University of South Carolina Libraries
^ ^ >^ vrV^// / f:^^' ' / / , ) |W: ~ ~ _ | ADVERTISING RATES;^ ^ ^ | ^-:eI^at '^e t? '. line each insertion. J^ATES REASONABLE. L* ' ^ PW5lISfiTSPE(?!ALTV.: * _._ Ma^ge notices i^ free. Obituaries over ten line charged for at ^ > regular advertising rates. gr^l > VOL. XXIII. LEXINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1893. NO. 17. L CHEAPEST r T=> 3L, .A.CrE ^ TO BUY i | .. --r 3fe iff ?ANDP i: ' ' ^ fill' FIRMIIM gfe- Trunks, Valises, Satchels, HB Umbrellas, India Rubber Coats? Mcintosh I Of all grades, together with ;a complete line of Boys' and fl BL Men's Overcoats. Also a |g mice line of Jerseys, Children & Suits, something nobby, from H i% two and a half to six vears, :V *m d o.t gliiixfyhfyT^ Aou can save money by callI EPSTIN BROS, I " US 150 MAIN STREET, ^ UNDER COLUMBIA HOTEL. COLUMBIA, S. C. Sept. 7-tf OMNIBUS LINE. *t r , I?1 T A IC E ^8 CASEY'S BUSSES f AT PSION DEPOT, COLUMBIA On arrival of all trains, for hotels or uioy part of the eity. January 11-tf. F. W. HUSEMANN =E= Gun and Lock Smith, = >{ AND DEADER IN [ GUNS. PISTOLS, PISTOL CARTRIDGES. FISHING TACKLE, and all kinds of Sportsmen's At tides, which he has now on exhibition and for Bale at his afore. .Main Street, Near the Central Banfc, Columbia, S. C. Aoext tor Hazard Powdks Compaxt. ."^HB^Repairing done at short notice"Tfer LBmGTON SAVINGS BANK. l DEPOSITS RECEIVED SUBJECT TO CHECK. -ALLEN JONES. President. W. P. ROOF, Cashier. _ DIRECTORS: # *1!^ W p r M F.fird i~L UVUVO, A*w., v. R. Hilton, Jas. E. Hendrix. EXCHANGE BOUGHT AND SOLD. Deposits of $1 and upwards received and interest at 5 per cent. per annum allowed, payable April ancl October. Sept, 2i?tf IIFE LIVER 1 and KJCDJVEYS. ? Cares DYSPEPSIA, I.I VER and III KIDNEY Troubles when all else fails. ? -P 25c, 50c, 81.OO. J LIFE MEDICINE COMPANY, Spartanburg, S. C. Peb. 22 -ly. W. H. Fitzgibbon, Agent, COLUMBIA, S. C , Has reopened at the old stand, with a full stock of fine LIQUORS, WINES. BEER, CIGARS, ETC. Free Lunch every u&j. Feb, 15?tL Future cf Parties. j New York Press. Politicians on both sides are for ; some time yet likely to assume, in ' the public utterances, at least, that i the present political division is to I ; continue, the one declaring that the It* ' i L j JUepilDJlCans pai ty Will I'UUIC imu nest presidential election with unbroken front, and the other ignoring any J danger of division in the Democratic ranks. But whoever will consider the composition of these parties will see that this cannot be, and that a new political alignment is inevitable. Although the lite issues of the time have been more and more to the front and the first of them, the quesof tariff", determined the result of the last election, jet the political division was not a true one. That is to saj that the habits, prejudices and affections growing out of the previous alignment -on the slavery question and its issues to which its bloody settlement gave rise, still largely controlled the division of parties. The Republican party had on its side large numbers, held by its prestige and its. memories, who would not have been with it on the naked question of protection or free trade, while the Democratic party was supported by many wnose true piace on toe economic question was with Republicans. The prestige of the Republican party is now gone; the memories which constituted such an element of its strength cannot hold it to geiher in the face of a decisive de feat which brings into the issue of practical legislation the the vital questions of time. The Republican party as it was is as dead as the federal party or the whig party. But the live element of the Republican party remains, and must find political expression just as the live element in the federal and the whig party found other political expression. Protectionism is not dead. It has suffered a reverse, but it has the - -airmnrft nf 1qs& mcLdeeplv habits of though t^ffif^powerful money interests which will enable it to revive and renew the struggle. While the element of the Republican party which has adhered to it despite protectionism and because of its prestige and memories will now divide on the live questions of the hour, and the tendency of disintegration which has shown itself in the rise of the People's party in the West and in individual changes and abstention from voting in other sections. will have free play, the protection element will seek new combinations. To it the prestige and memories of the Republican party were but a useful adjunct, a convenient shell. It crept into the Republican party on the death of the old whig party because that offered the most favorable opportunity to secure subsides and protective duties and special priviliges, not that in opposition to the encroachments of slavery there was anything germain to protectionism. It LIU J L iiiis ia>x?ucu pcusxuus oiujjjjj to keep up taxes which yielded pri vate profit. It would ally itself to the "Sold South" and vote pensions to Confederate veterans if it could thereby have its way: and now that the prestige and memories of the Republican party have proved powerless to save it, it will naturally seek alliance with the protective element in the party that has come to power. The law of political life requires two great parties. Any third party must ere long swallow one of them or become a mere adjunct of one or the other of the two real contestants. And so the death of one great party inevitably involves the disruption of the other, for a dual division cannot give expressions to all causes of difference. and external pressure beiug removed these must show themselves within party lines. Thus the "Solid South" kas only existed through pressure of theJRepubliean party. The fear of that party gone it must split. And so the mcongruos elements which the Democratic party has hei(l together in the North so long as it was a party of opposition, must part company when it accedes to power and essays the task of legislation and administration. Already, and in advance of the assumption of power, this line of cleav age is beginning to show itself. Ic was the manifest failure cf the attempt to mix oil and water which called such wide attention to the Crisp incident at the Reform Club dinner. Tom L. Johnson's outspoken declaration that the radical wing was on to}) and will no longer submit to the (notation 01 sugar coated protectionists" within the party, voiced the spirit of that aggressiveelement. in the Democratic ranks which has behind it the strength of a great principle and is now flushed with victory?that new i Democracy, which is in reality the | revival of Thomas Jefferson's Repubi licanism. Mr. Cleveland's power and J influence ma}T for a while prevent ' j open rupture, but the opposition bei twecn the two factions of the Demo! cratic party must become more and ' more pronounced, and transfer the i real battle between the spirit of pro lection and the spirit of free trade into the Democratic ranks. As the I i contest goes on, the conservative | wing will absorb support from the protectionist element of what was j the Republican part}', and the radij cal wing becoming more and more I radical, will gather to itself from the j Peoples party and non-protective | Republicans until finally when the I split between them takes open shape. ; C >"> U LlVTOj IW xv^AViuiubv ^ j cessors of the Federalists and I?e! publican parties of the beginning of the century, and of the "Whig and Democratic parties of a later period, , will again draw a clear division in our politics, in a party of protection i and a "party of avowed free trade; a ; party of special privileges and a j party of equal rights. These are the two coming parties j for they are the two natural parties. : What names they will assume or will be imposed on them cannot of course j before told, but it is unlikely that | 'Ttepublican" will be one of them. That has served twice in our history, : and it is not likely during this gener- i ation to be called on again. It is i more likely that at first, at least, both will assume the Democratic name. But the party that represents the ; j idea of equal rights must go farther i ; than its predecessors ever dreamed ; of going, for beneath ail the issues of j our politics today lies the great ques- j lion of the distribution of wealth ! j which, vaguely styled the labor ques- ! | tion, confronts the civilized world, j And the growing element in our j political thought today is the single ! tax idea. That alone has a definite j aim and a consistent policy capable J of being carried to its ultimate end. j and a principle that arouses the j J i :?___ wrui 1 ! ^i^l^)^o^ouUva"d demostrati&n it" has shown its power in the election of 1801. The next great surprise that awaits politicians will be when a clear issue is made upon it. "When that shall be is a question of time i and seeming accident, but it is along ! the line drawn by it that the greatest battle of our politics must ere long be waged. "With the second election of Mr. Cleveland, old things in our politics must pass away and new things come. Henry George. How's This! We offer One Hundred Dollars ! Reward for and case of Catarrh that | cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh | Cure. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Props, Toledo, O. tt- i ?JI : j ? l? >ve me uuuersigucu, uuve nuu?.u | F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, [ and believe him perfectly honorable j in all business transactions and fiui ancially able to carry out any obligations made be their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists Toledo 0., Waldiug, Rinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken interi nally. acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, j Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. 18 i Ike Drunkard G-ivs Up All. j There's my money?give me a ; drink! There s the elotnmg ana 100a ; and fire of my wife and children? I . ? ; give me a drink'. There's the edu i i cation of the family and the peace of | the house?give me a drink'. There's the rent I have robbed from my land- | lord and innumerable articles T have j robbed from my shopkeeper?give J me a drink! Pour me out a drink, i 1 and yet more?I will pay for it! j i There's my health of body and peace j ! of mind- there's my character as a ! Christian. I give up all--give me a ; drink! More yet J have to give! I There's my heavenly inheritance and j the eternal friendship of the refVkr-.i?A t li nvn fill flf ! UtCHlVU, lUVXV. LLiV 1 V. *.VAA w i salvation. I give up my God! I give j up all that is great and good glori! ous in the universe! I resign all for| ever that I may be drunk!?Catholic. ! J Review. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. ! I The best Salve in tiie world for { Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Fleers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped i ? MI i rt ..,1 .^n I lianas, l^Jilloiams torus, ium nil j Skill Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or 110 pay required. It is guari anteed to give perfect satisfaction, or ; money refunded. Price 25 cents per ! box. For sale at tlie ?, Bazaar j March 31. TEMPERANCE BEADING. TEMPERANCE. Hidden away in the crypt of each skull is the night blooming cereus of God, the wonderful brain with its fine filament of fancy and imaginat'on, its broad, beautiful petals of reason, its sweet perfume of faith, and to be reverent toward it, to treat it as a pure and holy thing, and to do nothing that would tarnish or mar God's holiest handiwork is what we are here for. Was ever errand more sacred outside of Paradise? Pythagoras compared life to the letter V. It is the diverging of the broad and narrow ways. It is easy to go in the right way at first; it is comparatively easy to cross from the wrong to the right at the beginning. T! 1 1 V ? 3 il. . n.acn aay s progress wiuens me distance; obstacles grow greater till at last it is almost impossible to change. Notice, if you please, not impossible, but almost impossible. The inebriate makes a gospel for himself which is of a purely human invention. He says, "God never endowed us with spiritual tendencies as he did ftther men, and therefore, we are not responsible. If we pay our debts and are kind hearted nobody has a right to complain." Tli/i incnirorl Tinn Inld iia that no one lives t-o himself. Some people seem to think'they exert no influence. Imagine a man cutting a hole in the bottom of a ship inside his berth, and then saying he is the only one in danger. If you never take the first drink you will never become a drunkard. Not that the first drink makes you a drunkard, but the appetite is sure to increase. You may think you'will master the poisonous beverage, but if you continue you will soon be its servant. Those of you who are in the srail ing bloom of youth have before them lives broad bannered with glorious opportunities. Let us begin at the spring head, and then we will have done more to purify this polluted i uvi sliiem-w.it, e rxn'' legislated. not let the fiery demon of drjn K^reck your lives, but plant your fe^t firmly down upon the rock of a strong determination and say, 'T will be true to a higher destiuy; I will cast off the fetters and scackles of the old bondage of drink." J. A. Elljsor, when the week is ended. Selected. It is good, when the week is ended. to look back upon its business and its toils, and mark wherein we have failed of our duties or come short of what we should have done. The^ close of the week should be tq - each i one of us like the close of our liveg. Everything should be adjusted, with the woild and with our God, as if we were about to leave the one and apn pear before the other. The week is, indeed, one of the regular divisions of life, and when it closes it should not be without its moral. From the , end of one week to the end of an- j other, the mind can easily stretch on .] ward to the close of existence. It j can sweep down the stream of time to the distant period when it will be 01^ f 1 rolKorrnn /I "h m o n f a ronr. 1 utj uuu uuwuu Jjy M Vi vw j ulate human affairs. Saturday is lime for moral reflection. When for the mercies of the week we are thankful, and when past months and years come up in succession before us, we see the vanity of our youth ful and the vexations of manhood, and tremble at the approaching winter of age. It is then we should withdraw from the business and the cares of the world, and giveathought to our end, and to what we are to be hereafter. M. E. Roof, Leesville, S. C. Superintendent of Press Work. It Should Be in Every House J. B. Wilson, 871 Clay St., Sharpsburg, Pa., says he will not be without Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, that it cured his wife who was threatened v/ith Pneumonia after an attack of 'La Grippe," when various other remedies and several ph)sicians had done her no good. Robert Barber, of Cooksport, Pa., claims Dr. King's New Discovery has done him more good than anything he ever foy Lung Trouble. Nothing like it. Try it. Free Trial Bottles at the Bazaar. Large bottles, 50c. ajid #1,00, ?: "^Sors Pork and Less Whatever else a farmer may pro <luce lit certainly should raise his own provisions. Meat that is sold from 121 to 15 cents per pound ought never to cost us, raised upon our farms, more than five cents. Corn for which we have paid il.QO per bushel, can be raised with us for 20 to 50 cents per bushel. Let us-^aot be apprehensive of glutting the mar- j ket. The South has been hungry j ever since the war. The rations is- j sued by king cotton for two years > could have been devoured in one and j nobody hurt. Senator Voorhees, the great apostle j of whisky at the "West,once in a speech tried to frighten .'.he farmers into his j destructive views by telling them all their surplus corn would be thrown i upon their hands if the distillery of j whisky should be prohibited. Feeling that he had availed himself of a form- ! idable argument, that tho farmer j . could not answer, planting liunseli j upon bis Senatorial dignity, he called j . out to know what the farmers would ! do with all their surplus corn if they j . were not allowed to make it into . whisky, and then paused for a reply. ' . Up rose an old farmer on the out' j skirts of the crowd and said: "Sena- I I tor, do you really want a reply?" | "Yes," said the Senator, "what will j j you do with all your abundance of j corn if you cannot turn it into | ^ whisky?" The farmer replied: "We j will raise more pork and less hell." I j commend to you the wisdom of our ! . Western brethren?let us raise more ' pork and less hell. Strength and Health. If you are not feeling strong and i healthy, try Electric Bitters. If "JLa Grippe" has left you weak and weary, | use Electric Bitters. This remedy j acts directly on Liver, Stomach and j Kidneys, gently aiding those organs : to perform their functions. If you | are afflicted with Sisk Headache, you ? IT IT ? J J A 1 1 Will iiUU speeuy uuu pcimui^ciiij iuuci | by taking Electric Bitters. One trial ! will convince you that this is the ! ! J remedy- you need. Large bottles , only 50c. at the Bazaar. A Trao Wife. \ The Latly. ] It is not to swee^he house, make J the beds, d?.rmt?C :"Scks and cook A wife. If this is all he needs, a ser i yant can do it cheaper than a wife. If this all, when a young man calls " w . to see a lady, send him into the pen- 1 try to taste the bread and cake she I has made; send him to inspect the 1 needlework and bed making; or put 1 a brocm in her hand, and send him ' to witness its use. Such things are 1 important, and the wise young man will quickly look after them. But what the true young man wants with ' a wife is her companionship, sympa- ' thy and love. The way of life has many dreary places in it, and a man needs a wife to go with him. A man 1 JfESometimes overtaken by misfortune: ( he meets with failure and defeat: < r trials and temptations beset him, and he needs one to stand by and sympa- ' thize. He has some bard battles to i fight with poverty, enemies and sin, j ] ?*w/3 V./-> no/irlo o -nr i mion fViof \rVi ati Via I ^ auu lie D t* nuui||?4 VUMV II ? | puts his arms around her, he feels j that he has something to fight for: she will help him to fight; she will put her lips to his ear and whisper words of counsel, and her hands to his heart and impart inspiration. All through life, through storm and through sunshine, conflict and victory, j through adverse and through favorable winds, re an needs a wife. T Rheumatism Cured. ^OTsn^EBS Rep Star Store, ") ] Lai?e City, Fla. j 1 JP. P. P. Manufacturing Co.: j | Gents?Having suffered with Rheu 1 'matism for sometime, and tried great many remedies, but could find no relief until I used your great and beneficial P. P. P. I recommend it i suffering humanity. Yours, J. POTSDAMER. Col. Streator, the man who last year disgraced the Pennsylvania military j by having Private lams cruelly and i i brutally whipped for cheering the j \ Homestead strikers, has been re- I i ported to the military authorities of | that State as being beastly drunk dur- I < j ing the inaugural ceremonies at ! \ Vv^shington. ffe should Le made to j < I suffer the same punishment he had ] inflicted upon poor lams. j j <>?. j , ! A Necessity to Every Honso ; < We. i ? 11 "Whv don't you use Pearline'? It i , * J < is the champion of all compounds for ! j W?s|iipg fabrics orbands3 and as a rronovol olonrtopr Tf, wn.<ihps much I 1 eabies, makes clothing whiter and sweeter than it washed with soap. It is also a gem for cleaning hands. Its superiority for washing dishes, ' scrubbing, cleaning paint, marble, : tinware, silver, jewelry, and for re- j moving ink, grease and blood-stains i ; is universally acknowledged the best ! thing made. Price 5 cents, at the Bazaar, Trns Story of a Tramp. He was in rags?a regular tatterdemalion. His weather beaten face and bleared eyes told of exposure and dissipation. Standing in the door of a saloon one freezing, windy night, with the bright light pouring lull j upon him, he looked the picture of desolation and misery. ' Hello, ragbag!" shouted one of the boisterous crowd at the bar. "Come and have something good to thaw you out." "No, thank you," replied the poo* wretch, "but if the proprietor will allow me to go back to the fire and j ..... t ...ni i.? .... t n.,. ! naiiu JL will ut* vtrij giii'triui iui ilic kindness." ' All right, go ahead," sang out the bartender: "you look like you needed it as much as any fellow I ever saw." Indeed he did; the half clad form shook with the cold. % "You are a fool for not drinking something," deliberately, but not unkindly, remarked the man who first greeted him. ? "He's a temperance lecturer out of a job," chirped a convivial gentleman. "No; I'll tell you, boys, he's an object lesson sent out by some good people to warn us of the way we are all tending. Shall we accept this awful admonitiouTf This speech was Prom a citizen at the end of the coun ter, who seemed slightly fuller than the rest of the company; in fact, just full enough to be as solemn as an awl, and as sentimental as some wildeyed wooer of the muses. "Rats! Rats! go soak your head!'' :ame in a cjioryis from hi9 audience, and the grave person thought himself unappreciated. The tramp had passed the crowd and was entering the back room when ae stopped, turned back and walked up to them. "Gentlemen, you mean to be kind :o me, in your way, no dwbt," he said, pushing up with a tjrembling Jttuu Lue avppcu uiiui ui uio/ ovucu md torn old hat. "You must know rom my abearance that A am not ; this day Fniust remain swr as it is ray mother's birthday, f bope you will not think it strange, now, that though a poor, shivering tramp, refusing what you in your generosity thought would be most acceptable to me." Then he went and held his unwashed hands over the glowing :oals. One of the crowd had compassion for his friendless brother in rags and ?ave him a place to sleep, out of the x>ld of that bitter night. Lonf? before the time for dawn a U I past light illuminatad that town and the cocks crew as if for day. A dwelling was on fire. A shouting, excited crowd soon surrounded it. rhay were more than willing to render every assistance in extinguishing the flames; but all saw the effort was useless?the building must be left to its fate. Listen! Above the noise of the roaring fire, above the cries of the agitated populace, a woman's shriek of despair rang out: "My child! Oh, my child! it will be burned alive!" Strong men turned pale, and tvomen fainted. It was too true; in j ^ y ? j i some unaccountame way an imam had been left in the family sleeping room on the second floor. The house had been abandoned; it was wrapped in flames. None dare enter it now, for already a fierce blaze was leaping up the stairway. Out from the rear of the crowd ran a shaggy form and cried in a clear, steady roice: "In which room is the child?" "The Northeast!" shouted somebody. In an instant the man parted into the open poor of the doomed dwelling. "He's too late!" 4 They'll both be burned!" "God bless him! whoever he is." Tuese and similar ejaculations went up from the spectators. Then all is stillness, save the roaring wind, and the hissing and snapping of the merciless fire. The slow dragging seconds are hours; the intensity of the suspense *s painful. But it is 3ver now. The shaggy form bounds from the blazing threshold, bearing j r precious burden which is laid unscathed in its mother's arms. A hundred hands rush, resh, ready to ex- j tinguish the burning rags of the liero?the tramn of last night's acquaintance. Skillful surgeons and l- .1 efrnro fr* rnafAVP il U.1 oto OUUt V tv AWtJVV/A.W V14V poor fellow to conscicmsuess; for-. he bad faljeo, like a shot beef, in the street. All effort is vain. The sun rises with unruffled serenity, as if nothing had happened, and on its first beams the spirit of the outcast flits away forever. In the cemetery of that town there is a marble shaft, on which aro out these words: '*AN UNKNOWN HERO." Since that night of which 1 have | written, a quarter of a century lias been added to the roll of years. J Often on pleas ant afternoons, so [ people thereabouts say, a couple, in j all the vigor and beauty of youth. j may be seen placing flowers on a well | kept grave, and a chubby boy beside them never tires of hearing how his papa, when a baby, was saved from his burning home by the brave man who lies buried there." \ ulcers, \n\ cancers. scrofula, \vs salt rheum, \ rheumatism, BLOOD POISON. these and every kindred disease arising j from impure blood successfully treated by that never-failing and best of all tonics and medicines. Swifts Specific SSS Books on Blood and Skin x Diseases free. Printed testimonials sent on application. Address ^1^1^ Swift Specific Co., ATLANTA.CA. \ Mav? 2~> lv. TTTL . TTTV li tiwy ft vv The good people of Coon Hollow^ N. C., are greatly exercised over the disappearance of Henry Simpson, colored, his wife and two sons, who reside near the edge of Bullfrog pond, four or five miles from Coon Hollow. Unusually cold weather has prevailed in * Bastern North Carolina. Bullfrog pond, which is fed by subterranean springs, covers an area of only an acre and has never been known to be frozen until this winter. A week ago while the oUce of every stream for miles a^*?o , was congealed to a depth or fifteen inches, the waterdp^dullfrog pond were absolutely free Jrom ice. During the afternoon of that day the largest flock of wild geese ever seen jid that portion of the State same ?^^-^d in^ By^ ^freak of nature, on that j night, for thelTfttetime in its history, j . Bullfrog pond was?r^fi^j^er? aQd the next morning the whole flocE>Qt, 1 geese were, to all appearances, helpless prisoners, bound one to another i i i* . l . # . .1 Dy an unyielding case 01 ice several inches in thickness. When Henry Simpson discovered this state of affairs he rushed among the geese, followed by his wife and two sons, and began, as they supposed, the work of extermination. But the negroes had made a woeful mistake. An old grey headed gander, the patriarch of the flock, gave a loud squawk, which was immediately answered by his lieutenants from every quarter of the pond. Simultaneously more than three thousand wings began to flap. In an instant the geese arose above the tree tops, carrying with them a solid cake of ice and the Simpson family. From that hour to this not the slightest tidings ha\'6 been received from the unfortunate negroes, aod their fate will doubtless ever remain a mystery. Simpson's taking away gathers pe culiar sadness from the fact that he leaves behind an aged grand mother, who is entirely dependant upon the charity of neighbors for support. August A. Klages. 810 Charles street, Baltimore, Md., writes: "From mv vrmth T suffered from a noison ous taint in my blood. My face and body was continually affected with eruptions and sores. I-am now 42 years of age and had been treated both in Germany and America, but no remedy overcame the trouble until I used Botanic Blood Balm. I have used about twenty bottles, and now my skin is clear, smooth and healthy, and I consider the poison permanently driven from my blood. I endorse it as the best blood remedy." 19. Valuable Book. Every farmer and mechanic should have a copy of "Ropp's Commercial Calculator." It shows at a glaneo \ the value of grain, stock, bay cotton, lumber and merchandise, also the | exact interest at any rate? the per j cent of gain or loss, tables of wages, j and shows contents of lumber, logs ! barns, bins, wagon beds, corn cribs, i oordwood, and carpenters, plasterers \ and bricklayers work and also solves ! many practical problems in daily ex- 1 perience. For sale at the Bazaar. For Corns, "Warts and Bunions Use only Abbott's East Indian j Cora Paint. ForSapolio, stove polish or kitchen ; soap, call at the Bazaar. ) / ( ? ? ? m?rn?mrnmammmmmmmm Prometheus Bound to the Bock. The Terrible Last of Lamar Und< r Which Zach Chandler Writhed. Richmond State. , The death of Justice Lamar has j recalled his well known devotion to the Confederacy, and bis love for the leader of the lost cause was productive of one of the most dramatic scenes in the history of the Senate. TJ.fl I -"" J j. uc jicAiciiu |juu?iuu uui was uiiuer consideration and an amendment pended, extending its provision to all veterans, irrespective of their course in the war between the States. It was near adoption. Congress, it was said, could best show its desire to forgive and forget by extending the benefits of the measure to those who had once borne arms against the common country. The amendment was near adoption when Senator Zach Chandler came to his feet with short speech,-^ " " ? in whi'lh he said that while in the mam lie agreed to the general tenor of the amendment, yet under its provisions even Jeff Davis would-be re, stored to citizenship. "And*" he added, "I am not prepared to go so far as that. Lamar arose. His intense excitement was evident. Between him and Chandler a strong personal antagon- / ism existed. An outburst was expected. and it came. uMr. President," said the Mississippian, with outstretched finger pointing at his foeman, his tall form trembling with emotion, but his voice bell like in its clearness and _ without a quiver in it, "when Prome tbeus lay bound to the rock it not the kings of beasts who avafll8|H^HH9H themselves of Lis distress. not any other of the nobler H?|uH9H8H| of the held or birds of the ainHwiP~B|HHHj was the vulture, the scavenger animal kingdom gluttoning up rion, which preyed upon his knowing that in a defenseless ^KMWMMhBH who could move neither hand HhbHHB foot, he had one into whose vii;als^Em^wKBBb could dig his beak." He sat down amid a stillness sflflEnHflfi profound that a rustle of deuWPpale. Drops' of perspiralioR m stood upon his forehead and he oiinched the arms of his chair until the strained wood creaked. It was expected that lie would reply. Twice Tie^f^arose, then sank back. He did notr^jk^^ Street-car drivers ancl^jhers who are constantly exposed to allSfi^s of weather, and cannot find time (o lay by, should ever bear in mind this ^ plain fact that Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup cures coughs and colds. It is 1-1 unequaieu. President Cleveland has intimated thai he will appoint no man to office ?. who served under him his first term. Senator Hill had a twenty minutes' conference with President Cleveland last Thursday and as a consequence those politicians and newspapers who have been trying to run Mr. Cleveland's Administration for him, are wondering "what's up." The Fire Depatment in every city could not do better than to keep a dozen of Salvation Oil at each station., It instantly relieves all burns, scalds and bruises, and in a few days makes an effectual cure of the wound. 25 cts. The Richmond and Danville Rail- ^ road Company will operate a line of barges 011 the Mississippi river. Julia Foice, who recently mur dered her two sisters in Atlanta, Ga., and afterward adjudged insane, has been indicted for murder. Postmaster Eissel is accredited with the statement that he will appoint no local business man to a postmastership. A course of P. P. P. will banish all bad feelings and restore your ^ health to perfect .condition. Its curative powers are marvelous. If out of sorts and in bad humor with yourself and the world, take P. P. P., and become healthy and national. Hon. Wm. Elliott, a relative of the Editor of the State, will, according to that paper, be appointed to the U. S. District Attorneyship. "We shall see what we will see/' and the probability is that somebody will find # that they have "counted chickens before they were hatched." For Old Sores, Skin Eruptions, Pimples, Ulcer and Syphilis, use only P. P. P. and get well and enjoy the blessing onlv to be derived from the o v use of P. P. P. [Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potassium.] Gov. Tillman says be expects Judge Simonton to appoint a receiver for the Gover's office before his term expires. . ji * ' . . Erysipelas, Swoolen Limbs, Bad Sores, Scales and Scabs on the leg have been entirely cured by P. P. P., the most wonderful blood medicine of the day.