERTILIZERS AM
w Grenada. York it has allowed men who got by
The south! police bribery their thousands and r 0.,..
e. with all tens of thousands aud perhaps hunand
all dreds of thousands of dollars to go scot other
iceofillim- free, while some who were merely Au intelligent far::
)i boundless trie cat s paw and agents of bribery . ?
> that night are struck with the lightnings of the tusposed to believe ev
e southern law. It reminds nieofa scene i:i hears and does not ta
isfigures the Philadelpia when I was living there. 1 ^ranted, talked to a
ook up at it A poor woman had been arrested and veV,s ;ind Couriei. th
ndwich Is- tried and imprisoned for selling molas- . . .
y shall come ses candy on Sunday. Other law- j vei*y mteriaining \\a\
breakers had been allowed to go undis- ers and fertilizers. E
lat my text turbed, and the grogshops were open | interesting and j;ome
point of the on the Lord s da v. and the law with .1,
ast. I have its hands behindus lack walked up ??
around the a~id down the streets declaring to 15 given as * chows:
:> much im- molest many of the offenders, but we "The drop in the
at the mis- all rose up in our righteous indigna- from seven to fiv^ c
, are taking tionand* calling upon all powers. -may well cause con
terrible war visible and mvisiole. to iielp us we , ^
t, will leave declare that though the heavens fell P^nicrs. borne ten
l flat in the no woman should be allowed to sell twelve to ei<rht t
always and molasses candy 011 Sunday. ^ now, planters were
our hands Then there are among these foreig- less cotton, to raise i
acre at Port ners so many of the English. They (infca*anu, beiore all e
an nations inherited?the English in which *ei,t"lzcrs, but this ad\
diabolism. Shakespeare dramatized, and Milton f. an1tj' reasons
Wo fnrcrpt. cltirtipf] his fflrjt.os"and "FTenrv ^lelville -njnseii.Lie planter CO
war both gospelized, and Oliver Cromwell pro- tlie ^"?tto;i iie coi
vhen there rogued parliament. and "Wellington v?
d and slain commanded his eager hosts. Among . u itn tlie drop m 1
r. whether these foroigners are the Swiss, and iOU. rom s^ve)il,
ttes. is hell they were rocked in a cradle under the ice l(,' ^ ~ss c.'
result will shadow of the Alps, that cathedral of *codand use no fertil
hiucsc con- the Almighty in which all the the ele- , . Phuiters. .put the
more open ments, snow and hail and tempest and u "lca ^ f \? lu ?."ce'1
anity than hurricane, worship. Among these cen, coivon is entirely
nary Carey foreigners are a vast host of Germans. ,)lC hv Lie P
ministers at and they feel centuries afterward the P*anl.lc? jess cotton a
his project power of that unparalleled spirit who -)a,ictn<rtae price: iii
jidiu. they shook the earth when he trod it. and has Us disadvantages,
-ise. From the heavens when he prayed?Martin strenuous eh
of India to Luther! From all nations our foreign Gf, iu -m comu
e is not a populations have come, and thc-v are e i'uS lia^e. o01cu ^ei>'
x -I mwi v.-.pnrpi;T/Ofl nc r, '
Iv or indi- homesick, far awav from the piacc of J
Dwer. The their childhood ana the graves of their supremacy in
iwful work ancestors, and our glorious religion Lrlon" , , orei.^n ?r?
:s ago was presented to them aright will meet '?r>jed down the vorl
;e where it their needs and fill their souls and *"Ktt f01'ei?n grown ct
ier shod as kindle their enthusiasm. They shall forced down tue price
no one rev- come from amid the wheat.sheaves of 1 ioieign cornpetiti
out 3.000.- Dakota, and from the ore beds of SUi-v* a,na v\3 lllust ,n:
.dia are the Wyoming, and from the silver mines P"oved inctaoc.s and j
rad on the of Nevada, and from the cold gulches nucs'b0 possibly
is of Amoy of Colarado and from the banks of the f,vcn Ul'"ceilt co^on 1
are the ad- Platte, and the Oiegon, and the Sac- j\aus reco\er our Aoran
on the 340,- ramento, and the Columbia. "They may^ets oi the
shall nnmA qIipII /vnne fmni the west." CSllt COt.Olj. tilC COctOn
mosque of But what will the do after they i naa'";U xuctors lorinaj
lurried into i come? Here is something gloriously S''*'ue cot Ion goods a or
last Bud-1 consolatory that you have never not-1 4L7 f v;m . c a
fortress of j iced, 4'Thev shall come from the east. en"y Sp^n lor \ ears
Hindooism ! and the west, and the north, and the rruV,'e.01I1 our .
south, and shall sit down.- Oh. this well followed that In:
m the east is a tired world! The most of people P('ruon; of the planters
with him. are kept on the run all their life-time. ;,ca.r v/1"1 CJ}?u?h coi
obstacles to Business keeps them on the run. then' ov. 11 raising for
deals must Trouble keeps them on the run.Rival- P1-) . . . .
le consum- ries of life keep on the run. They are r to the advice thi
tenians un- running from disaster. They are run- J? uss ' . .ieri
irks, ilay ning for reward. And those who run *aid than upon either
the Bospo- the fastest and run the longest seem ?ulj^? r?11crre ,
me has al- best to succeed. But mvtext suggests ' <<h \\ill continue t
ited States a restful posture for all those who for ln 1111> same pro
Britain and a lifetime have been on the run. 4 'Thrv -icre ul,'e I'ca
le indigna- shall sit down!" Why run any longer i ^ i:(nV . ar^C;T ?rc
is. While When a man gets heaven, what*:nore tood. and is. so thoro
is be sent can he get? "They shall sit down/' ^ result that u <
ale massa- Not alone, but in picked companion- ?10'" corn and me;
uisite that ship of the universe: not embarrassed, p^pporwons each \ ear.
bv nrotest though a seranh should sit down on ^ cens ^a pour
om Wash- one side of vou and an archaugel on uie *i. coma not
lintoCon- the other. " ^
athematize ''They shall sit down." Rest from P", . feitilizeis \
sultan of toil. Rest from pain. Rest from per- a their use mcreasec
slohamme- seeution. Rest from uncertainty. "earI^?1,,,|!11^ 1 ?,
in Turkey Beautiful, joyous, transporting, ever- some S00,000 to 900,000
come from lasting rest! Oh, men and women of sold.
1 come at the frozen north, and the blooming
. grandest SQjith,. -$?ie realir^ of thejartv^v^H 1 c r 11 cr^rsaWE-i
5Ta.ii ~tmie. ing or setting sun. tS^nig]l^hnst get ^eitK!7'er? ^line
Dissolute your sins forgiven and "start for 5,0 than onrfjalf tne percc
i who have place where you may at last sit down ?o(i taat the} furnish
nbay and in blissful recovery from the fatigues Q^ly buy pounds per a
aes defame of earth while there roll over vou the ,r was found ad\ an tag*
holy lives raptures of heaven. Ham- of you
ihose mis-1 have had such a rough tussle in this ^ ~T'
?uke to the J worlei that if your faculties were not l0r. ~ pounds wi
tines stop- perfect in heaven you would sonic- cents a^pound and fert
nd women time forget yourself and say, "It is ^u,7, +.C
a glorious time for me to start on that journey,"
ie just as or "It must be time for me to count ^ : *
is Mission- out the drops of that medicine," or''I ?, r *
?d to write wonder what new attack there is on ?r , 'er ,one
ords: me through the newspapers?" or "Do cents a pound and ferl
you think-I will save anything of those ?eottc
rkoess - est? crops from the grasshoppers, or the p ' fertilizers. \
t- locusts, or the droughts?" or "I won- *ents * pound and fer
ie'e. f . der how much I have lost in that last o0 pounds of cotto]
!?.d fair' bargain F or "I must hurrv lest I-miss f? P?und* of
* I ohrorc vvo-m tha
the train." No, no. The last volume T'"V"
iri ai1f] ,vrv. of direful, earthly experiences will be Pouncis ^
)f Melville finished. Yea, the last chapter, the a^rc". 5, ? a
r the mis last ParaSraFh, the last sentence, the. i11 :t' 2
d iJVfit Jast word? Finis: sold for *'? Pf t?n- . 1
hA crvmA Frederick the Great, notwithstand- stages of the decline m
Vhat c"hoi7 tog aiightv dominion over which Vl , ce,nt5
V Hat shall 1?-^ - r]pnrMSPfi -,t tw* cost of fertilizer has kej
id the stu- ie rei^ea, wa* so aepressea at times it] it t] t f t] 1
,vriv,ic. he could not speak without crvmgand
ese woras. - i em-ill hotflp nf nmVL- rvr?;?r>n 3*eai*s the fertilizer for
Africa be camea a_ small bottle ol quick poison w }
with which to end his nnserv when he v y-n " i V
1 thp rnrr- cou^ stand it no longer. But I give c?,u:5 Pounds of cc
<? "tiiev you this small vial of gospel anodyne. ^ ..Vs statement j
? ~ /l-?wr? r*f xirTn/?Ti Tmrtino* ftitllftl* .? *?1tilCJ9SS absolu
it That , i ^ % i Sv ?;r = tins statement may oe
vervtliino- body 01' sou*' 0Uoat *? soothe all un- ^ j^s -q p0im^s 0f coi
fic "oceans res^ and put ^your pulses into an etei- er ncnv receives twice a
le of holi ^ ca]m- 'They shall come from f00c| as ]ie received for
the east, and from the west, from the
;m ? Will 1}?r^1-.,an(^ ^ie south, and shall sit 1-There lias been no 1
glad that "oun" tory of cotton growing
across this Al) Old Friend in Need. COUJ.d ]">e ];SC(1 at a be^le
lg the ad- cv>t'-vht\ S C Tan ?3 ? The to the planter ths
~ast f ^ oV^ ^blisWthe f?ilmvin= ^und? ITS
, To the Editor of The State: Permit .vieJU- iinsmeaiis siai
ingui netl me to address the people of the South i {1?nce for vea)
lewspaper an(| call their attention to the facts in hiis founu it a prime ii(
}?}x regard to Mr. Samuel P. Thomas: the f,01']VS of ferPJi
ot vrhicu 0jg tried and true Southern patriot of * 'l,e cc!.u^ ^ari
.-0.11 i* ^ this city, "who stood bv vour people Poun?]s 0; fertilizer ^
\? and ex- during their straggle "for independ- pounc.s of lint is a fair
vhen you ence Dui.;ng t];e war ]ie donated Ihis snows a net gain ?
peak fiom tl10usanjs? yea tens of thousands of 1'P a^rrc *"C!
>oui own dollars to assist the cause of the South. k^>ounds of 9^0u or
i m corn- jj-s house was <he home of all Confer!- Jthout fertilizer the
a . P? ice erates who happened to come to ihis nm-:e not.iing over cost
L\? eldere c^y. His bountiful hand was ever or \youk.. show a posith
i dens and ex{ended to them i;i the wav of fur- r c
crime in njs],inir food, shelter and clothing. a'so "< 111 en ciouble
senes of besides, he gave them money to de- coursc *;,e Price at whic
n and se_- frav pynnnsos. and sent them on their I SV ]u:lJ^S a great curi
o IT ^n.e wav rejoicing. He made and present-! PJam.er- oul Jls percei.
helm this e(I tQ Gen Jolm Mor?an thc beautiful remaiMS the .If
lergeinent c]Jccucve(i suit of clothes that he wore CC11*S a P?'jnc^ but->4 pi
nea on the memorable night of his escapc fuaue use of fert
T from the Ohio penitentiary. Mr. J's a .PrOiit. Enough
can 1 e- Thomas was arrested and indicted for ;}~on re!SiJU to pay for
Diumns of assistinfr General .Morgan to cscaoe ^ves tue price of the 1
mg that an(j for harboring vour soldiei-s. 'it pvowt from t^e use
denuncia- j cogt *2.700 to have the indictment :s ~'"J P;r 9
. captious , stopped. This fact is shown bv tlje . ,/"ei'c ar? domruatn
,r , records in the United States Court at n.'Iav.01' -ie
ige .lakes Cincinnati. -I refer you to General sUuai'.on *iat 1
?r lown (Jorman, Birmingham, Ala., Jtul<re T;iey need pay out not
keam a!I1 Thomns Hines. Louisville. Kv.. or to mea..:all groceries.
tenements the postmaster at Cincinnati. eic.. cost i;ul won; iua
nds with Mr. Thomas is now in a helpless ~1CT c0st a few ye
n..i f condition, being 85 years old. and is oi l':?V1 !ess tIiau one"1:,:
without home, food or proper clothing recently food and all <
rvPT -t .*? keep him warm. What is to be' i'vere bought on a year's
% / come of him v.-e dare not say. unless *aro? l-i*olits to the rnei
- p"-" vou people come to his rescue so much of the cost o;
,,1? " This will doubtless be the last win- rcprefented by the cos
' V i ter that he will spend on earth, there- meat- and the amount :
o\v Vn,i fore 1 be? of 3"?u. in the name of the decreased prjees of all
,ni)n,' many noble Confedeate hereos i\ho -^PP^es. the planter s'
, V - fell while thev were battling for iir- t!l? eiK- o1* tiic year an a
11 i? V - cause that he "loved not to forget or 351that will enabli
ho- nmw turn a ear 10 the cry that ?coraes P0rtI01?at least of his s
t f {, to you asking- assistance for as true cash? he thereby impro
, A with the merchant, who
vT^?v and laittnuia ?ouineru painoi us ever , , .
\iplift t tic pve(j any goods he rinds it ne
ml make * His address is. Samuel P. Thomas, piicredit at a much lm
they are u EUler strect Cincinnati!, O. 1,0 cl;a"Sed hln? 1,1
1 or Sing: a \ei<r]ii.or supplies were bought; or
Sod and 1, J! ? ' "Through the i.mpro1
ve never Killed the Lender. fertilizer the planter no
anyth- Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 24.?There the amount of plant foo
oposes to mutiny of the crew of the stea- centage of his crop that
y the "jjfier Neubvili'e on the Tennessee river | years 320. He can now
neart vesterday. They were led by the 3Cre *or t
taw. mfost man, Joe Duim, whom Capt. G-Icas
iperp^aTl
ID COTTON. | his family or bis hands, consequently THE REG!_
will pay out less for wages than ever
,? , ?--.7 *1 I before. So that at the end of the vear state
;?s I swo ti:c , , , ? 01..H v..aii..Kt.i
! "? ?i nrrov r>-si to rrr\ thou
Cv .LCii. LliUii V? ? *? I. ^A'^rv
of the proceeds of his crop will he left to
tier, who is not ? cash in land. A earefnl studv of c,K.V?niA.
, the situation leads to t.he opinion that .. . ,,, T>
erything that lie fjie planter is as well,even better able. m=ris.0 e ik
ke anything for to buy fertilizers than ever before. Carolina now
reporter for the provided of course, that he raises his ing. Some w<
e other dnv in > corn anc* nieat- Also, that if present wing- came fo:
J " low prices hold the competition of State convent
' about the farm- foreign cotton growers may decrease fight on the n
[is views were so and disappear. While the planter gates to the St;
of his conclu- may not formulate the above facts iu vention. Thei
it what lie said "ie &imG they are presented here, isters with the:
a 1 " lie is conversant with mest of them and now corrn
and is laying- out his business for the can organizati<
price of cotton year, and will plant as much cotton as tions propose t
ents." he said, hr -an, and use fertilizers upon it. lar to the seve
sternation to the il ter ^iav^n.? arranged to raise his chairmen all
n vear's supply of meat, corn and speaks in prett
years ago u fell - - ' H'er0 rente.
and then. - e Headquf
advised to plant SPINDLES OF THE SOUTH. State
-iiore corn ana r< 1
t . . Colui
Ise.to quit using T th T>p hi:
'ice was unheed- Their Roar Should Frighten Northern T^e
> satisfactory to Manufacturers. tration for eac
ntmued to plant ol.
ild to buv his Baltimore, .Tan. 24.? Mr. William at the court ho
f r*< t -i x c i-u \ i tlon- renewal
urp forr.ihzpvs. ! ( , T.nvpvinff rivAcirlAnf of fno Avlr- n < i -?r ?
V . 7 * x ? tiie nrst Jiona;
Lne price of cc,.- wri^hfc Ciub. which represents all of May, June an<
^ the large New England textile manu- these days the
itton. raise more ? ? f-i *
izers is ottered facturers, was invited some months U1" PUIPl,s,t; aux
situation under a8"? after returning from a visit of in- ^
t, possiblv four- vcstiga 1011 to the South, to deliver an
- unlike any be- address before the New England Tex- *
la liter. As for tile Club on Cotton Manufacturing in
nd therebv en- the South. This address, which has (:a-'! .
<A\ priced cotton never before been made public, is now '?u^v ^
It has induced by the consent of Mr. Lovering. pub- *\v . ?
orts to produce l^hed in this weeks issue of the Man- ^ntfo? The
ries. and these ufactures Record. tion illie
7 successful and In his address, which is a a very full ~ ; ?'
menace to our and comprehensive study of the whole S!'
cotton, produc- suuauoa, rar. covering says: - " i
wii wheat has "The time has passed when IN cw ^ "
d's price, so it is England manufacturers need to give hoK
>tton alone has but little attentionl to cotton mat, utac- J"
in this countrv. turing1 m the South. TV e have come . " ^ .
ion lias come to to realize that the South has entered mg to the jacti
ieet if hT im- the race in earnest and to stay. Hence- * P?
increased econo- forth, it must be the survival of the ' - , },
? ? w fittest. The old mills in the South on the part oft
at a profit "and with their antiquated machinery have P^iallv ot the
ar supremacy in been succeeded bv first-class mills ,lhe 30 rfe
?l<rpwufave with the best equipment, and we find
belt has all the mills in the South today that will com- p f
liifactuKinglow pare"lywi&ourNe.Engknd "^riish
' a large portion ""iu> vuiib ju everj- rapcu lu uu liicii , . - . ,
vice so persist- work in the cheapest and most ap- ?
that we raise proved manner. ?
is now being- so While it has long- been conceded *?j' *ll0" _ 1be
is season a good that m certain lines of coarse goods,
; commence tlie the advantages are in favor of the ""v.
rn and meat of South, North manufacturers have Pu ^ ^
the vears sup- comforted themselves with the state- *
ments that the manufacture of the 9^. nest coopei
it lessor no fer- finest goods would remain with them ?.C0"0re
3 is more to be and that the South- could not make
of the other such goods. In this we are mistaken. JJ ' JF"
ove. That the There is an actual increase in the pro- ?
o plant cotton duction of finer goods in the South Is^imSvpd i
portion hereto- and where man ufacturing is once ^J
"sons to oelieve. firmly established, st is only a matter P * u
>wing its own of short time, when the Jabor em- ^ :
uglily satisfied ployed win improve m skiii anaaaapt tr.t
-vHl continue to *" ' to the finer work There seems
at in increased to ue no reason why as fine yarns may " uu , >
When cotton not be spun m the South as m any '' ^ ^/Ob
id. on much of otlier section of our country. . ? ^ j*?~ J
be grown at a A mill in the South running 6S 1
of fertilizers, hours per wee.x for 50 weeks in the _/> r
v-re introduced year runs 3,300 hours. A mill in Mas^
[ from vear to sachusetts limited to 58 Ji.ai^r-tfer . f anc
mtiljast year week, for 50 weeks jjr-dT year, runs V?m
1 tons were un- 2,900 hours?a difference of 400 hours f. , ,,
/ a year, or severf weeks in favor of the fime ?, ca,ia
fmv 1 ~s.~i-.tc. n SriJ-!fTiAi?n mi'Pie Trr-rt millc nf rlirv OUt after the Cl
LC5 a N-'vy ^ VAAVA >_*. j 4. 11V M1HAO fcUU -y?- -j -pj
or" $7iT^ar4Ql^ same size.construction and equipment, m *T*r a
furnished lais one in New England and one in the JJJJff
intake of plant South will cost about the same so far l? I? ^
now. At first as biddings and machinery are conicre
was used, cerned. The very low cost of build- Y _ a .
sous to increase hig material in the South is partly oil- 5 111 ?USl 1
w the average set by the higher cost of the machine- . ,
?unds. To pay ry due to the expense of freight. '
th cotton at 15 There is a large population at the J. H. John?
ilizer at $75 per South ea^er and an::;ous to work. The ^ what \
otton, or $7.50; class of help at work in Southern State Chairms
and fertilizers mills today is as good as can be found iQg any stock
is 50 pounds of in the whole country. They are na- Republican" cor
>00 pounds of tive Americans with but few foreign see where it can
Cotton at 6 ers among them. The South is in this the State, of eitl
ilizers at ?30 a case, really more Americans than the hi the matter of
? &f\t\ 17sT/\>?+v* TKo -fovnc' tr? f] )o QAiitiiA^n I 6nclors6S verv 1)
'11 pa,V5AUr &\JV in W^taviii _
rith cotton at 4 States are not half what they are with the colored prea
tilizer at $20 a us. It has been found that Southern their churches o
a still pays for men aie more desirable and efficient situation on th
. The nlanter as superintendents and overseers than the Carolina p<
proceeds of 50 men brought from the North, as they getting about as
le fertilizer for seem to understand and control the as interesting as
nd found a s?,t- operatives better than Northern over- But no matter w
rhen fertilizer seers. of February an<
.'hrough all the New England has. however, the ad- going to be very
price of cotton vantage of establishment which may
; per pound the be termed the prestige of priority. Thee
)t an even pace This is a tremendous advantage and if Columbia. S.
: past twenty we are not legislated out of it, we shall a fortnight ago.
?J. "u /i if pam a 1 fr li'nia kir tliqfli" ?s\r>r*C\>2 /' aifof? q
ciII UCrC XH COL- 11V1U JLUXVSJ. CI lilliiV KJJ OiXVVl wa t VV4. w
with tlie pro- of New England pluck and determina- min F. Hunter, 1
itton. Remark- tion."' _ tic, who claims
nay appear it In summing up his investigations God." No atter
tely true. To and seeking to draw what conclusions of course.paid to
added the fact he can from them, Mr. Lovering says: came, which rea
tton the plant- "It seems to me that the cotton manu- To the Governc
,s much plant facturers of New England are in a and the PeopL
it twenty-four critical condition. The tendency is Be it and it is!
away from New England and towards and all nations, 1
,ime in the his- the South, and any legislation that now living in a
when fertilizer stops looms and spindles in New Eng- ies in the United
r percentage of land today for any considerable period chief ruler of tlii
m now. Upon stops many never to be started again, for ever. Thus
isheel soil 100 In making these statements. I do not Your time is 01
, fair average wish to be understood as sounding any lie in the dust, f
'vation to the alarm, but I think it is wise for us to with the rod, bu
s the planter know what the future posibilities and with everlasting
?ccssity to pay limitations of cotton manufacturing-J JtSE
zcr. as without are in New England/' J Stamped in re
m. With 200 were the folj
per acre 250 A Republican St*p* in. "Depart from m
average crop. Washington, D. C., Jan. 2L?Mr. Amen!' "3y th
of 100 pounds Hoar was present at the of today's God. Benjamin
ftilizer costing session of the senate, after a lon^ ton. D. C. Amei
200 per. cent, absence from the city and signalized the living God v
planter will his presence by calling attention to is now lyin
of cultivation, the absence of a quorum. A call of tree. "Message
*e loss. Using the roll took place and after some de- Delay not.
ost in cotton, lay the presence of a quroum was ^ ~
its cost. Of secured. Among the bills introduced _ .T.h,rp"'^"v
li the cotton is and referred was one by Mr. Chandler Denver, Col.,
erence to the (Eep.) of >~ew Hamsliire, to prevent from vv estern C<
rtu. ,, A v. i c ?? .i:,?I fv-siv inches of
Stnn I Wr?"SIul la^ag "i
ifif ?>i,. i om ^^apk and telephone wires. I blockading railn
iliypv' w *<? -S ^not^er diplacement of a Senator The snow that 1
SJ f occurred today, when Mr. Jarvis, of on the mountai
'OUonha\mg ^orth Carolina, whe had held an ap- frozen, making
Oft (Pomtment from the Governor to fill last snowfall to
a I lJie vacancy caused by the death of snowslldes have
n t> ^2 r' fceuator ^ ance, introduced and made J?e Potti, a lesse
la- tl ? tov for his successor. 3Ir. Pritchard. mine, was killed
o .<a\ antages who has been recently elected bv the which swept ove
i ' I6 Legislature :o fill Senator Vance's im- City an avalancl
considered, expired term. 3Ir. Pritchard is a Re- ing a mail drive
ing tor corn publican and after being sworn in h* driver escaped.
?V?? Tk" 5?I took a seat next t0 Vr- Chandler, who wagon. At Tell
ov- 0 subsequently offered a resolution to Keystone mill c
*{f i b%man?' pay ^lr- Jarvis $24.40 for his last two Southern engim
f . cntii very days service, which resolution was and seriously b;
i nc At "RiV-o t_)i? Rio l
amer supplies immediately agreeu iu. j-ntr outtc vi ?--- - ;
credit at very Xorth Carol in a has nr?t been represent- acted. a nd^ antra
-chant. "With ed by a Republican in the Senate ^tUi another sue
f living as is since the reconstruction period?Sena- shaill .Basin, villi
t of corn and tor .John Fool's term having expired Cimarron sta 3ie:
represented by twentv-two vears ago. On the fourth r?u ml,y' a Vrc
other family of Ma^ch next, Mr.Fritchard will have of ^ne Smuggleiliould
have at a Fopulist for his collegue in the permount
of cash soil of 3Ir. Butler, who was elected at ^ t***1
e him to buy a the same time as hinself. to succeed Chicago,Jan.
tore goods for Senaton Eansom, Democrat. " and Democrats c;
ves his credit council chamber
' will sell him siiotby tiu Siseriir. Gallagher, Repi
cessary to buy Darlington, Jan. 23.?Late yester- chair, and the m
ver price than day afternoon Deputy Sheriti Ilobt. who are in the m
e wiioie year s bcarbW-ol^il WWII .(? dllUM. UUIUUi
credit. gard Murray, a negro, on the charge force. The Dem
j*ed qualitv of ^i^alic^ ^11 the 1-51 their oppositi*
ILAR REPUBLICAN'S. j THE STATE CONVENTION.
V/ebstPi- Issues ji:: Address XIic Eixlitfcentii Annual Gat'ierhi;;
ihe I'aitJiful. 1. M. C. A.
S. C.. Jan. 23.?Both Columbia. S. C.. Jan. ?J.icpulicaupartv
in South ?;rlitjeiith MmuulStat?co"venti
' 1 I the 1 oung jicns Christian As
seem to be up and do- j of South Carolina is to be h<
?eks ago the independent J Aihon this year. The time is f
rth with its call for a J ;lry 1-i to 17. The indications an
;ion. looking f to a big j the convention will be one o;
latter of electing dele- largest and most interesting evei
Ate Constitutional con- jn the State. The conventions <
l came the colored min- last few years have all been la
ir call for a convention, attended and havo accomplished
ss the regular Republi- good throughout lLj State.
:>n, which the other fac- The following is the official ca
o supplant.with a circu- the convention which has just
ral "Republican county issued.
over the State, which Columbia. S. C.. Jan. 20, li
y plain terms to the ne- In sending out this call foi
5 the circular: XVIII State convention cf the Y
irters Republican Men's Christian Associations of ?
Exeutive Committee. Carolina, it is with hearts fuU of
nbia, Jan. 12. 1S95. itude to God for His many bles
ican Countv Chairmen: showered unon our work "duxin
xi -c A 1 .? '
uie supervisor ui rogxs- past year ana tne many eviuen<
:h county will be open prosperity which he gives us fc
use for general registra- future.
of certificates, etc., on We invite and urge the Chvi
ay iu February. April, young men of our State to meet
.1 July. In addition to us at Aiken, February 14-lT.and
ofiice will be open for help us devise plans by which
ove stated, and for the young men in our country disi
' all persons who have our towns, cities, and colleges,
registered, on Monday, be reached for Christ.
;h, and on each follow- Will you net unite with us.
t Snndnv, until Thurs- need you. Your community need
L These are the only information which you will
there will be an oppor- there.
iter before the election Yours for the Young Men of S.
the Constitutional con- D. B. j0hxs0>:. Chairman,
election of delegates AY. M. Lewis. State Secrc-tai
a the third Tuesday in State Com. of the Y. M. C. A. of
>ach eountv will be en- c#w?n
ny delegates as it hasall the railroads for the delegat
Representatives in the J the conrentiou. Local ticket a<
bly. The principal ob- can furnish all informitioii as to 1
g this convention is to ! rates.
s colored voter, but o\v- All young men who are in em be
onal diit'erences in the Protestant evangelical churches
rty, there is an oppor- invited to attend. If there be m
sand judicious action sociation vrhere any such, whod
he Republicans, and es- to attend, lives, he can simply go
colored men. who con- pastor to sign his credentials,
a proportion of the Re- such delegates "will be entertaine
of this State, not only the people of Aiken free of cost,
scheme to nullify the Gospel hymns, numbers 5 a
the United States, but combined will be used. Messrs. ]
much to promote the j Whilden. of -Charleston, and J;
: the whole State. As | a. Dorrittc, of Baltimore, Md.,
;ssary to success, an ef- j have charge of the music, assists
n.ide to register everv i a TIip P.irrirvw A
.ould instruct the pre- Co.. of New York, have furaishec
i to see that every Re- note copies of this book free of cLu
?s an effort to register Each college, city and town ass
30ve ment;_,ned. The tion must bring a short written rc
*ation anc; support of of their work, to be read in open
Listers of e,rery d"^' mi- vention when called for.
e? solicited in this mat- A representative from each ass
sets the CCLC-Iiutional fion should be authorized to m?
ties of the-race which subscription to the State work for
and in the vital inter- year. '
;s elevated"above the " Delegates should.i;ex?0rt_2.tlS?*
politics. A committee ciation 'immediately upon
lized at the court house,.^^ajfTnTliken; all should plan to \
in securin^uei'r regis- hand at the opening session, and
itesjiwcfprocuring ac- until the convention closes.
yrffTose from a distance Sunday, February 10. is sc-t apai
liged to remain at the the State committee as a day of sp
nore than one day dur prayer for God's blessings upon
s on which the office of convention.
I be open during the The programme lias been arrai
h. with the gatester care. The I
I ail-important duty at study will be one of the main loat
egister the voters. It j of the convention, and will be conc
advisable just at this j ed by Rev. C. P. Williamson, D
invention of the party, ! of Atlanta. Ga. The programme
ose of the registration ! be printed in full and sent out a
jpublican convention ' two weeks before time of meeting
ry for determining the j Any further information will
pted in the selection of ! jrladlv furnished, if vou will write
Constitutional conven- M. Lewis, State Secretary, Oolum
for on the thiridTues- S. C.? State.
E. A. Webster,,
State Chairman. j WashdTiT0>._ Jan- 2,_Sen
| Butler laid before the Senate tc
;on, Secretary. i the petition of Mr. Sampson Pope.
vebster says. , candidate for Governor of South <
in Webster is not tak- J 0lina on the Democratic ticket,
in the v Independent; petition is in the handwriting of
ivention. and does not p0p6i js addressed to the Senate
cio the Republicans of ; makes some very plain statement
ler faction, any good ; ]ative to the coduct of the election,
the coming n^ht. He j savs.
eartily tlie scheme of j "The undersigned respectfully
chers to work through j resents that he is a citizen of the S
11 a uniform plan. The ; 0f South Carolina, and that at the e
p KPrmlVhra/n ffmA of ' Oi.i.
? 7 i Liuxi iituu cuius uui>uvciuut
Dhtical house is now ^04. he was a candidate for the o
> much mixed up ana ve Governor, and- was. as he belie
that on the other side, j defrauded at said election to sucl
hat comes, the months : extent as to deprive him of said of)
1 March are certainly that members of the General Assen:
interesting. State. were electcd at the same election. <
have recently elected B. R. TilLns
rank Turns. | United State's Senator: that thousa
C., Jan. 23.?About; of voters were prevented from ccsi
Governor Evans re-1 their ballots at said election by rea
nicfttinn fvnm of frwn on/"! in + imirltif niv> tViattfmiK1
the New York luna-! of ballots were thrown oui ordestro
to be the ''Living ' and in many instances other . bal
ition was, as a matter . were substituted for them by mana<
i it. Yesterday another and other persons: that the const
ids as follows: _ lion of the United States and of
ir of South Carolina State of South Carolina and the 1;
e of His State: j passed pursuant thereto were utt*
hereby known to you disregarded; that these frauds v
anguagesand tongues ' committed under the direction of E
11 States and Territor- | jamin E. Tillman, then Governor
. States that I am now i said State, and of Hon. J. L. M. Ii
s generation of people ^ chairman of the State executive c<
says the Lord God. ' mittee..who is a member of your h
it. Come down and j orable body.
or I chastise the Jews { "Wherefore, your petitioner pr
11 will chastise you ! that a committee may be appointed
damnation. Amen!< your honorable body charged with
F. Hcs'TEK. i amining into the conduct of said e
tl ink on the envelope j tion, with power to send for pers
.owing inscriptions:; and papers, and on tlie coming ii
efor I know you not. j the report of said committee, that si
e grace of the living j action be taken in the premises as
F. Hunter, Washing- < report will justify."
i r The judgment of j ^ ia 0h:o.
nth^ SVE i Zasesville. 0.. Jan. 2i.-Two t
g at the r defined and unmistakable cases of
from the living God. I ^ w . discovevcd witbi
few. miles of Zanesville. The vict
Inches Of Snow. i a** daughters of M;'s. Garey, the
i n ! dow of Georce Gar^v. an ex-sold
dorado state that thir-1 T.he ailment has been usually spol
snow fe'l vest 'rdav ! of as sc"?f,ula. A ten- -months ;
oods and Wagon roads! the father of the children died and
iad previously fallen applied for a widows pens
ins had melted and aB.a. also fc?n allowance for her
it impossible for the lld chs^en. In tins way the !
stick, and numerous f?rers were1 brought before the pul
: resulted. At Ourav ! U"'jug 1 th? ?ec<?sar-v P*lanl"
e of the Jlickev Green! medical examination. lac ek
vesterdav bv a slide j daugnter eighteen years oid was e*
r the dump. At Lake lned. bytlie Lexington board
le came down, catch- i Pf"5'?11 examining surgeons >
?o,wi Tiio ! shortly ^xter it was rumored that:
A UHVl IVUlll. J. iAV I i . <11 1 i V
losing his team and )vas J Iep< - she has been a suits
uridea slide near the i ?01\ hftee" / ri' . An mveaigat
aught a Rio Grande i just completed conhrmsthedistress
? smashing the -ah! reports. In the case of the e!
raising the "engineer, laughter hands and feet have dr
Grancfe road is block- UP a"d dropped olf, the bones of
fflc is at a standstill. ?!ose have been destroyed and parti
le is reported at Mar- the ul'P?r and lower jaw hones hi
ch carried down the come away. AH sense of feeling 1
3. part of the CimarH K?ed away and arms and legs
eked a tension station fitfully, swollen and disco or
? - I Tl-ia (roiiiiw I hoolth h*ic (.nntini
Union tramwav. I "" "rr"".
" ! good. I he victim lias no hope
eeFJcht. comfort except in death and cant;
0.j T, ' 11- ? but little. The younger child is
. i iX -o fi,fl years old and the disease is now c<
- i , ^ n 1 lined to her fingers and toes, but is ,
to-night. Alderman ; with th? s:unc ce?taiiuvas'
ublican. -was m the ^ ^ 3 ^
lembers of his party, ' the case Oi her elder a?ter._
ajority. tried to get Destroyed by <in Earthquake.
reducing the police London. Jan. 23.?The Times cor
ocrats were violent spondent in Teheran. Persia, tc
m and made a rush ! graphs under yesterday s date: i
liie Chairman Gall-! city of Kuchan. which ai earthquc
e order was carried, destroyed fourteen month ago a
the opposing1 parties which was immediately re-built, v
^a_l contract at the again destroyed on January 17. Ivla
of the ; ^111
SOC^1" i
ild m i
'ebru-! x
2 that! \
f the!^"
held j
Df the [
| ^ s^l" r 1"^
.11 foxbeen
XT I?VI? p
>9 a. 1\ III V Jb Ii ^
LllC /*-, <7>}.>
bung - .v^
S COM PROVED ;i
;es of
>r the
'.stain
?? CLAIM.
i-cia.
may
,2 xbvbb
gam
^ had ^
notlL&WSUIT. |
esire Such the record of trie
Yii f'^l
SI'A'JXTON" LIFE ISTSURANCK
nd 0 COUP AN Yt
?. F. -T
irnos Numbers o" Bene5ci<iries Testify to its
will
d bv rroaipmess aai ojuuJiieis.
tfain '
1 200
ir^re. -*aturil Preaiiun Insariajs on the mcs
Approved Plans.
conThe
tew "Coupon Policy" of the Statin
ocia- ton Life is a model o? simplicity. In addi
l^ext tl0!3 aI1 ?eSt ^ea!:ures mo^ern iife^ flal
insuracca it psar.'i^iin faf-^^TTymgnTr>f ?j
Ssso^"the "coupon" IMMEDIATELY after |a
am~ r.eath, without rotice or the formaliva
/A-n
stav ty of proofs. Trie "'coupon" covers 10 per
cent. of the face o? the policy, and is ia ad **'
dition thereto.
ecial
tlie Assets wanted. Literal Cjoj ml-sl )n
Livi mea can make big nmcy.
He ' - Jk
SIS Jfl). S, Eeyaoid^ t
will Seaeral
bout COLJIH8II, S. C. % ..y.jj
.nds _____ wE
iiag This Handsome Batten BQQjEBfc fl H
S?J worth the world over $5.00, Trill fee S
\-H} sent to any person who will send ma
?eis ?,V ^loyifl ?aof nTATPQ JMsImA B
m jux. vtwuy w^u)u v,1 i it " yvw/. im iiimwm
tae light, worth $1.00, at 65e. each.
^ 40 yards of S^raw Matting $3.90. H
ere $10.50 for an Oak Bed, Bureau, I
!e^ and Wash Stand to match- S|
by. Send for Catalogue of Furniture, fl
3IU* Cooking Stoves, Baby Carriages, Sew- 1
ing Machines, Buggies, Lamps, Grodc* m
ays ery, etc. fl
i L. F. PADGETT, jflH
ons Broad Street, Augusta, tefl
X KJi. . CTvai
g25Z5HHH5HSH5a5S5HSa5H5H5H5gffl
? $ fa' COTTON MB
lep- Makes 4c. PRICES, even on
^?n jjj DO NT ^e.^'scour2^e(^' ?ut jjl||l
gj Easy Installment Terms./'
* *rV i VntltniW- IX?>./. ?r/\ fkin
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