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^ ^ AD7ZI'TI5I-TG HATES:^ KATES KKASOXAIiLK. I ' ! ''" :"'i; JOBPKini\?A"SPtCI.VLTY. i _ \ . ' fr... - - - (>.?ii!i:tn( s ov. r tfii lit:*' t li.tr^ il for at .__ r>-ou!;ir ailvoriisit!^ rates J VOL. XXIII. LEXINGTON, S. C? WEDNESDAY, EEHKI AIIY 22, 1893. NO. 14.1"' ?? THE CHEAPEST :e= x_. c e TO BUY YOt'lt rf mmIIS TO ? iLUiifiUi. mis -AND lit\IV llli\IMII\li\ Trunks, Valises, Satchels, Umbrellas, India Rubber Coats* Mcintosh Coods j Of all Grade*, together with I ?-\ - 7 <-> a complete line of Hoys* and Men's Overcoats. Also a i mice line of Jerseys. Children | Suits, something nobby, from i two and a half to six years, I ?^^^reoffered at slaughter prices v_ ciii 4 > \ t_'d It) OT I EPSTIN BROS, B I 50 MAIN STREET. UNDER COLUMBIA HOTEL. COLUMHIA, !S. C Wk TATVTATTTJTTC T TfcTT^ XjlJ U o IJIH X. T A K 1" GAHEY'S HTSSK? I'M ON DEPOT, COLl'MHL" On arrival of all trains, for Lott-ls c t<%uj [ah l sji ?.xjv January ll-tf. F. W. HUSEMAN* Gun and Lock Smith, ?-? ^ AND PEALEK IN } GUN'S. PISTOLS, PISTOL CA1TI RIDGES. FISHING TACKLE, ??<3 tlI kinds of Sportsmen's Aiticlevrbtfit fit Rhs now on exhibition and fo sale ii He ?*cre. Main Street, Near the Central Bant ?j?| Columbia, S. ( . Aoext yon Hazabg Powder Company. .S^Repairing done &t sbort notice"^ r iilTi f TRIUJ!I'll A NT! At the Exposition Universelle, Pans K. 'wxsy. received the oulv Graud Pr;/> awarded for Sewing Machines. The No. ! |?| ban ixa e*jual in rapidity aud precision o action, elegance of design. The mos Mtep. -simple and durable Sewing Machine 01 the market. For prices, terms. etc.. ud dress, W. M. COKLEY. Agt. j||k 15 rook laud, S. C. lexd(;to\ L SAVINGS BANK. PE POSITS RECEIVED SIBJEI'T TO CHECK ALLEN JONES, President. I \ W. ? ROOF. Cashier. DIRECTORS: Allen Jones, W. P. Roof, C. M. Etird, jllV^y - R. Hilton, Jas. E. Heudrix. EXCHANGE BOUGHT ANI) SOLD. Deposits of SI and upwards received au?' interest at 5 per ct-ut. per annum ailowt ! |p^ payable April uml October. The Sternal Joys of Heaven. i i Extract lr<?:n Tsihuiuie. 1 must stu.lv these sciences so far as to help me in my work, but 1hvoii<1 that I must give myself to saving my own soul and saving the souls of others, knowing that in one llash of eternity we will catch it all. Oh, what an observatoiy in which to : study astr nomy heaven will be, not by powev < r felescope, but bysuper natural visn and if there be some- | j thingdoubtful 10,000,000 miles away, 1... ^ 4,... I- /, 4l>/5 irilln- V.Hl !? <> 1} '? M I , h~ VI I li\ ?> I v/s.* ?>v i there, by another stroke of the wing ; you are back again, ami all in l?-ss time than I tell you, catehing it a'l i : u> /,nr> r,f r>t#>vintv_ Ami geology! What a place that i will he to studv geologv, when the ! | world is being picket! to pieces as ; easily as a school girl in bonatieal j lessons pulls the leaf from the co ; ' rollal What a place to stmly archi tecture. amid the thrones ami the I I palaces ami the cathedrals?St. i Mark's ami St. Paul's are rookeries i i . I in comparison. ! Sometimes you wish you ccuid| ! make the tour of the earth, going ! around as others have gone, but you ! have not the time: you have not the ' means. You will make the tour yet during one musical pause in thef tor- i nal anthem. I say these things for the comfort of those people who are - . - - . . . abridged m their opportunities--those people to whom life is a hum ! drum, who toil and work, and toil , and work, and aspire after know!- ; edge, but have 110 time to get it, and say, '*If I had the opportunities which other people have, how I 1 would fill my mind and soul with I grand thoughts!" Be not discouraged, ! my friend. Yur are going to the : university yet. Death will only 111a- j 1.? ?.1 .1.. ..... ?...i 1 ini'UJiUt* >UU 1UIU liJV lUHU tunr-r | of the universe. What a sublime thing it was that | Dr. Thorn well, of South Carolina. ! uttered in his last dying moments! As he looked up he said, "It opens; ! it expands: it expands/' Or. as Mr. m T< ill.. -' *L_. 'j -' ~. . -!. | though he saw something supernati ! ral. "Light!" and as he came nean j the dying moment, his countenanc ; more luminous, he cried, ''Light 11 j and at the very moment of his d< parture lifed both hands, somethin I X { supernatural in his countenance i, ! he cried, "Light!" Only anothc ! name for sunshine, j Besides that we shall have all th j pleasures of association. We wi j go light up in the front of God with out any fright. All our sins goiu . | there will be nothing to be frightene i about. There our old Christiu: I friends will troop around us. Jus as now one of your sick friends goe away to Florida, the land of flower.< or to the south of Franco, and vm i do not see hhu for a long while, am | alter awhile y 'u? et him, and th | hollows under ,h ? eyes are filled, am ! the appetite has come back, and tin j crutc1 has been thrown away, an< i he is so changed vou hardly knov J him. You say, "Why, I ne\or sav | you look so well." He says, "i i I couldn't help but be well. 1 hav< j been sailing these rivers and climb >r j nig these mountains, and that's hov t T (f/ *f iliiw- ol-utvid k r . ? i -A 111*0 ua.-?uin). JL v.as x . j well." s | Oli, my friends, your departed * j loved ones are only away for then ! nealth. in a better climate, ami wliei ! you meet tliein they will be sc. i * 1 changed yon will hardly know then ?they will be so very much changed 'T and after awhile, when you are as j sured that they are your friends, you j will say: "Why, where is that cough Where is that paralysis.' Where i> that pneumonia.' Where is that ecu * sumption.'" Ami he will say: Oh. i I am entirely well! There are no j siek ones in this country. I have I j been ranging these hills, and hence j this elasticity. I have been here new ! twenty years, ami not one sivk one - j have X seen?we are all well in iliis x j climate." | \:el then T <t:nu] 'it tin i I ~ '"v o'll< ' - j tlit* celestial city to sec the proces j sioiis come out, and I see a long proI cession of little children with arms j full of flowers, ami then I see a j procession of kings atui priests mov j , j ing in celestial pageantry-?a long moces>ion. hut 110 black tasseleel ve. ' j hide, no mourning group, ami I say: "How strange it is! Where is your itroeiiwoo'i: \\ lu re is your Laurel Hill? Where is Your Wesuninistt r | Abbey?" And they nlmlS cry, There arc no graves here." Aiill t}j? 11 listen for the tolling of the oM beltries ol heaven, tlie ol<l , belfries of eternity, i lib! en to hear ' them toll for the dead, but they toll . not for the dead. They only strike , up a silvery chime, tower to tower, > cast gate to west gate, as they ling i out, '*they shall hunger nu inure, neither thirst no more, neither shall the sun li^ht on them, nor any heat, for the Lainl) which is in the midst of the throne shall h ad them to hv in<j fountains of water, and (ml shall wine awav all tears from their eyes." Oh. unglove your haml and give it to mo in congratulation <>n that scene! I feel as if I would shout. I will i shout hallelujah! i)oar Lad, forgive me that 1 over complaint <1 about anything. If all this is before us, who cares for anything but God ami heaven ami eternal brotherhood.' Take the crape otV tlie Ooor bell. ^ our low d ones are only >\"av for i.. i.i. i i u,?:.,i IIII'II llilili LL ill a lil'HI aii.'IMUMiU. Come. Lowell Mason. Laae Watts, and give us your best Lyinn about joys cm lostia!. W hat is the use of postponing our heaven any longer? Let it begin now, aid wl osoever lath a liaip let lcr thrum it. and whosoever hath a trumpet let himbl av it and win s ( verba h an organ 1< t liim give us full diapason. They erowd down the air. spirits blest, moving in eavaleade of triumph. Their chariot wheels whirl in the Sab batii -.sunlight. They eotne. Halt, armies of iod! Halt until we are readv to join tls* battalion ot plea . ures tlifit never du1. <>h. Hiy friendsA would take a ser moil as long as e'Hiity to tell tin- { joys that are ooiniBf to us. I just set open the siinshi\i door. Come in, all ye disciples of the world who | have found t tie world a mockery. ! Come in, all ye disciples of the dance, I and see the boundinir feet of this . ! heavenly gladness. Conn in. ye dis- | ciples of worldly ainusen.ent, and j se-e the stance where kinos nr< actors. I ? r> o I ami burning worlds the footlights, j and thrones the speculator. Arise, ye dead in sin, for this is the morning of resurrection. The ! joys of heaven submerge our soul. T pull out the trumpet stop. In thy j presence there is fullness of joy: at ; thy right hand there are pleasures forever more. ft UU. o. j ?i.? i.,^r ni.. v.- ....... niKsoar aw To ai?l the son?, the 5 a'm to hear, 0 j i Ami how the chief of siners there. Oil, the sunsnine, the glorious su ! shine, the everlasting sunshine. (Y I ? O i S100 Steward $100. 1' : The readers of this paper will 1 |] pleased to learn that there is r.t lea [. one dreaded disease that science b , i been able to cure in till its stasrf , ! O , i 1 ! .,+ t !? U IT . n i . .. i tin . i in.n v.iuuiu. ijaiis VUTUl"] t j Cure is the only positive cere know . i to the medical fraternity. Cat art t | s ! being a constitutional wlisease. r i (ptires a constitutional treatnieii Hall's Catarrh Cure is *Cken inter i | ally, acting directly up/.i the bloc p j and mucous surfaces of tlie systet j j thereby destroying the foundation i I the disease, and giving the patiei j strength building up the constitute r I and as listing natuia in doing ii i vSp/k. The pioprh tors La\e so mue faith in its curat've ]kv }>. that tin . 1 ! offer One Hundred Dollars for an case that it fails to cure. Send fi ' | list of testimonials. ' I Address. V. J. CHEN MY a Co., . loletlo, V. , ; tr.-y Sold !>v Druggists, Toe. 14. I ? o o ; j Some days ago ;i tramp applied fc > j lodging at a Mississippi farm lioust , when the fanner set liis dogs on liii ! : and severely heat him. The farnie ! afterwards discovered that the ma ! j was his son. who had run away fron - i home 20 years previously. Never whip a horse for not doihj what he cannot understand is \vante< . '' of him. Few horses wilfully refus to perform a service required. l>u they do not understand. Spent your energy in patiently making tin animal understand, instead of spend i ing it in whipping him. i S .! Chandler. Ilichmolid, \ a, writes: --No one can afford to 1 i without. i>. 1>. i>.. who wishes an ap petite. 1 could scarcely eat a singh hiseuit for breakfast, l<ut since takinj I?. It. ]>.. I clean the whole table, si t<> speak. lb. A young gill was caught kissinj, her sweetheart a few days ago. He: mother took her to task for suel actions, but the girl silenced her In this (juotation: "Whatsoever y? would that nun should do unto you do ye ev< n s<> unto them. I lie oh lady wilted. Memories of old wen brought forcibly to mind. \ wilful fab* la. -d is a cripnlc. iiol abl'' i<? jmmU'1 1?v it>cil" without an other t?? support if It is easy tot el a In., but it is hai'l f.< tell only om lie. H'kxI s S:irsaj?arill.*?, f??r salt* :it tin i Bazaar. / * They're Dying Out. J I I One Set's But Little of the True j Type of the "Ole tinie Darkey" ' Now. \ii.inui v>< ?umi .uikjij. Away down in the valley of the j ^ Savannah liver lies a fair strip of j country where the spirit of the old 1 . south, its simple customs and faith will : 1 never die. Theie in that beauteous ; and delectable hind things seem to! ' * lock recklesslv c?ir with the change j ! r , of seasons pretty much as they used j to do before there was ever any talk : of war between the states, and just j , as thounh there had never been any ? * ; 11 war to rufne the peace and happiness ; j j of the south. i j The people are not as rich as they j MeOil 1/ i l\/\ ?n al t/.iv *4 I ur*v vi 11/ it, L'ui v* uui maun n 11 %> iu'ii | they are just are as happy??The ! , great plantations have never been j ft subdivided or cut to pieces, and remain to this day the same vast es- ij tate that used to spread out before ^ the gaze of the southern barons who i ^ presided over them in tin dearoiddavs when they could call their scores of slaves around the "big'ouse" at sun- , rise and march them out across the | ^ _ . _ _ _ i n loads of cotton and corn for miles j around to work. The lands are just j ^ as rich, the seasons just as pro p; pitious, the air just as pure and j p. fresh and the water runs from the j r, old sweet gum springs just as cool j }e and delightful as it used to run; fl( while the sun summer shines just as j {] warm and bright and the mocking j 01 birds have lost none of their power 1 f(] to charm the human heart with ; T I Jti merry songs from out the bush and bramble. ! Ja The same old darkies that used to wait upon their lords are ibere, many of them, and while they have large j families they have not allowed the I "newfangled city ideas" to get sway St upon the mind of the younger generation. There are few regions in the pi soitthgwhere such conditions still remain unc!u*iged. One seldom finds in the southern state today the true jS ? i)ooH' : ^ illj to iv books about iliis cla^^^^^amlled individuals' sav fhev fiTid ft tvnva | -and there, yet it is but the simple u- , truth that the genuine character ! doesn't turn up at the beck and call { of the writer every time he makes ; believe. Towering schools and coji leges for the colored freedman's |3e } children have played sad havoc with st the ranks of the 4,fo de wall" plantaus tion darkies, and with no intention of >s, ; robbing thestatesman of his taskto tell i h whether it be for the good or the ill of ,11 the republic that this is true, it may rh | just be stated here and now that the c j writer who ilraws pictures from life for it. the sake of fiction and bis reputation n- through conversations with the "ole id i time southern 'dark} had best hasten n, | with lu's task ere ho have no object of i left alive upon whom to work. They it | are going from us with their happy 'ii i solids and shouts. i ! The type of plantation darky to be h | found along the banks of the Savau } j nali today is so different in compari- j y : sou with the type of negro to he ; >r seen comuioply throughout the south j j that one would hardly know whether j | it were the same race. It ought to j be said just in this connection that \ j very few of the book writers who de- j I pend upon the old type of negro for ; j - ,r ; incir cuaraciers got tne truth from i j nature.?They fall short in the pic- I n ture anyhow. The pen of Thomas : r Nelson Page has snatched from the ; n | old Virginia darky the very words ! ,, j lie utters, and it takes no close oh | server to know that he has painted i his pictures from life as ho found it. 'l | So it is with Joel Chandler Harris. . He has not been mistaken in the man , I and has put the picture just as it was I presented. What miserable fakes are many of the plantation sonars one hears from I o j the stage nowadays! It is the same ; i way with the characters portrayed ] by some negro-dialect writers. PerL hap-, the songs of the negroes meas- j ured beside the songs they are re1 ported to sing very ofteu show the i ' widening difference between the true { J character and the fictitious character I ; more conspicuously than any other j t evidence that could be taken into ac- j > r count. A southern born man who j i has ever spent a day on a southern j farm among the darkies "of the old ! school," so to speak, would laugh to scorn the songs that the minstrels | | sometimes sing with pleadings to be i taken to their old plantations, songs which have pretty enough verses to them, but which have none of the simplicity that ready characterizes j j the true songs of the old time darkey j As a rule their songs were discon- | 1 neeted and contained but little more j than a mere jumble of ill-timed rhymes.?The old time negro couldn't ! a sentimental song. If ho was in a soiitimeiitiil mood his song would XV: bo more of ft monufnous nnmii. im !U provised with a few words murmured j W! m u low voice over and over again. I '' For instance, one could be heard i ')a singing in the melancholy dirge of a o? i illl I'm gwine ter leave ;>]?! Giorgv-j! I'm gwina ter leave old Gvorgy-j' ne. I'm gwine tt-r leave old (icor^> v-\' 011 When the sun goes rollin' down. There were no more verses of this j on<.v, ant-1 I ne\^ heanl 1 ?ut one j iegro sintr it. Therefore, I think it j o o vas original. Ir "tens meaninglc-s, ? : I ave to the extent that the singer j ' n I a t em port rv grudge against his ntivc stain and didn't mind making old to say so. Y?1 to liim it was u i ighly sentimental song. j Lejc The chief repertoire of the old ! witt r 4 , i Oth line negro vocalists were songs of a t0 ^ ghter nature, and were- usually sung P * C t the cabin dances, where, with a rent, lightwood knot lire blazing on ? tie hearth, they would gatlmr around i x cm all the cabins of the quarter for i gm tie "hot supper" as the ball was i 2?=? tyled by them. J fr^e" Mini unc IU jnuj a uuiuc:*i-i j jrning tune on the old two dollar ?" ddle, one to ubeai straws," and one J ) call the figures of the dance and ,vo or three enthusiasts to "'rap" or j at, the dance would go 011 with a ! alf dozen or more couples whirling i >und and round, whetting out sine ia^ , . , , iuai ather at a furious rate on the rude i mi S*r( Dor of the cabin. Tliere it was ^ mt one heard the real negro song, 1 . . i I l -*11? iginal and Simon pure, such as the ^ illowing: i ? ra? ; ci iy bird up de sugar tree, i ^jir( Sparrow on de groan', ! , i S and ,y bird snake de shngar down, Sparrow pass bit 'er roua'. ! den Chorus, | . V UJ . loo, laches, shoo! 1 spec Shoo, ladies, shco! : 100, ladies, shoo, my gal. 1 110 Uni jest fuiii Sugar Hill. i . was ve cents is my pockit change, rr * km. ' m t. I eii cents is my bill, I times don' git i^bettm' heah, i ^ Um boun'A rockin' keeps i)JfE/K8j&B^BSP^ ! more inspiring d a^^^neplahitive ; tone that runs through the true j { negro melodies Whether they be ! j merry or solemn. j The "set" is finally ended and a j j relay of dancers, summoned out by j i the repeated shout, "nardners on do i flo\ " take position in the arena ' | The tune changes with the change i of set and another singer comes to j i the front with: j Steal my pardner, I st-.-al yourit. i Little Liza Jane: j Steal all 'er rouu', don* slight none, j Little Liza Jane. t < j And when the chorus comes, all , I join in the shout and the dance as- 1 , I sumes all the life of a perfect south , Georgia cyclone. I WHAT ABOUT THE BANJO? It has been a much debated ques- j ^ i tion among negro dialect writers i J whether the baDjo is really very much i of a negro musical instrument, that 1 is to say, whether it was invented by 1 | the slaves and whether it was ever *s played by them to a great extent, j It has been claimed by some that | the banjo is an Arabian invention, i ^ and that it came to this country sim i ^ ply as a rude combination of hide j c and a wooden rim. It is also claimed i " j i that the negro was never much of a periormer on tne trnnjo. "Whatever might be advanced to j sustain these claiuis, the fact still re ! v mains that the prima facie evidence J is against them. J To those who have never heard ! the genuine negro banjo picker, there \ is but little doubt of at lent the i adaptability of the instrument to the race. Of course, to hear the banjo C fakir of modern times, whether his skin be black or white, would tend j [\ to disprove the commonly accepted j \\ tradition that the hnnin i* the Iiotrtvi w I i l - ? ??" '"n1" " I LI instrument, for the faked songs and j fantastic movements of the fingers S( on the strings have no smack of p plantation originality. There is the ()i greatest difference between the ban t; joist of the present day and the p banjo picker" of the past, whose J Uv songs were the life of the plantations j ], of the south. The eutiio art is [ fi( changed, and the banjo itself has : p] evoluted from a seive hoop covered i si with a sheep skin to a beautiful in ! in stumcnt trimmed with silver orna | n< incuts and covered with the finest J p] calf skin parchment such as is used j tt for the manufacture of college dip r<: lonias. J T The old negroes along the banks ' in of the Savannah river play the banjo j bi today just as it was played in its ! T primitive days. They know nothing | g; of tht1 fancy minor chords that the i h: dudes of the cities have found oil tin- jh frets of their pretty instruments, re They use but the forefinger and the 1 h thumb on the strings, jmd have but | in the one movement which is all the 1 p? , I,, limn i i .i.^Hterrmi iv from the shoulder down the in in measured jerks, keeping time th tlie seldom i hanging tune. iere is :ui inspiration about the njo when played this way that os right into tno heart id a man, 1 makes him say to himself, if the 11j ? was not first eoneeiveil hy the gro. it ecilainlv is easily at home th" negro's knee. My - h2d a malignant breaking out on my leg >w the knee, and was cured sound and well t two and a half bottles of er blood medicines had failed .0 me any good. Will C. Heatv, Yorkville, S. C. MHHWm vas troubled from childhood with nn or* ,-atod case of Tetter, and three bottle* t f rSF3B cured mo permanently. wiilare mans, * *' Mannviilc. L T. tr book on Mood and Skin Diseases mailed Bwdt Specific Con Atlanta, Oa. lav?2"> ly. udgo Lamar at Petersburg. 'I tne many eloquent speeches ile by this brilliant Georgian, per is the < ran l<*st v.asi n lHfln, to the : 0 I 1 in the trenches. Generals Long : et and Ord were confronting each or on the James, ami it was not * after the Fortress Monroe con *nce. Longstreet's men were j ui fr,.i M.. i 1.., i ! iiiivi tii 1c\i, LliUJ ' ?e to his one, all warmly clothed | richly fed. 'he ''bovs in gray" were despon | t, when it was suggested that O O L. Q. C. Lamar make them a ?ch. Longstreet said it could do larm, and might cheer his sol's. But when and where to speak j the difficulty. All the men were I he trenches and close up to the ; era! liim. place ITttle back fi i in 11:1 1::'1 ot^^TiTamar and never in the senate, the hoi^P the courtroom did he make such stirring address. He stood on a r< stump, with the ragged veterans Lee huddled close about him. As the great orator proceeded t men cheered. Attracted by t cheering the federals shot at t noise. Lamar went on with t speech ducking his head to the rig r>? tlin l..ft <?* 1 1 -A.v .Wl, UUHV13 ? U1/.Z.CI.I CIOSC him. Finally the tiring became heavy, contiuous and accurate, ma iug splinters fly from the stump 1 was on, that Col. Lamar conclude bis speech with this remark: "Tho vankees must have owl's eyes." Specimen Cases. S. H. Clifford, New Cassel, Wi was troubled with Neuralgia an dheum&tism i is Stomach was diso red, his Liver was affected to a ilarmiug degree, appetite fell awa uid terribly reduced in flesh an itrength. Three buttles of Electr: litters cured him. Edward Shepherd. Harrisburg 111 uid a running sore on his leg of eigl ears* standing. Used three bottle if Electric Bitters and seven boxe if Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and hi igs were sound and welh Joh: ipeaker, Catawba, ()., had live larg "ever sores on his leg. doctors said h ras incurable. One bottle of Ek< ric Bitters and one box Bucklen* irnic Salve cured him entirely Jold at the Bazaar. Immediate Action Needed. olmnbiii Register. The ruilroads must be taught tha icy are nut supreme in South Care na. Through the intervention o ,ie ITiited States Courts ti.ey liavi efieil the uuthoiity of the State am A its laws at naught. They mus o brought to a proper sense of thei bligations to the State, even if il ikes an extra session of the Legisla irt; to do it. An extra session wouh ist the people of the Statesome n o ie] nt they are willing to pay, for the ar< jilting for a principle, the prinoi le of State's rights. It was jusl ich a s]>irit which provoked the en lslii of "Millions for defense, but >t one cent for tribute.'* The peo ie are willing to go even to the ex nt of revoking the charters of sucl ads as fail to to respect its laws here should be no delay in thi; alter: the railroads oiiirht to 1m roiight uj> w itli around turn at once ho railroads have tiling down the inntlct of defiance to the State a no ive nullified one of its laws and do ?d its sovereign power to collect venue to ruu its government. Now t them hewiire; this is not an age which railroads can boss the peo ?oj)le About Cnr Grandparents. H irju-r's Riz-ur. fl'ojM the standpoint <>! l nvcra^o child. there i> nohody so . Hamuli as mo average graJMparo ( iiail'lfiltluTS ;uc llir jolliest <>f ]>1 follows, the must clianr.iiiLf of Co j panions. Fathers aro apt to ho : . soihod in business, with little or 4,',.w. 4.. ,4? 4 . 4 1.,. ..... nun* iu uru'ir iu iur ?im iiTM'int'ii I I their bovs ;u. 1 <rirls. but ?rr;uidfat n r> ers ftro no longer in the conflict: tb can patter about. lolp in maki: j kites ami building boats, tell stoii by the hour 'oyether: tln-v can sy pathize with a **f. liow" iu liis il;.i ! trials ami triumphs. A pandfath is very nnieli nearer a boy of five ! ten years old than his father is a 4 1. H.l 1. . 4 1 1. I 1 to no. lie iooks inioupn outer \ more ehild like eves, and appreriat the koj's difficulties aiul tcmpatio: ! more readily and more truly tlian ; younger man does. It almost soon at times as if a man must bo a ?r ran i . . ! father before he entirely enters in | the fulluess of fatherhood. j As for grandmothers, no family j complete that lacks one. A ^ran i mother over tin* way. in the no ! street, in the next town, is a hies i lg, but a grandmother resident O O tlx* family isagift for which to lliai God fervently. "Who else is so to: dor, so sweet, so dear? To liorquh room, young and old bring their pc plexities, to liml the patient wisdo] and the ready eommon sense wliic explain whatever was battling, an d-3\ise a way in o fr. edom from eat ' Grand-mother's eh: i Gmovedintotli sunniest corner of the kitchen who grave household duties are afoot. 1 is her receipe by which the weddin cake is compounded for the bridr and the mince meat prepared for th winter's supply. Grandmother always has com plaster and witch hazel and arnio and toothache drops in the little cal inet in her room. She can sprea. MajLces and bind up wounds, au (^n* p^^^^^Kdparents are accused by daughters, with a fair 11 o^^Hson, of being decidedly ?*il lenient with juvenile offenders, ?f I sternly disposed toward disci ! th an thf v woro ti? flmir clnl in an earlier day. They would *1(? the grandchildren if allowed, do j the fathers and mothers sereueh lls ! fideiit of their own discretion, j quite sure they are right in | sternly repressive methods. Su j Never mind. The wheel of in its ceaseless revolution is brin J0 j on the day when the man -d j laughingly reproves his parents se 1 their fancied weakness, will hii; some day stand in awed plea J gazing into the round eyes of j second generation, and feeling F- J self the founder of a line. Toe 'd j will be his turn to emulate the gi r" j parent, as the grandparent has 1 ;11 j from the beginning. | Now Try This. ic I It will cost you nothing and I surely <lo you good, if you Inn ^ | Cough, Cold, or any trouble 1 ,, | Throat, Chest or Lungs. Dr. Ki hi ? ,s j New Discovery for Consump! js j Coughs and Colds is guaranteed u j give relief, or money will be ] e ! back. Sufferers from La (hi e j found it just the thing and undei .. j use had a speedy and perfect re s ! ery. Try a sample bottle at our . | pense and learn for vourself just ] good a thing it is. Trail bottle ! at the Bazaar. Large size j and si.Go. I ^ - ? | A Question of State Sovereign i j From the Columbia Journa1. f j Tn the pending conti owrsy P j tween the railroad companies and 1 | State of South Carolina the iss t involved are of too serious charat i i' ! and consequence, tlu* law on the> t j ject too elaborate ami the plain j ; for the assessment ami collection 1 j taxes too clear to conclude that { ! this instance it is passion an 1 3 : judgment that prompts the unm j ami summary action emanating ft t | the Kxecutivo. " A question of State sovereignty t ; involved. A jx)siti.<n is takoi oil - j one hand. which if maintained. - ! paralyze the una of our State in i : enforcement of her laws. Wo : fairly facing a grave question am 5 j serious situation, the iv>ult of wl ' I will make its impress ami materi: < j elYeet the administration and enfoi } j meat of our laws in the future, i I tirelv irrespective of oartv f:n-t i< "A I with tho present governor of ' i State entirely eliminate.! in his \ ' j sonality, from the matter, we m ) j cousider this ?jnesti<>n with care n | sincerity. ' It i:? to he deeply deplored tl trains chained to the tract in different parts of the State are causing temporary cessation of tratlie atnl a corresponding sutiering ami injury lie . .... to consignees of freight. j D O To sav tiie least of it, the State nt. , ;t prima laeie ease, ami it is only a a demonstration of partisanship ami 111 prejudice to hold tin* State, through 1 ' her otlieers, entirely responsible for 1H' the unfortunate condition of affairs. Our morning contemporary, the State, in an effort to dismiss tliis feature of the ease from the pending i controversy and relieve the railroads { from any portion of blame, says that " **it is not the wish of the railroads l'.V M,,t ,K. U. - 1 kjiii i inn uiiliJSUrC cutanea to t lie (1 tr eks and prevented from perform i ing their functions, ami therefore 1' I they cannot be liehl responsible." \ Far indeed, is it from their "wish" ' * ; that they should be thus dealt with, A '''* I but it is a primary principle of justice I j that these who ask equity must do ' | equity?one cannot take advantage ( i I ..." j (.1 liis own wrong. nor can the pica of defense be completely established unless the party, making such claim can come into couit with clean hands 2 and evidence of not having provoked the difficulty. Tn the matter under consider in k at ion it is a pertinent question to ask the railn a 1 companies if they come within the scope of these well ^ defined principles. Si ill! 1> n^J o o *??/?* ?/?? ? . no r>w ? ?TI JIJ LI ?.JIKIC7 tn ? , lias an undisputed right to 01 act laws for the lew and collection of < I lier taxes and through her officers has the highest and most solemn right to enforce the collection of 1 those taxes as prescribed by her legally existing and duly enacted j o J ? laws. ' The State is acting upon her dis' tinet and sovereign lights and O O jgc.* should not lie obstructed by hostile ' opposition which is nothing short of an invasion of her reserved and 1 righteous powers. N We therefore deny the propsition ^ that not cxiWas it would to other credi theii sho.\ The spirit as well as the letter of Iffflfi 11101 1 the laws of South Carolina on this ^ question of taxes and their collection P-1 u' is that the party feeling aggrieved or ||? v""" imposed upon shall obey the State's i9 sl)011 order and accept her assessment, pay elan pt.r [pp ju fup when presented, reserv- V con- ing the right to do so under protest " ami and to bring an action to recover any their excess alleged as having been charged. That puts the State in her proper tl,m' position, makes the tax payer, and ghig Uot ;i sovereign State, the actor in an who action for demanding redress. ful The railro id companies would have useli il;ld the State of South Carolina apply slll< to the federal court, at Richmond for an order directing the receivers to U pay to the State the taxes in ques 11 1 tiou, and. in fact, go so far as to say allt^ that, in addition to itsbeinc the most [J( i ) ? ' peaceful and expeditious way, it is really the only way. It should no doubt please a district Judge of a federal court of inferior will jurisdiction to have a sovereign State ,c a petition him to aid her in the collec,vit h tiou of her taxes and the enforcement n"*s of her laws. o Tl. - i. - 1 11 it I 1 "? i<,n. ini* maie nonis mat sue has her [ to own method for collecting debts due paid her, and that method and its enforceable ment is law. She needs no outside r it.- assistance and concedes no higher rov- auihoiitv to check or quicken her ac(.x tion than the Supreme Court of the [10w United States. fn>(. r)0(. Sucklen's Arnica Salve. The best Salve in the world for ^^K||sBnra (hits, Bruises. Soles, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores.Tetter, Chapped IBnlcSiiSIra ty. Hands. Chilblains Corns nti-t oil Skin Eruptions, ami positively cures Piles. or no pay required. It is guar- BHB anteed to give perfect satisfaction, or lie- money refunded. Price *25 cents per . hox. For sale at the Bazaar IjjHHfl March 31. ?HM lie t el' , In the town of (It oigetown, in tins .. -lnK i .... i ? ' j t< * ' ? t% c\ ^ t?. viuu IIUJS ISl'Cil i'l called -riio Grand Gallon Pot." i ?i Hie Georgetown Times savs ''that 111 . . onlv Jiist class liars arc liable to join hot / # J , this club, ami that one of his friends ?ual remark* d the other dav that lie had ?in _ never told a lie in his life, whereupon "The Grand (ballon Pot" promptly , elected him president?this unliable the ..1 ... <_renthnian. will the ' alc Female Weaknsss Positive Cure. 1 ;i lo 1 uk Lmtok:?1'lease inform ii,-li your readers that [ have a positive 11 v lvimdv for the thousand ami one ills whieli arise from deranged female I in organs. 1 shall he ylad to send two ,iis. Ii.'itlt > of my remedy khk.k to aiiv lady tlio if tlic-y will send thfir Express aiul ?er P.O. address. Yours respectfully ust Dr. A. C. Maiichisi, I'tica, N. Y. .lid 4. i