University of South Carolina Libraries
^ M "5*V v. ? '? . ;;- > Jp ; - . " #S * t ^ - . - - - - - - ' ' ADVERTISING RATES: LEXINGTON DISPATCH^ ^ ^ ^ ^*n^**te^ |L UKX.INGTON, C. H., S. C. ^Sfel$ ^ ^ '^' 4if' ^ ^ | Notices in local column 10c. per line "" each insertion. j . Marriage notices inserted free. ? .. ? ^ Obituaries over ten lines charged for a 1J?RMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. j ???? . ? - regular advertising rates. -r?V0L_ XXL LEXINGTON, S. C? WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1891. " NO. 22. till I{ " ' . Jggj' - m Lc * ,v _ ? L T'V . this space for annouceme'nt Ox Bargains in CLOTHING next < et at I'M?^ L.EPSTIN,; 150 MAIN STREET, f UNDER COLUMBIA HOTEL. j COLUMBIA, S. C. ! Sept. 7-tf J - J HK33H8SHBBS2BHB61HQ8HHB38EHBH3ESK -LOAN AND EXCHANGE? I nmimmmwi. SHIS, CITT AJD COITTV DEPOSITORY. 8 COLUMBIA, S. C. Paid up Capital $121,000 Surplus and Profits 76,000 Transacts a general banking business. 0L Careful attention given to Collections. W SATMGS DEPARTSEXT. Deposits of $1 and upwards received. Interest allowed at the rate of 4 per cent, per annum, payable quarterly on the first ; day 8 of January, April, July and October. A. C. HASKELL, President. 5L. W. C. FXSHEK, Vice President. JULIUS K. WALKEB, Cashier. June 19?1y 1 COMMERCIAL BANK.! I 1 COLUMBIA, S. C. Capital Paid $100,000 Transacts a Banking and Exchange busi- ! ness. deceives Deposits. Interest allowed ' on Deposits. Safety Deposit Boxes to rent ! at $6 per annum. "Wm H. Ltles, James Ikkdxll, President. Cashier. Nov. 28?ly CAROLINA NATIONAL BANE COLUMBIA, S. C. STATE* CITY and COr.YTI DEPOSITOEY. Paid np Capital $100*000 ! Surplus Profits 60.900; fs ATWGS DEPART3E5T. Deposits of $5,00 and upwards received. | Interest allowed at the rate of 4 per cent. j per annum. W. A. CLARK, President "Wiiiiz Jokes, Cashier. December 4-ly. IMPROVED COTTON SEED. ^ J AM NOW OFFERING 100 BUSHELS j JL of a new variety of improved Peterkm : Seed for sale at $20 per bushel, or $5 per Peck. It i3 a Limbed Cluster, very prolific, fruits from the ground to the top, and ma- j tures every boll. Not likely to dry forms ; on stalk liae other prolifics; not liable to j fall out like other clusters; makes about the ; same turn out of lint as the well known j Peserkin, (from 38 to 40 per cent). t i .1.?v.:? 1 l i?i%yc uuicr vwio icuv/o w*iu wid B " Cotton, and can say that I believe it to be the beet Cotton now in existence. I have never offered it for sale before, j and have only HO bushels for sale. Order j right away if you want them. I am stilt offering my well known variety j si $1.50 per bushel, price reduced on large i orders. j Cash must accompany orders and freight j prepaid, as the railroads will not aocept I Cotton Seed without prepaying the freight. ' BL The price 011 Improved Seed will not be re- i duced by taking over a peel*, but will be in ; the others if ordered in large lots. A farmer who buys a peck of the Improved Seed, will consider himself fortunate next fall. I have never seen anything to equal it. FAS, A. PETERKD, & Fort Motte, S. C. . PIANOS AND OSOANS, | cash or on time, at the lowest possible prices. WALTER D. SOSES K CO., 1005 B ilain St, Riohmcnd, Va Addresss: J. D. Smithdeal, Richmond, : i# Va., or aall on E. B. Roof, Lexington, S. 0. j THERE IS NO DEATH. ' f( P There is 110 death! The stars go down b To rise upon some lairer shore; p And bright in Heaven's jeweled crown ?, They shine for evermore. . I< There is no death! The dnst we tread ; t; Shall change beneath the summer show- j g era * t To golden grain or mellowed fruit, ^ Or rainbow tinted with dowers. I The granite rocks disorganize, v And feed the hungry moss they bear; t The forest leaves drink daily life From out the viewless-air. ? a There is no death! The leaves may fall. And dowers may fade and pass away; They only wait through wintry hours The coming of the May. ] ^ CI There is no death! An angel form Walks o' er;ihe earth with silent tread: He bears our best loved things away; And then we call them 4 dead." I * " a. tie leaves our nearis an uesomic, ^ He plucks ocr fairest, sweetest flowers; Transplanted into bliss, they now 0 ldorn immortal bowers. t The birdlike voice, whose joyous tone3 Made glad theBe scense of sin and strife, ? Sings now an everlasting song Around the tree of life. C i I Where'er he sees a smile too bright, Or heart too pure for taint and vice, He bears it to that world of light, ^ To dwell in Paradise. ; C J i 5 Bom unto that undying life, j o They leave us but to corae again; With joy we welcome them the sane? j 3 Except their sin and pain. c t And ever near U3. though unseen, The dear immortal spirits tread; For all the boundless universe ? Is life?there are no dead. 2 LeesvUio College T. U. C. A. 1 ! c i s With your kind permission I will | ^ give you and your readers some items i t concerning the young men of this ] college. j ( In November the young men or- j | ganized a Young Men's Christian As i j sociation which has resulted in much i good to them. They meet every j Saturday night; the attendance is ; good and much interest is manifested, j Since Christmas we heve added j I meeting ?the number " .1 c ^xistnras is nineteen. ' At first we had no.one to join us : ! ~2t the boys in college; but now we j ' i are glad to report that many from j | the town and surrounding country I J I have joined us. We extend to them ' ; & nearly welcome. I hey Trill do us . 1 good and we hopeio prove a bless- j ing to them. This brings us to our last meeting j ^ (Saturday night). At that meeting i ( | the Association requested the corres- ! 1 : ponding secretary to write it up for k your paper. j ( The committee on entertainment j * | had invited Miss Mary L. Yeargin to i give us a lecture, or as she said, "a j 1 talk." Miss Yeargin, in company i with Miss Alice Rice, was present at j ^ the appointed hour. The latter fa- j T U1CU U5 VV 11-J4 3UUJU Ui UOi O FT Cv I mu3ie. ? * Miss Yeargin first read the 12th ; chapter of Romans, and in her usual j 1 good way, gave us a profitable talk I from these five uBeV Be honest, be ; * just, be brave, be pure and be true. ! ? From these five sentences she told j * us many good things which are c worthy of rememberance, and from t the good attention that was given, * they will doubtless be remembered by all who heard them in days and years to come. "VYe hope these ladies ^ will give us another call in the near t future. a At the close of Miss Yeargin's v talk the house was thrown open for I business. First; an invitation for I members was given and Messrs. F. f E. Brodie and N. Jones united them- i] _ _ i _ *l v 1 11 I selves wnn us. a collection was [ c then taken up to defray the expenses of delegates to the State Convention n which will convene in Charleston on u the 16th inst. Last, but by no means j o least, an election was held to elect ; v delegates, which resulted in the elec- i o tion of Messrs. W. B. Fallaw and G. j t! W. Dukea. ! 5 Come down, Mr. Editor, and give 1< us a call. We will be glad to see j b you at any time. Jesse J. Stevenson, Corresponding Sec., Y. M. C. A. j April 13th, 1891. * Beaver Pond Notes. We have waited so long for bright g genial spring weather that the last c, few balmy days, with their caroling Q song birds among the opening ver- a: due of trees and bushes inspires a u hope and cheerfulness which may be ti read in every farmer's face. The ri plough boy whistles a merrier tune ti and the good housewife sings over r< the love songs of her girlhood, and ci we all yearn for the spring poet to K gush forth and warble to "spring, s< gentle spring, ethereal mildness.'' n The rapid work being done on the T South Round is fnrm shiner npw nprve T I >r enterprise in our midst. Pros- j ecfcive dej)ots, large satv mills and j right, flourishing little cities are j ictured on the growing map of our I uture. Every one, from the bare j ooted urchin to the grav haired sire, . ? alks railroad. AVe are told that j ;ood railroads bring greater civiliza | ion. Let her come even if the route j rings tlie measies ana uiuio waui|?, *y-the-way, we have lately had a isit from a genuine specimen of the oot pad who travels, as he said, for deasure, but to make himself useful ,s well as ornamental proposes to ;ive new and elegant instructions in i >enmanship. He left specimens of i lis "copies," all of a very inferior frade, taking good care before leav each place to fill his capacious oaw, and at one place swindling a ittle boy out of a dozen eggs. This ten fruit he may propose to ;tset" on >ut we tra*t that they will not hatch ut any more tramps. This neighborhood has had enough of these Dafers and the next will get the fraud bounce. This portion, hitherto known in j l&ssical phrase as Musii lsiana, is j Loted for is good, thrifty citizens, j ine health and forests of giant pines. ! iVe have a score of enterprising mer J bants, good churches and some good chools with splendid teachers, such ,s O'Brien, Leard, Rice, Smith, tiisses Scanlin, Rast, Caughman and ithers who have done much' toward ' a/ ahv iifc) euucauim ui juui,u. Prof. E. A. Leard has closed his ine school at Calvary and com nenced the study of Greek prepara ory to entering the Baptist Theologi :al college at Louisville, Ky. He Is i brilliant, worthy young man and vill doubtless succeed in the minis ry. Why don't the Dispatch outfit, levil and all, come down, see the rooming South Bound and angle for :rout and jack? Ottuh. April 14th, 1891. ?? Boiling Springs Laecniss. jh&s bneij I Farm work in_this section R!^55emS?^weainer More corn and less cotton is the watchword in this locality, lind the farmers seem to have canght'by inspiration, as it were, the motto of poor Richard, "He that by the plow would thrive. Hlm?elf must either hold or drive." R. E. Taylor, who will be remembered as the Boiling Springs barbe?uist of campaign times, has erected j. a j* i.iii -J. I i turpentine aisuuery at x>onuig Springs. Clark ?fc Clark, in the vicinity of Clark's Mill; Hallman, near he residence of W. N. Lucas. TV. H. Sharpe, having somewhat egained his health, is now in charge >f a large and prosperous school at Boiling Springs. The "Big Pasture" io the chief and I tlmost sole topic of conversation, and he pending suit as to its legrdity is vaiched with great intensity of feeing pro and con. Those in favor of jerpetuating it say their lawyer has old them that he will quash the I general stock law Act of 1882. If j he legal gentleman from Lexington loes this, (?) widespread dissatisfacs ion will prevail, even in" this bedghted section where reason has run ; lot. Recently, at the residence of the >ridegroom were united in the happy , >onds of holy wedlock; John W.'Wi'Se nd Cedesie Sharpe. Moore Jefcoat i ras the groomsman and Miss Annie brooks wss the bridesmaid, Mr. H." 3. Busby serving as ursher. Then j ollowed an old fashioned cake walk ! I ' a which old and young alike parti- | ipated. The people down here are very much pleased with the Tillman Ad- , ministration. They didn't all get ffice and they have gone back to i fork to ''earn their bread by the sweat j , f their brows," and while they know. hat the "big fish swallow the* little 1 sh" they are consoled by the excel- I Bnt thought that when they get to i e "big fish" they can swallow, too. | ; Sigma. I . Reeder's Store, April 10th, 189-1. j Guaranteed Cure for La Grippe. I We authorize our advertised drug- i : ist to sell you Dr. King's New Dis- j 1 overy for Consumption, Coughs, and j !olds, upon this condition. If you j { re afflicted with La Grippe and will j se this remedy according to direc- | ? ions, giving it a fair trial, and expe- ! ; ience no benefit, you may re- J i irn the bottle and have your money | ( ?funded. We make this offer, be- j : luse of the wonderful success of Dr. j { iing's New Discovery during last | 1 ?ason's epidemic. Have heard of | s o case in which it failed. Try it. ] rial bottles free at anv drucr store. 1 i ,arge size c-Oc. and 5>1,00. | 1 Along: ths Lino. j ] ! i ? L Corn planting in general. Some i cotton is being planted also. Wheat and oats are looking fine, I but the last frost sung the do^sology | 1 for peacnes. j ^ Messrs. Amick Bros, arc moving j , their new saw mill to near Summit j on the C., C. A A. R. R. Charles Langford, colored, lost a ! ^ tine youg mule of distemper a few j 1 days ago. , I We are glad to see a new column in the Dispatch. It was already oni ; of the best county papers published j and what will it be now? Messrs. Kyzer Bros, have their | ! turpentinery in full operation. They j ' are also doing a good mercantile busi- j | ness. ' It appears that "W. H. H." has been studying the roads while sing- ; V)v bflbift" to his first ] born. Hope he may "civilize" our ; countrv in the war of roada. I I Those who have been losing a j great many little 'chickens from what j they thought to be cholera will find j it to be vermin (lice). ~Apply*a little ; kerosene on the breast and under j the wings of the mother hen, and the | pest will be stopped. fc Mr. Wesley Nichols has helped , more young in getting hon??s than any other man along the line. He j did this by lending them money. i The Sundav schools are now gen* o " '?j ? IT 1 ~ I eraiiy re-orgamzeu. iuay mey uu much .good in teaching the young to know Christ's-love and suffering for them. .. We have just learned that some pine timber near the new railroad has been sold for ten dollars per acre.. Now this is more than the land was worth before building that road. How does that sound in the way of enhancing the value of land along a railroad? We are glad to shake h&ods with Festus again in your columns. He seems to take long naps, but when he wakes how nicely he can tell all his dreams. . ~**^ered just now. j No one doubts that Or. Sages Catarrh Remedy really cures Catarrh, whether the disease be recent or of long standing, because the makers of it clinch their faith in it with a $500 guarantee, winch isn't a mere newspaper gaurantee, but '(on call'' in a moment. That moment is when you prove that its makers can't cure you. The reason for their faith is this: Dr. Sage's remedy has proved itself the right cure for ninety-nine out of one hundred cases of Catarrh in the Head, and the World's Disoensarv ' XV Medical Association can afford to take tlie risk of you being the one hundredth. The only question is?are you willing to make the test, if the makers are willing to take the risk"? If so, ? . i the rest is easy. You pay your druggist 50 cents and the trial begins. If you're wanting, the $5,000 you'll get something better?a cure! The Metz-Iredell Case. .r Columbia Register, l<th lust. Yesterday almost the entire session of the Court of Common Pleas was occupied in hearing the returns to the rule to show cause why a receiver should not be aooointed to X X take charge of the assets of the old Commercial Bank. The complaint of Levi Metz, the plaintiff, was read by Mr. Allen J. Green; the answer of Commercial Bank by Mr. J. S. Muller, and the . answer of S. S. Metz by Mr. ?fird of Lexington. An affidavit of Mr. Wm. H. Lyles, , solicitor of the new bank, and for a few weeks its president, was read by 1 himself. All of the papers in the case are voluminous and occupied a great deal of time in the reading. . lhe complaint recites in detail tne ( history of the banking partnership of Iredell & Met?, known as ^the Commercial Bank," and'^the formation of the new bank, which is a chartered ' institution, know as "Commercial Bank, of Columbia, S. C.," (the prefix the not being used by the new Bank), and amongst other thkngs charges conspiracy to convert the assets of the old bank into the assetsof the new bank. Mr. Metz claims I' that about 8d5,000 is due to him by ( Captain Iredell and the bank. The answers of the several defend- | * Ante admit certain facts iu the eomC~aint, such as the partnership of i Messrs. Metz & Iredell the formation * jf the new bank, etc., and denies al- I ?v. A?% nil /> /vrt 4i ' I' V\ ? ILIUM r>vi> uiiitri auegauuii. ? UK mswer of Captian Iredell and the uank also alleges that all of the as- J sets of tbe old bank which are in the j possession of the present bank are ! is property by lawful purchase for ralue, and that so far from the present bank oweing the plaintiff my money, the plaintiff owes them j ibout ?44,000. After hearing arguments pro and J ?on Judge Hudson instructed the j ittorneys to frame an order restrain- ! ng any of the c.xeditors of the old j oanking fivrn of Metz & Iredell from instituting uits against that copart- , aership pending the adjudication of j the case on its merits, and further ' 7 I providing fjr the appointment of a j receiver who is to take charge of all j the asse+^As are in the old bank, ex- ' ;ept smK^isets as are in the hands ; >f and clamed by the present Com- j mercial Bank, and the appointment i Df the receiver to be without pre- j judice to the right of the Commer- j ' ' *1 i f 1L L _ ' 2ial .Bank: to collect any 01 tne asseiH in its lianox. by suit or otherwise. It will thus be seen that the ap^ pointment of a receiver will in nowise , interfere with the business of the j present Commercial Bank. Since the above was put in type j Col. J. Q. Marshal has been ap- i pointed Receiver. Deafness Can't he Cured i i By local applications, as they cannot reach ihe diseased portion of the j ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitution- j ed remedies. Deafness is caused by J an inflamed condition of the mucous j lining of tthe Eustachian Tube, j When this ^tube gets inflamed you have a ruipbling sound or imperfect hearing, f and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unles the inflammation can be taken out and tlie tube resorted to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are cadsed by catrrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We ^11 give One Hundred Dollars for anwase off Deafness (caused by C&t4l?S/U&t- we cannot pure hy tak ing Hall^vCatarrh Cure. Send for circular, frde, F.iT. CHENEY & CO., ? ( , Toledo, 0 r>om RE?" ? FOR A MURDERER. The governor has ofterd a reward of $50 for the capture of Toby Jackson, charged with murdering Nelson Hook, at Cfrangeburg, on Dec. 13. Jackson is five inches in ^height, sparely made, coal black and has two razor scars on the side of his neck. ANOTHER REWARD. He has also offered a reward of $50 for the apprehension and con vicuou ui Liit) prison ui persons vvno on Dec. 8, last, wilfully and maliciously perpetrated an assault, battery and robbery upon the body of J. H. Clamp, in Fairfield county. Judd Earksdale, the negro who was sentenced to be hanged at Laurens next Friday for the murder of Gace Todd, will Dot swing from the gibbet, Governor Tillman having commuted his sentence to five years imprisonment in the peniteniary. Though the judge and the solicitor would not recommand the commutation, the governor believes that he had strong reasons for the exercise of clemency. LOUIS WILLIAMS RESPITED. The governor has respited Louis Williams, the Darlington negro who was to be hanged yesterday. Wliat it "Would Do. ' The money paid for one glass of beer would pay for one loaf of bread. The money paid for one glass of whisky would phy for one pound of beef. The money paid for two glasses of beer would pay for a peek of potatoes. TllP m/illfV Viftid tr>v fwn erlnacosi r\f 1 whisky would pay for one pound of ! coffee. The money paid for three glasses ! of beer would pay for a quarter of a ; pound of tea. The money paid for three glasses | of whisky would pay for a dressed fowl. The money paid for four glasses of beer would pay for two dozen eggs. The money paid for four glasses of whisky would pay for three pounds of butter. The money paid in one month for j .wo gfeisses of beer a day would pay ! :'or a to^of coal. The motley paid in one month for I ;wo glasses (^jrhisky a day would )ay for a suit cif clothes. A bottle thowiU into the Atlantic, November 24th,^587. from the Ce^halonia, about 400N^iles out from Boston, recently washed ashore on a . \ ittle islet in the Garril\bean sea six ! 1- 3 *1 _ > .nousana miies awav i i ( I I I SENATOR EDMI NDS EXPLAINS.! The Farmers' Alliance Makes the ; Situation Interesting. , j The > Democrats Have Nothing to : Lose by It?No Third Party Move- j rnent in the Allianae Enterprise. I The Silver Question. The Washington Star recently j published a two column interview 1 with Senator Edmunds upon the present political situation and outlook. As between the two great parties the I Senator does not see any great differcnce between the situation now j and what it has been for several years, i but as to the Farmers' Alliance the situation is one of extraordinary in- ! terest and importance because of its j possible effect upon the next national election. The reporter asked: "What dangers to both parties and to the j Armnfw are there in the situation1-" "I do not think there is any dan- j ger to the Democratic party," the Senator replied with a faint smile. | I "For in this respect all is fish that conies to its<net, or indeed that goes into the net of the Farmers' Alliance: for in the next Presidential election if the Farmers' Alliance should carry j many States without having a major; ity of the whole electoral college the | simple result would be , that there i would be no election by the people. | as it is called, and the present | House of Representatives, having a ! very large Democratic majority of States as well as members, would elect a Democratic candidate in a Constitutional and regular way, 8.1 i though he may have earned tne | smallest number of States. As to j the danger of the Republican party, 1 it is that the Farmers' Alliance may i carry in the next Presidential elec tion 3ome States that would othert ! wise vote for a Republican candidate, and thus in effect, if there should be no election by the people, give tig j issues of the Rre4dectial campaign : partiesr'' "The Republicans will doubtless j stand by the same ground for justice ' and equality of rights among the citizens of the United States and far fair ejections and for the protection of American labor and industries that it has maintained hitherto." "Do you think that silver will be an issue in the next election?" <*1 don't think it will be1 an issue between the Republicans and Democrats, for I think that the Democratic party will hardly wish to make the silver question an issue to the extent of running any considerable risk oi separating silver and gold as coin money for the country, and certainly the great body of the Republican party-1 am sure will not up to the point of safety. I have no doubt but that the Republicans will be in favor of using silver as money as it has always done. What the Farmer's Alliance platform, if it should nominate a candidate for President, will be I am quite unable to say." "How is the feeling of union among the certain classes to be met?" "X think it is to be met as every other disturbance in society ought V O to be, by a candid consideration, by correct information, just reasoning and by the enactment of such laws as may fairly appear to be for the promotion of the general public good. It is upon such considerations l that every government of the people j must be carried on." "Is the third party movement | likely, and if so, what might it lead | to" Is communism at the bottom of j it?" ! "A third party movement," said the Senator, "does not exist in the Farmers' Alliance enterprise. If successful to the extent of having a President and both houses of Con gress, it would doubtless lead to the enactment of the measures they have already indicated, and then in a very short time whether those measures were good for the farmer or extremely bad for them would manifestly appear. I do not thick that communism is at the bottom of the Farmers' I Alliance movement. The per centage j of communism in this country is, I believe, almost infinitesimally small. The great body of the laboring people' of the country, which, taking all I the departments of human activity, | AAO vwaVVOUI -tt ^ A I 'CLII vi K/*J iiiLiny -li > c uiac \ hundredths of the whole number of j grown up people who are altogether | too intelligent and honest to think ' that communism will be of any benefit to them or their families, but i they believe that it is destructive of j private rights of personal prosperity i and personal happiness, and if ear- i ried into practice would effect the I maintenance of the vicious and lazy | and ignorant out of the toil of intelligent and industrious people." ' How might the finances of the country be effected by this movement?" ' The finances of the country always depend very largely upon the confidence that people engaged in business and people having capital have in the administration of its gov ernraent. it any ot the movements , of which we have been speaking should appear so formidable as to made unsound legislation at all probable, the finances of the country < would be very greatly disturbed, and that, of course, would disturb every branch of labor and business. This everybody perfectly understands." A Clpui of Witnesses. We know of no medicine that has so many testimonials to its efficiency as S. S. S., the great blood purifierIfany of the best known people in the country certify to the marvellous results it has wrought in the various forms of disease for which it is recommended. These testimonials come ncit alone from persons who have been relieved of their sufferings by S. S. S., but from people who have witnessed the effect* of the druggist, pharmacists?in fact, all who have had an opportunity of observing the cures brought about by ; th;s great blood remedy?bear will| ing testimony to its efficacy. In its held, which is a wide one, covering ! sotne of the most serious ailments of humanity, S. S. S. has no rival. The Bright Side. Look on the bright side. It is the right side. The times may be hard, but it will make them no easier to wear a gloomy and sad countenance. It is the sunshine and not the cloud that makes the dower. The sky is blue ten times when it is black once. You have trouble, so have others.. free from them, Trouble | jew 'd I tOflO T-0 life? a dull sea, and the sailor would new^ get skill, where there was nothing to disturb the surface of the ocean. What though things look a little dark, the lane will turn and night will end in broad day. There is more virtue in one sunbeam than in a whole hemisphere of clouds and gloom. See how the mist flies before the brightness of one little darting ray. So will trouble disappear be fore the ever cheerful. Slid Ssld Baauty's Passport. i No matter what the type, beauty and attractiveness of a certain kind can assuredly be cultivated by women"' through careful attention to details. A clear skin, a bright eye, fine teeth, well-kept hands, glossy hair, a good carriage and a firm step are oertainlv passpors of beauty. The more so since they endure when mere bloom has passed away. While these things j are being looked after by dentist, ! hairdresser and manicure, it will be ! well for my lady to further pursue 1 iV_ , i- f?1 i ' ? 1 ** j ner enorcs. i^ne inay De trouDied. j with dyspepsia, may have no appetite, | perhaps is generally debilitated and | has no zest for any subject. Perhaps j incipient fever has secured a foothold, | and lends a hectic hush to the cheek and an unwanted brilliancy to the eye. It will be then the beaute de diable. The functions must be natural; and nature's greatest regulators | are to be found only in Dr. "West ! moreland's Calisaya Tonic. In ma[ larial sections it is invaluable, and I as an anti periodic has on equal. | For sale at the Bazaar in 50c. and ! 31,00 bottles. Defining a Blush. A Cincinnati physician defines a blush as follows: A blush is a temporary erythema and calorofio effulgence of the phvsiogmy, setiologized by the perceptiveness of the sensorum when in a predicament of unequilibrity from a sense of shame, anger or other cause, eventuating in a paresis of the vasomter nervous filaments of the facial capillaries, whereby, being divested of their elasticity, they are suffused with radiance, emanating from an intimidated, prsecordia." That settles it. She's from Boston.?Chicago Times. Wh.it a Gra^s Widow la. Two children were playing on the side-walk, and a lady passed them. "She's a grass widow," said one. "What's a grass widow?" asked the other. ''Gracious! Don't you know that?" said the other, scornfully; "why, her husband died of hay fever " ,? ? i Cough drops, atthe Bazaar. / \ TEMPERANCE DEPARTMENT EEAUTIFUL WORDSBY MBS. T. LA.THEUP. Only a glass of sparkling wine, Is that ali? Is that ali? Tempting a moment with ruby shine; Is that all? I've seen a soul in a passion of paip. Cry out at the wine that with iron chain Held it in thrall! Held it in Only an idle, an evil word, Is that all? Is that all? Only a darksome thought thus stirred, Is that all? I've seen the wreck of an honored name, The sunless glooui of a path of shame After the fall, after th* fall. finlr Q Pa nro? no tra cta v/-*j w */v Jj5?t <*o nv la that all ? Ia that all? Only a few "wild oata" to 90w Is that all? I've seen the reaping in loss and tears, The harvest growing of sorrowful years, And this is all, and this is all! T&9 Fight Against Bum. * * Vr? Spartanburg Delighted with the Talk of an Eloquent Advocate of Woman's Suffrage?The Substances of ^er Lecture. From the News and Courier. Spartanburg, April 7.?The Court TTrmaA woa emur/tarl loaf ni<-rVif few AAVMMW TI ww V4 v ?? vtv M iiAgaw t/vy hear the lecture of Mrs. Mary T. Lathrop, of Michigan, on the temperance question. Many returned home for want of room. The Band of Hope opened the exercises with some lively temperance songs. Mr. C. B. Ezell introduced the speaker. She is a fine looking woman, and strong in body as in mind. She went to the platform with an ease and grace that indicated her familiarity with such places. She laid aside her hat, and stood up before the audience and, as a little girl ex- m pressed it, she talked just like a man. * She started off by showing that woman was forced to the front. It was not her choice there. In New EngB ' v ^ J ^^^HBSKB Jb>y just can't do it. It is necessary for them to become breadwinners. They have to enter the business places of life by the side of men. In the South the war left many widows with families to raise. They could not do that and sit in idleness. Crocheting tidies and working slippers would not give the children meat and bread. Thus women have been forced to work. They have the privilege of working for a living, paying taxes without voting and being hanged by verdicts emanating from a jury not made up of their peers. In work, education and moral reforms woman has been forced to take the position she occupies to-day. It is not of her own choosing, but she is here to stay. The speaker then showed the part woman was taking in the temperance work. Her picture of the progress the whiskey power had made since the early days of the Republic was a true one. She showed how, by degrees, the saloon was evolved from years of legislation until now it stands forth the acknowledged power in the political machinery of both parties. As go the saloons, so the elections go. They are entrenched behind law. They are here with the authority of Government. It is-to remove these, the greatest evil m our J.?.- Al_ - L AT- 1. ?A 3 uoumry mat in? wnii.e-riuuoiieu muiy are banded together to day. The battle is joined. The forces are arrayed, and it is to be prohibition or a fight to eternity. The W. C. T. U. had first tried to save the individual drunkards. That failed, as it must do with the open -? saloon in every town. Then they appealed to the saloon keepers, and that was the most futile and fruitless effort they had ever made. They simply pointed to their license and claimed that they were doing just what their friends, the voters, said they could do. Finally the women had determined to make their attack j.i. _ .1 i .1 i , i over iu? poor uruiiiiaras ana me saloon keepers and appeal to this great Government through its ten million voters. She believed that the child was now bora that would see the last licensed saloon swept from the face of the country. Her argument was clear, forcible and logical. Her manner of speaking is very attractive. She has no abuse for any one. Spartanburg will always give this gifted, good woman a warm welcome. E. S. W. Superintendant Press Work, Leesville Y. W. C. T. U. The Florida hotels have done a fine uusmesa uuruig tutj past wmier. The keepers regret that the time has come for their guests to move northward