BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM ?IN? Western South Carolina, O RATES REASONABLE. O SUBSCRIPTION $1 PER ANNUM JOB HBTIM i SPECULTV, AUIANflE RALLY! ?a???mm????bum? i ?l^? c?????? The Lexington Dispatch. Jt Bcprcscntatiue newspaper. Gouers Lexington and the Borders of the Surrounding Counties Like a Blanket. VOL. XXIX. LEXIXGTOX, S. C., 1VEI>XESMY, SE PTE JIBE II ?. 1800. X0. 44 ?E??????3?B?MBBC?" " .?-?*.? i-fum?g????K=to????m?????MM?? GLOBE DRY GOODS COMPANY, Jtatt *w. H:. moitc2K:OI7, TR, ^gVtii'Y fcj^\V| J M)!icao MAIN STREET, COLUMBIA, S. C., HQ fluiT^-' m[1 Solicits a Share of Your Valued Patronage. Polite and Prompt Attention. W Hi I I <5^ Odob 'r 13?tr s^' Senator Tillman is as Strong Today as Hs Ever Was. He Delighted the Audience Who Went Wild Over the Faithful Champion of the Common People. Newberry Voice of the People. [We take the follow account of the Alliance Rally, which was recently held at Little Mountain, from the Voice, which deserves great credit for its enterprise in reporting the meeting. It is estimated that there were from 1,500 to 2,000 persons present at the' meeting:] . Brother AlliancemeD, ladies and fellow-citizens: About one year ago the Alliances of this part of Newberry and of Lexington counties made an koro SanoW Tillman make CILUi t l/U ua i u ??yvuuvv? ? a speech here. We are 15 or 16 miles from Newberry, further from Lexington and quite a distance from Columbia. A great many of the citizens of this community have not attended a political meeting, and a considerable number of the ladies and gentlemen here have not heard or met Senator Tillman. Consequently he was invited here, so that you could ? see him snd hear him speak. An appointment was made for the 5th of August, but the .Newberry College reunion took place here on the 4th and we felt that it would not do for til ther meeting to follow the next day after that, for we would all have - , been too tired to erijoy it. But Senator Tillman is here today, and you will get a chance to hear him speak. There he is sitting over theTe. We have other speakers. ^ HON. J- R BLAKE, of Abbeville, is with us. He has come a long distance to be here. He is Vice President of the State Alliance * add State Lecturer. He will dow address you: GentlcmeD, ladies, fellow-Alliance* men and fellow citizens: About one year ago it was my privilege to address Newberry aDd Lexington Alliancemen. I am glad to meet you again. It i9 always a pleasure to *- meet you. I am glad you people of Newberry and Lexington bold your annual gatherings at Little Mountain. Isolated as you are it gives you an opportunity to come together, we of the lural districts too seldom have the pleasure of indulging in social gatherings. I am glad on the other hand that your meeting is held UDder the auspices of the Farmers' Alliance. I don't think it is necessary to talk to Newberry and Lexington AlliancemeD, where the Alliance spirit has been so stroDg, about the grand work accomplished by our order in the past. You know what we accomplished by our united fight % against the jute and tie trusts. Many million dollars were saved the farmers. The farmers stood together as one man in the fight. In the t great battle with the lie trust about $5,000,000 were saved. I might I talk about the State Exchange and what it has done. Had it not been for the State Exchange, we would have been as helpless as babes in their mother's arms to meet the combinations that were against us. The time has come when th9 principles of ^ our order appeal to every man. The present time is fraught with momentus issues. Great social and industrious revolutions conf.ont us today. They should be fought under the banner of "equal rights to ail special privileges to none." History is ever repeating itself. There is a mighty stir of business in the cities and towns, yet agricultural interests are languishing and dying. "We hear of hard times ariiong the farmers; especially the cotton producers. The more cotton we make, the poorer we get. A strange condition exists. It reminds me of an aLcedote I heard . about a farmer and his son who went 1 to town with a load of apples. The 1 father left the wagon for a short while, and before going off said to vthe boy: Son, if an} body talks to you while I am gone, keep your I mouth shut, for if you open it they will find out what a fool you are. The father had hardly gotton out of sight before a merchant came out of [store, went to the wagon and asked the boy what was the pi ice of his apples. No answer. He asked him again. Still no answer. The merchant getting aDgry, said as he turned on bis heel to return to his store. Keep your mouth shut then ^ you blame little .fool, I don't cart \ whether I buy any of your apples ot not. About the time the meicbaui ^ entered his i-tore the boy's father ro turned, and tue little fellow excbedb exclaimed: Pap, I didn't open ur h moutb, but he found out I was a foo anyway. If we make alargeqnantit; r of cotton we keep poor, and if we fai^ to make a large crop we remain poor. Some say our trouble is overproduction of cotton. If the depression in agricultural iuterests was confined to the South. I would think that answer was correct. But the West, wheat and corn growing countries, a'so complain of hard times. We are tjld to diversify our crops. What is the use when combines are formed to depress the price. The farmers must combine and get others to join with them in fighting the Trusts, which are the ruination of our country. Our farmers are turning their attention to tobacco, and already we ^ mi TT7 J beirot ToDacco lrusis. ?e Detu markets for what we raise. Our towns must come to the aid of farmers. Ltt producers and consumers come together. Let factories be established in our towns and cities, the farmers furnishing the raw material and the towns and cities doing the manufacturing. We need a stiict anti-Trust law. A law that will invalidate claims of Trusts, and make it a crime to form a Trust. The speaker closed his address by eloquently appealing to the farmers to come together and re-organize their Alliances; that such organization stood as a bulwark between them and those who would oppress them. CONGRESSMAN LATIMER was the mxt speaker introduced. The chairman said: 1 now have the honor of introducing to the audience one whom many of you know. About five or six years ago a man comparatively unknown, one who loved you and came from the farm, appeared as a candidate and ran a successful race. Mr. Latimer is not a man of promises. He is a man of deeds. The Third Congressional District of South Carolina never sent to the United States Congress a better and more intelligent worker than A. C. Latimer. Look at his record. See what great things he has accomplished. Think of his successful fight for Newberry College. For the rural population in establishing Kural Mail Delivery and many postcffices and other advantages. Think of all these things. See the results cf his efforts. When have we ever had a man to do so much. He is not only willing, but has the peculiar talent of knowing how to work. Congressman Latimer will now address ycu. Mr. Chairman, ladies and fellowcitizens: I hardly know what line of thought to take this off year in poliitics. In a short while you will have Senator Tillman to address you. I have been a member of the Alliance ever since it was first organized. I am a plain farmer, and never held office until you sent me to Congress. I believe in the Alliance organization. It has done great good. We passed the income tax in the House of Representatives. It was an Alliance demand. There never -was a more just law. Under the present arrangement the rich escape taxation to a great extent, causing the burden of taxation to be unequally distributed. The income tax was intended to tax the income of the rich. A Supreme Court in the interest of capital de cided the income tax unconstitutional. An anti option bill, intended to stop gambling with your cotton crop, also passed the House. The Senate did not pass it. The Senate is made up principally of lawyers. A great many of them are in the pay of rich corporations. Unfortunately there are few men there like our Senior Senator. I believe that he is the j only farmer in the United States j Senate. The great agricultural in | terests in this country represented by one single man. Yet the fanners are picking out men who can mak* | fine speeches, and sending them tc j the United States Senate. And t j per cent, of such men are selling out | You need something else there be | sides fine speakers. Look at oui i j war with the Filipinos. What neei ! ! xvflc thprp for that war? AYe are tolc i i that God and destiny are on the sid< j of the Republican party in this war > | For what? Are not those peoph j i fighting for their liberty as our fore , | fathers fought here. God aud des > j tiny directing Americans to go ther : I and shoot religion into those men t j Can you find one word in the Xe\ - | Testement justifying such acts f j What was ihe war first started fo? f To liberate women and children wb 1 were being starved in the towns am f cities by Wevlor. We freed thos people. We should have stopped j there. But the greed of the Administration caused it to go back on the j . principles of our forefathers, and it j started out to conquer. We are told j that commerce must be extended; j ' that we produce more than we can ! consume. Such excuse will not do. j j? j The trade of the islands the United j States are endeavoring to conquer | only amounts to ?20,000,000, which * I must be divided with other nations. H j The inhabitants of those islands will 1 I trade where they please. We will * | have to show our price list. If we c i put up tariff over there other coun- ^ j tries will put up tariff on us. It * is an unrighteous war. Keep your ^ boys from going there to fight. 1 [Voices: That's right.J Your boys have do business out there. "We had a good meetiDg at the Wheat ! Grower's Convention in Greenwood. We cannot make wheat as a money ! crop, but should raise enough wheat I for home use. Come up to the con[ vention at Greenwood next year. He urged the necessity of deversiflcation, and the production of wheat, tobacco and the grasses. The Secretary of Agriculture has promised j me to furnish grass seed. Putin the ^ Texas Blue Grass, Orchard or Ber?j ; muda grass. The Bermuda grass ! has been tried, and is highly recomj mended. If you want the seed write * ! me a letter. I am a farmer myself? ^ g j started under my father with a onej horse farm, and I am now running c fifteen plows; was running them 1 when you elected me to Congress. I * am one of you, and have done about J as much hard work as any one in the * ' ondionoc. Vtovp nrilih as much as 200 * rails a day?and deeply sympathize with you in your hardships and am anxious to see you prosper. I am taking in waste land by puttirg wire fence around it. I am buying i up yearlings and putting them in pastures. By keeping them up about three years, and then selling them, I expect to make a good profit. Put sheep and goats in there, too Let us try to get out of old ruts. As Mr. Siigh has told you, I didn't make any promises, but I have done everything in my power for you. I con sider the rural delivery you are now receiving second ODly to your school in spreading information. I obtained ten rural deliveries for my district, while the rule has been to allow on}y two to a district. In the large cities j mail is delivered at the doors of the people ten or more times each day. A ? L |U . in 4 U n vi.vn i r Art X leu ILiai iLitr jjeuyie iu tijo imai ecu tioDS were entitled to have their mail delivered to them at least once*a day. And that is why I did my best to give farmers the rural delivery. I have lived on the farm away from a post office, and I know what it is -to be for days without getting mail, cut off from the outside world and not knowing what is goiDg on. You | picked out a man and sent him to Congress who knows how to sympa thize with you. It is my purpose to have the mail delivered to all our farmers. The rural delivery has not reached every section of the country, i It had to have a starting point, and j in order to give it a good start off | and make it as great a success as j possible, the thickly settled commu J nities were selected as starting points. I But I intend to work hard for the es| tablishment of the rural mail deliv' ery throughout the country. You j are entitled to it and ought to have i have it. You should net be denied I : the advantages the Government gives. : I want the mail to go to every house J in the country. The speaker de- j nounced governmental subsidies,rep- I j robate monopolies and tiusts, and j urged upon the farmers the import- | ance cf keeping organized to protect j their interests. At the conclusion of Congressman i i Latimer's speech there was an inter- j i mission of something over an hour ^ for dinner. After dinner Chairman j Sligh again called the meeting to or- | j dor, and said: A man all of you have ; heard of and many of you have seen | and love; a man who started Lis polit- j ical career in 18SG, I think, or near e i . ! j that time1, as achampionof the lights j I of tue common people, will make a ' speech before you. All may not j , agree with him in everything. Most | people agree that he is honest, pa, triotic and intelligent. I don't know t , > of any man who has had to meet the I V ' ; opposition this inau has in lighting j j | your battles. He had to overcome e [Continued on Second Page, j A Deserved Pcn:ion. \Irs. Manning Brown, of this City, [ Whose Husband Seived in the ! Mexican War, Received it?Work j of Rev. Dr. Clifton and Congress- I i i man Stokes iu Her Behalf, iunitor Hi-raM. ' About one year ago Rev. J. A ! Clifton, D. D, of this city began to i nake efTjrts to secure a pension for j ilrs. Manning Brown, widow of the ' . ate Rev. Manning Brown. The I :laim for a pension was based on the j i tervices of Iiev. Mr. Brown, in toe j Mexican War, in which struggle he i ought gallantly, n fleeting credit j tnd honor upon himself and his j j State. When Dr. Clifton was youDg ! j n the Methodist ministry Mr. Brown ! { vas his Presiding Elder, and he then i j :onceived a love and admiration for j j lim which was enduring, and which j j ncited him to efforts on behalf of Lis ; f ridow and fatherless children. I z Dr. Clifton got together all the j lata with reference to Mr. Brown's j var record, and enlisted Congress- j nan J. Wm. Stokes in the work, and j le pushed the claim before the Pen- j ion Department in Washington. It las required about a year of close ! ittention and many personal visits to j he Commissioner of Pensions on the )art of Congressman Stokes to finally jet the matter through. There is luch an enormous volume of these :laims, of one sort and another, that mless any particular one is followed ip closely it lies over indefinitely. Lhere were some troublesome points j leculiar to this particular case, how:ver. It had been turned down leveral times before, and this record vas a stumbliDg-block in the way of ts favorable consideration. A good nany affidavits and a good deal of * iew evidence had to be secured to offset these uapropitious circum- , stances. Everything in the Pension Bureau moves in a certain groove, ind there is any quantity of red tape n its administration. After several efforts to get the affidavits and testi- j nony in the exact technical form accessary had miscarried by reason )f some verbal ioaccurracy. Con- | pressman Stokes finally drew up the accessary forms to fit the requirements of the office. These were duly ^ signed in proper form, and the pen- I fion followed. Its payment involved j some eight hundred and odd dollars, | hack pay, besides the regular month- I ly stipend to Mrs. Brown during the | , remainder of her life. This happy result is most gratifying to Mrs. Brown's friends, and their number includes every one ' who knows her. The case is a most : worthy one, and great credit is due i Dr. Clifton and Congressman Stokes ; for their unremitting earnestness and j zeal in the accomplishment of the j work. This is the second largestVduim of j the kind which Congressman Stokes | has procured for his constituency. J One in Colleton county, which was ! granted through his etlbrts, involved J over S 1,500 back pay. He has been ' Dndiilto Coiollvf in UinQ * Tilis j nodufio i aianj III limb as a In, Cases Out of Ten?A Curs Found at Last, dlS? operation, poison in the blood, circulating thro the sore or ulcer?known as the poison remains in the blood, and j renewed violence. The wonderful success of S.. S. S blood diseases which were conside spairing sufferers to try it for Cane the physicians without a cure. Mu equal to the disease and promptly spread rapidly, and it was soon d beyond doubt that a cure had a found for deadly Cancer. Evulenc undated which is incontrovertible the following is a specimen : " Cancer is hereditary in our family, sister and an aunt having died from disease. My feelings may be imagined 1 rible disease made its appearance on m; a malignant Cancer, eating inwardly in to cause great alarm. The disease seem* skill of the doctors, for their treatment whatever, the Cancer growing worse ; Numerous remedies were used for it h grew steadily worse, until it seemed that " "" " * ? l ? r ? T to follow the others or tne iauniy. mr i when inherited. I was advised to try Sw first day, forced out the poison. I contin bottles. when I was cured sound and wi dreadful affliction, though many years 1 for Cancer.?Mrs. S M. Idol, Winston. > "Our book on Cancer, containing information, will l>e sent free to a j Company, Atlanta, Georgia. opposed to the general pulsion policy of the Republican party, as ill Southern Democrats are, but has always voted for meiitorious cases, md const *?-icntly has had more coti >i kratiou at the bauds of the Pulsion Department thau ho otherwise would. lie has been so foi lunate as to secure a number of Civil War pensions in meritorious cases also. I'lie law allowed this, and Congressnan .Stokes very properly thought :he money should come down here, is much of it as possible. He has been able to secure as much as ?1,000, ill told, on this account, which, should be placed on the credit side of Lis account as a representative cf the people of this Congressional Disrict. A pension is just as acceptible and as much needed down in his part of world as anywhere else n the United States. Perhaps a ittle more so. The scarcity of such avors from the general government nakes them all the more appreciated. + 20 CTS. GIVEN AWAY Cut this out and take it to the druggist named below and you will i receive a regular size bottle of Dr. Sawyer's Ukatine for f>c. Ukatine positively cures all forms of Kidney difficulties, Dyspepsia, Constipation, ! Headache, Rheu- BY matism,Puff I wg of the Eyes. Ukatine cures j Pimpks and Blotches, and makes sallow and yellow skin white. D^- ! not delay, but take advantage oi ' this great offer, as thousands bear j evidence to the wondeiful curative powers of Ukatine. JULIAN E. KAUFMANN. LEXINGTON, S. C. , ., 1 1' 1" Common Honesty Needed. An exchange says: "Talk about i pour moral waves, but an epidemic of | icmmon honesty between man and man is what the country most needs. This way of scowling like a thunderstorm at the more open sins, while man's business obligations to his felow man are disregarded is not even ohilosophy.'' There is not in all the jooks a more solid chunk of wisdom :r decency than is contained in this paragraph, and we hope every one of the dead beats that we have had to Irop from time to time because they would not pay us for the paper they bad read for two or three years will :ut it out and paste it in their hats. ^ In the south within the last five months sl7,'?00,000 of new capital has been invested in cotton mills. Hamilton Clark, of Cbauncey, Ga , says he suffered with itching piles twenty years before trying DeWitta Witch Hazel Salve, two boxes of which completely cured him. lieware of worthless and dangerous counterfeits. J. E Kaufmann. Floods swept away 1,850 houses iu Woo Chow, China, thousands of people being rendered homeless. A Mrs. Ta}lor, of West Virginia, who was pronounced dead, has re turned to life, asserting tbat she saw the gales of paradise and conversed with angels. fearful disease often first appears 2 re scratch, a pimple, or lump in ast. too small to attract any until, in many cases, the deadly is fully developed. -V can not be cured by a surgical because the disease is a virulent ughout the system, and although Cancer?may be cut away, the >romptly breaks out afresh, with . in curing obstinate, deep-seated red incurable, induced a few deer, after exhausting the skill of eh to their delight S. S. S. proved effected a cure. The glau news emonstrated ill the while ut the Cancer mrs. s. m. idol. I was doomed know how deadly Cancer is. especially ift's Specific (S. S. S). which, from the tied its use until I had taken eighteen ell. and have had no symptoms of the lave elapsed. S. S. S. is the only cure C. c* other testimonials and valuable ny address by the Swift Specific ROV Makes the food more i ROvAL BAKING Captiv: Cubans Released. Freed From I'li.on Iu Response Tu Appeals From This Country. "Washington, August '26 ?TheloDg | and persistent (fforts of the authorities here in behalf of the Cubans arrested by the Cuban authorities during the Cuban struggle for independ1 ence have at last been rewarded with success, word having been le1 ' ? ' ? *? i L C cetvetl at ine department xiuuj I United States Minister Storer at \ Madrid tbat four of these Cubans j were released from the Spanish penal settlement at Burgos on the 8.h instant. These prisoners were sent to Cadiz, from which point they have sailed for Cuba. Their names are Rafael Joyor, Antonio Capablanca, Julian Alvarez and Noberto Rojor Hernandez. These men were political prisoners accused during the regime of Gen. "Weyler of disloyalty to Spain and sentenced to penal servitude for life or for a long term of years. About twenty other Cuban prisoners who have been at the Island of Ceuta or at Burgo3 have been released and are now at Gibral.ter, without funds to get back to their homes in Cuba. The release of these men has been the subject of much solicitude by State Department officials, and both Acting Secretary Adee and the o United States minister at Madrid have continued to urge that the prisoners be released at the earliest possible time. The Cuban representative here, Mr. Quesada, has also ' ? Koliolf nf flicop nnfnr UCCLl iUL'l 11 1 LI U^UUii. V/4. I.UVWV MM.v | tunates. Since friendly relations have been restored with Spain the ! Spanish authorities have shown a ? disposition to accede to the wishes of the United States in this particular, and the present action is looked upon as an evidence of Spain's friendly attitude. Although the numbar released is only a small part of the Cuban piis' oners held under exile, yet the beginning thus made is regarded with o O ' much satisfaction by Mr. Q lesada i i and his Cuban associates here, and encourages them to believe that similar action will be taken in the case of all tho Cubans held in captivity vat Ceuta and elsewhere. Brava Men Fall ! _ Victims to stomacb, liver and kidney troubles as well as women, and all feel the results in Ios3 of appetite, poisons in the blood, backache, nervousness, headache and tired, listless, run-down feeling. But there's no j need to feel like that. Listen to J. W. Gardner, Id* /ille, Iud, He says: "Electric Bitters are just tho thing for a man when he is all run down, and don't care whether he lives or dies. It did more to give me new strength and good appetite than anything I could take. I can now eat anything and have a new lease on life " Only oO cents, at J. E. Kaufmann's Drug Store. Every bottle guaranteed. Bsats the "World. Whnf f!an Bp "Raised on a South Carolina Farm. The recent meeting of the Georgia State Agricultural Society at Quitman, says the Columbus Enquirer | Sun, was the of unusual interest. Among other coings the matter of diversified farming was discussed. Iu order to show that the South, and I Georgia especially, is the best place in the country for diversified farming, the following list is printed showing the products grown on a f ? i r\ single 1 arm in one 01 me ureorgia counties: Hay, corn, Lams, pig*5, chickens, sea island cotton, casava pepper, cusbaws, peanuts, millet, syrup, pears, sorguui, wheat, peas, lard, rice, bacon, tu'keys, cattle, geese, eggs, cotton, beggar weed, colhrds, oats, pumpkins, sugar cane, rye, potatoes, grapes, JoLnsou grass, | pea vines, watermelons, Kaffir corn." That is doing very well for Georgia. ki bakino Powder Pure delicious and wholesome rowocn co., new vqpk. J A South Caroliua farm would have ! a Ided, however, blackberries, dew ! bjrries, cucumbers, squash, bean?, figs, pomegranates, quinces, ducks, guineas, Bermuda grass, partridges, cantaloupes, plums, maypops, doves, sparrows, haws, crows, yams, tanvas, peaches, lettuce, poke salad, milk butter, buttermilk, vetch, mellilot, asparagus, maize, horses, cabbages and some nut grass here and there for seed. Surelv. surelv, there is no i place in all the world like South | Carolina for diversified farming. f * * | , Chronic Diarrhoea Cured. i This is to certify that I have had chronic diarrhoea ever since the war. I got so weak I could hardly walk or do anything. One bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy cured me sound and well. J. R. Gibb.S, Fincastle, Ya. I had chronic diarrhoea for twelve years. Three bottles of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy cured me. S L. Shaver, Fincastle, Ya. Both Mr. Gibbs and Mr. Shaver are prominent farmers and reside near Fincastle, Ya. They procured the remedy from Mr. AV. E Casper, a druggist of that place, who is well acouainted with them and will vouch for the truth of their statements. For sale by J. E. Kaufmann. Anderson's Crop Prospects. "We have interviewed a number of leading farmers from various sections of the county, and nearly all of them say that there will not be more than one half of an average crop of cotton made in Anderson county. Several of them say that the farmers in this section are in a better condition than ever before to hold their cotton awhile, and urged us to advise them to do so. If the crop does not exceed 10,000,000 bales, we believe the j farmers can get 7 or 8 cents per j pound for it within sixty days ? i Anderson Intelligencer. Primitive Electrocution. "Do you employ electricity in the execution of criminals out west," asked the eastern touiist. "Sure," replied Judge Lynch, of Arizona. "We have used telegraph poles ever since I can remember." - ? The S-uth Carolina farmers are getting profit and praise by their sensible diversification of crops. rrL . XT AJ T\.:i? j xufc) ^>ew v^ntruua jlvhiij uiaiti cojo i of them that they are "evidencing J the possession of more good, hard ; sense than those of some other States we could name. They are turning their backs upon cotton and ; the crop of tobacco this year is estij mated at $20,000,000, worth from 4 to 26 cents a pound. Moreover the cultivation of the wheat has been so successful that the acreage will likely be doubled nest year." Millions Given Away. ? It is certainly gratifying to the public to know of one concern in the j the land who are not afraid to be ! generous to the needy and suffering. | The proprietors of Dr. King's New i Discovery for Consumption, Coughs j and Colds, have given away over ten | million trial bottles of this great j medicine; aod have the satisfaction j of kuowiDg it has absolutely cured i thousands of hopeless cases. Asthma, J i Bronchitis, Hoarseness and all diseases of the Throat, Chest and Lungs : are surely cured by it. Call on J. E. ( j Kaufuiann, Druggist, and get a free trial bottle. Regular size oOc. and si. Every bottle guaranteed, or I price refunded. ? j A peculiar suit to be tried in j Jersey City involves the claim of a divorced wife for pay for her services I as housekeeper. ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements will be inserted at the rate of 7> cents per square of one inch sjiace for first insertion and 50 cents per inch for each subsequent insertion. Liberal contracts made with those wishng to advertise for three, sii and twelve mouths Notices in the local column 5 cents per line each insertion. Obituaries charged for at the rate of one cent a word, wren they exacted 100 words. MfiWio rro r? AtioAn ? v\n *IWW14