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..rt I mm Bra* - ^ BB^B^^H^b:s"'.'i'-u''l",*v' '"iri"' 1""* - 11 " ^.y ' " ' '"" I*11 1 1 ,' ' '??" ? ,1 ,i l.'i. I'lin liniim" j.:i.- ?i - . , ;.. . , .. . ' ' ,,. n I $ ^0 ^ * it ^ tfulfil ^ ^ TT T"? And Re I H'"' That IXYHN hM alwaji Wen IhiH Hcetlon H Br^ I HAVE now made th^Juj^piH | tbiag, if possible. And i?^HHwerificc I era, I can convince them\B^he Qooda r * . * ^ ARE SAO ^ Seal Flash Modjeskas advertised i ; - ... wows ac *io ou to QW^l will sell at i ' Misses Newma^keta^fine Goods, at worth doublo whai Cashmeres, doifblo width, from 14&< c i t hare all dress trimmings, includin ? 65c. worth 800. "Wjbrstedaress Goods Jeans, Flannels, 'Ticking, Towols, } h BOOTS AN HATS AN! MY STOCK ( By every person, to 1 (ion; m for $15, fl DO NOT FAIj I LEADER AND CE May 27 JT. D. JONES. m NEW CA? ^HplsiTE 3 would be pleased to soe our ? stock, consisting of Dry Goods, Noti Trunks, Valises, &c. We/would oall especial attention|i fiffiVA. ^ 1_ _ ? opfr all wool 25 cents Jeans, ("'tis a j P j*, ^|| _ , ? DOOTQ DnOW. MR. J. E t till represents the old and reliable STACY, and will always bo found at KjL< Respect f uliy, i|. Sept 14 Bk< \ SAH'L S. STOKES, - ? * A I T PUBLIC. "'ni?W > bU o*r? wil "? ? ? **Ury [gum, selling urn ! K ... reful?y MEMBER, the Leader of Low Prices in of country. f ort of my life to cloan out the whole id in prioo will convince tho closest bayRIFICED. it Evrick's Ridleys and other large ; 812 50 and 8l? 82 50, 82 75, 83, up to 83 50. ,83 25, 83 75, 85. t we ask for them. 19c. to tho finest grades at 67 Jc. > to 30c. g watered silk, which* I will sell for from'4c a yard up. iVhite Counterpaines, very cheap. rD SHOES, l rTDTTXTT/Q / XXiUll XVIO. )F CLOTHING >e the largest and best seleoted they men- | L TO CALL AT FLYNN'S, [AMPION OF LOW PRICES. 21 tf W. T. BEATYt 1H STORE, FHE BANK.. to :) friends and havejthem] inspect oui ions, Boots and Shoes, Hats, Caps tojour^line of Jeans. Come|and se< good un.") Also our $1 50 lined ?. JONES i Cotton House of CABBOL & tho top of the market. JOKES & BE AT Y. # o Oil! ... . ... . . 3Sfei?ffi 1*MIIMrtlM<1rt>M?l<|(Awlwllll,l?l ?*V EfeJ3w?Sc?g5SS mm ?H?i ? ? taotwr. Uwn rmlili ? Ui>r?tr?*? ?c ^ iyr!^ ?? tftyi?: VTff%? \rT w t?Mty iw f t'w *? m l jgftgg?1 R7iM^SB??ri?TL? ??*?? w 1Z$ BSX*e?S^5^*fcj6*2?**JSK2S?Ne? SKifsii^StaXSH&SS^&Si'SS* 4wMeyg|WMB|*e^iiewe5eiiE6 ^ Jtli W ?T K'W K L. li y , . -?AT TH*? OLD RELIABLE STORE. R W. T1N8LEY respectfully Announces to . the public that he has just rcoeived a fine lot of FASHIONABLE JEWELRY to suit the pockets and tastes of all classes consisting* or WATCHES, CLOCKS, WATCH CHAINS. CUFF and ia/LLAR BUTTONS^ EAR RINGS and DOBS. FINGER RINGS and BREAST TINS. My assortment of SPECTACLES ana eYE-ULASSES is the largest in the up-country, and I can uit all ages and conditions of eyes. Silver and Silver-Plated Ware, Just tlie thing for holiday presents, can be relied upon m being fully as represented. JEWELRY REPAIRED in the best aod most substantial manner Don't forget the "OLD RELIABLE JEWELRY STORE, when you wish to buy i R. W. TINSLEY A Hion License Movement Among Barkeepers.?Several of tho most promiuent saloon men in the citj waited on sonic of the City Council yesterday morning presenting a petition signod b> six of their number askiug tbo City Council to increase tho license tax on saloons from $400 to $1,000. The saloon tucu whose names were signed to the petition are Goorgo Black. Ilolcombe & Simmons, II. Koebel & Bro.f Xork A Lcgun , J. W. Burgess A. Co , and J&8. B. Williams. Those saloon keepers who have signed thepaper aro earueat in their advtwjaoy " *^^?ss^M^Ltanda to decrease prices lor proving the class of the places where liquor is sold. It is very seldom ibet movement of this kind has been headed by saloon keepers themselves, but the wisdom of their movement i j!l- -i ujbjt uu reauuy oDserved. Ae tho supply ordinauee has already been pasted and published by the City Council, it is not probable.tbat tbo mat. ter can be re reconsidered, and if it is brought up there are some members ol the body who will opposo such an amendment *lo the ordinanoe.? Grcinville Aewt. ^ u He Holds the Fort.?Louisville, Deo. 6.?An effort waa made last night to arrest Harrison Uogan, a wealthy furuior, three miles ubove Jeffersopville, Ind., on a warrant sworn out by his divorced wife. He took refuga op it flatboat in the river, where he had a barricade well stocked with arms and ammunition and defied Deputy Sheriffs Lioek and Howell. A fight ensued, Hogan r using a shotgun, and firing through loopholes in bis barricade, and the 'offiera using their revolvers from a drift pile ' on the bank^ At night they went into the wopds on the bank for consultation. Hogan got 3 quietly ashore and surprised them with a shot into a clump of bushes where I they were building a fire. They took refuge behind trees, and the fight continued until Hogan got the drop on U.?ll -i? * - uuwcii, wueo an rmistioo was agreed upoD. The offioera returned to Jeffersonville and a party of four were eent out to make the arrest. They had not ; suooeeded at last aooouots. Death Under Distressing Circumstances.?Mrs. Nanoy Bagley, who lived about four miles from Winnsboro, on a plantation adjoining that of Mr. D. A. Hendrii, died on Friday. She was quite aged, about 85, and her death was the result of old age, lack of proper food and oold weather. Althoogh having fifteen children and a< number of grand aod great graod-ohildren, she has in ber later days been an object of ! oharity. Although she died on Friday, she was not buried until Sunday, to the fact that no gravo could bo W pared until some kind frieede had It dtfg.? Winntborro Newt and Herald. ?# - ? Tub a it S. Compromises.?\V iimint:lyn (N. C.) Star nay*; The aait of Jaeob Croon wold, of ihi* oity. against the A*hc?iHe and Spartanburg Railroad v Couipmv. 110,000 dama^ea for injuries j rocn:*?d in a.railroad accident, came ap ih the U.S. Circuit Court at ?K?loigb 1 >y?aterdry. nod wus oouipromised for $2' { 000 The cane was Dot tried, but . judgement vu entered by eoofent of the lamotu^aUted.. ' i THE 8HAH A flgOQRAPHERBut Titers la a SwuleSuu tlut dliMfug*, ,i. Mew UlM Is M Fraud. Thoshah of Persiavis dabblingin geography. A recent issuo of The Ivan, the official gazette of Teheran, contains an article, purport!rife to have been prepared by theshah himself, descriptive of a strange, newt -lake, of dimensions large enough to mako it almost an inland sea, that has of. late years appeared in the Great Salt Desert, the "Dasht-i-Kavii1." " Hie ground in this desert is covered with a white crust of salt, it.is habitable only in a few isolated spots, and there are said to bo vast morasses, escape from which impossible once a traveler ventures into them. Tradition is, however, that once this tract was covered by a sea. with numerous ports and harbors, lighthouses and commerco. There has slwfya been a sort of expectation amongtJMtC'ersians that some day the sea woujqjfifeurn and cover tho desert^ five miles from Tehe raJS^^pfemtorest occasioned by this was sqfgrcat tliat tho czar himself visited"ttge sprit Iq his account of it he say* that a small lake, known as the "Lake of Savah, formerly existed there, but that it "dried up about 1,857 years agoton tho day the prophet?may the blessings of God bo upon him and feu posterity? was born. It reappeared about six years ago." The shape of this new body of water the shah describes in homely fashion. Ho says: "The figure of tho lako may be compared to that of a pair of spectacles. There are twf lakes joined by a narrow channel, which is about two miles in width a little less." The shah wears spectacles. The size of the lako he gives at 100 miles in circumference. As to its origin ho says: "From observations which have been made we conclude thnt this lake has been formed by waters which bubbled im in tho Kavir like fountains from underground, for tho rivers which flow into it have npt changed their direction and cndtibf fawn a lako. A camel driver of the Arab nomads of the Keleku tribe, which has its camping ground on the shores of the lake, tola us that he had seen with his own eyes how six yean# ago a great quantity of water bubbled up in the middls of the Kavir, and, gradually increasing, finally submerged the places where it had appoareo." Sad to say, in spite of the shah's apparently honest efforts to tell the truth about bis new lake, there is a harrowing suspicion that his honesty has been fooled, and that, instead of the lako that disappeared 911 the day the prophet was Dora reappearing now out of the bosom of the earth into which it vanished, the new hodv nf water has its origin in a much lees mysterious fashion. ^hara *> a coincidence between the date of the appearftnco of the new lake and that of the opouing of a new $oad from Teheran to Koun which becomes irregular, in view of the fact thatthe lake covers - n - -f paniif rn impassable the old road, the dyke or *tnn"Ki?? 11?? in through which the water flowTru the new lake. Near the gap lives a Persian nobleman wno has an interest In the tolls of the road.?New York Bun. ^ . yfj.,1 _ B?doei?d if The third assistant postmaster 'general, in his annual report on thgdmsiness of the postoffiee deparroent, makes the suggestion that if one cent postage should bo adoptedthpjp^uM. he mil | I .|,^^lswtr iif iiffiil 11in11 i matter now included in HPHrd and fourth classes, that is, general printed matter and merchandise, being included in one classat the rate of 1 cent for two ounces, and newspapers and periodicals sent from offices of publication in another at the rate of 1 cent per pound air at present The proposition to reduce the letter rate from 2 cents for one ounce to 1 cent for two ounces and mako it the same as the rate for a casual newspaper or magazine or a book seems rather startling, but in point of fact it would not be so greatly different in effect from a mere reduction to I cent for the weight now allowed. The great bulk of tho letters written would j not be increased in length or in Weight, 1 and there would be a great gain in simplicity in having no distinction in the rates for matter mailed in the usual mtiSSmssm or un8eaJod or UUllUWiliiy.WPlll!^ or no wrltmg. A source of petty fraud aucUxxaslon and equally petty search for ft would be avoided. The only serious question relates to the effect on the revenues and expenses of the postal service, which ought substantially to pay for itself. This aspect of the suggestion calls for careful consideration.?New York Times. Vmd* and the Itllpw. i The astronomers who visit Nevada for the purpose of observing tbjo total eclipse of the sun. next January, will occupy the moat favorable position to be found in the United Stales. They will be in the center of the path of totality, and on the top of WlnPesnuoca mountain they Will. stated 6.000*feet above the level of the sea. Tnis attitude, however. Is not the great advantage to be derived from the Ideality. That which will most aid the astronomers is the dry atenosphcaa pf the Great Basin region?an atmosphere aimoi^eMdituts^f humidity. With M TU Poor of llexloo. I The poon laborer who earns 87 cents will not grudge a third of his pay to some unfortunate comrade. What rich man with an income of | $100 a day will with equal readiness hand out $33 to a poor fellow mortal? ' I know a case wnere a poor serving 1 woman took her littlo bed and gave it i to a sick woman, and horsclf slept on | the hard floor for weeks thereafter. A , poor paralytic comes to my door evory week and gets alms; it is liard to koep a silver quarter in the pockot whon a deformed man crawls by on his hands 1 and knees. How many of these poor 1 wretches one sees on rainy afternoons < crawling along through tno mud and t dirt of the streets. Many say, caro- , lossly, that theso poor people should be in the hospitals, but they prefer, when able to do so, to get out into the world of c their fellows and trust to the 1 charity of the fortunate who have 1 i *iiuw u poor woman, paralyzed frfmi j tho knees down, who, with her babe in her arms, kneels in ono of the publio gardens and receives tho charity 1 people bestow on her. If she goto a twenty-flve cents in a day, sho lives 1 well and has a little meat and possibly ] a drop of coffeo. If sho gets but six 8 cents she lives on that, and thanks heaven. In the lottery of life somd of us draw prizes?sound limbs, good * lungs and clear heads, whilo others, a equally worthy, get tho blanks. I can- 0 not help thinking, as I walk the streets p of Mexico, that it is good for tho pros- j, Srous, the comfortably ofFj to see cse poor cripples, these blind men and women, thoso strango beings, half human, who crawl at your feet Shut 4 them up in hospitals, and ono forgets t that they exist. Tho charity which ono puts into a plato at church goes t only indirectly to the afflicted. Half a tho pleasure of doing good is lost For years there was seen around the 0 streets here a dog faced lad, who s walked on his hands and feot liko an h animal. I havo not seen him for t! months,-and.perhaps he i$ dead. Tho * story went that this strange, fantaetlo e freak of nature was born tno son of well to do parents, who, disgusted at his horrid snape, turned him into the * streets. On chilly winter mornings ho h went about in cotton, for ho was do- t< cently covered, but his expression of p sadness and hunger and weariness went straight to the heart. To seo w this poor fellow made one ashamed of being able to walk upright. Those of us wno gave him small coins now and a then do not, I fancy, regTot it. now a that he has gone from sight For the k student of Hfeman development this sj lad would have been a treasure. Ho w was human, but he was also brutish. a| Sights suoh as theso mnko the blood run chill in the veins, but they also n prompt littln acts of charity which " make giver and recipient feel their "< common humanitv.?City of Mexico b Oor. Boston HeralcL ^ Causes of Dr. Mackonzio huB B about the crown princo^MBBH^^HH "tfVsflj?3 & fcw FriinciBm i>e do determining cause of its appearance is in many cases an injury, such <as a blow, or a oondition resufting from an injury, such as a scar, or the persistent application to a particular snot of something1 that keeps the tissue inflamed and angry, such as a jagged tooth which chafes tho tongue. Workers in paroffine and petroleum are po' culiariy liable. to cancer of tho parts [ ' "vrtrtcrh are habitually oxposcd to tho action of these substances. It 14 well known that a particular form of cancer which formerly was common enough in England is now almost extinct, simply owing to tho faot that the cause which produced it has ceased to exist. When soot commanded a good pfrico it had to bo sifted. This operation'naturally involved much of> friction against the skin, whereby irritating particles were rubbed into it, ana chimney sweep's cancer* was a frequent result. Nowadays it does not pay to sift tho soot, ana tho disease to wnich it gave rise has disappeared. "Among tho causes of local irritation heat is certainly one of the most active. By far tho most common seat of the malignant disease in men is the mouth, whloh is more exposed than any otaerpartof the body to irritation by hot substances. Every surgeon is familiar with this fact Whether it be a lower lip, on which the hot stem of ' *olay pipe or the smoldering paper of > a cigarette has rested day after day, or i a tongue exasperated by the frequent , contact of acrid tobacco smoke,;or the ( mouthpiece of a foul pipe, or. made raw by ardent liquors, or stung and blistered by fiery condiments, the cause is essentially the same?viz., thn searing of the superficial covering tyy pro- . longed heat In some places,)where ! hotorasiers ore often applied i to the 1 abdomen and thigh, cancer of theso ' parts is not uncommon, thoughsall but 1 unknown in either of these situations 1 elsewhere."?M. L. Holbrook, jM. D., i La Herald of Health. ; I , Th? Biggest Man In the World. During this trip 1 have been over a ' largo pari of this state, and find Iowa 1 has the largest and best corn citop that i has ever been raised in theatata. Iowa \ does not only stand at the head! of the j list as a corn state, hut stands) at the head, also, for large men. *1 was one of the two largest men on a train last week, and the two of us weighed lust two poundsovor a half ton. Iwoighed tlO pounds, and tb? ftiW I i~? r, - ... - ?ywyl ?v*lV TV ^ weighed Just 792 pounds, Hii name ' wit J. & Craig. B [a is 6 feet 4] inches I r long, and ww born in Iowa City t thirty-two years ago. He is sa d to be 0 the largest man lathe world at the g present time. He is well pnopo tioned, () full of fun and as playful as I kitten. He told me that when be vent to " church ho put $1 in the oofcloction basket and took a whole seat f >r himself. Ho has Weighed 88? bounds, but uses tobacco now to kpep his a yei^down Lbelow 800.?Davenport t] CAN THE.CITIZENS OF THE COUNTY AF FORD ITT It isetated that there is to be two othci bar rooms opened here the first of Jan jury. That will uinke nine for our )i;tie '.own. This increase comes when thero ii \ general feeling ofdcprcssion in the coun:y. Every crop is under as average this year except cotton. There is a general feeing of close times, with hard times iu ,he future. Thero arc more horseless enants this year that there have been Yr several years. The gcneraloomplaint :01110s up that farmers, who depcud 00 enants, cannot get those who are provided with work animals. Flour, bacon, indalarge amount of corn and hay have 0 be bought by laruiers. By the first >f Maroh ten per cent of theui will not iave ready money to purchase theso artices. That is their condition to-day and low Ihfcv. with the assistance of peo This shows that the barroom men have lulimited confidence in the drinking ind paying capacity of the people who lavo to pay all the necessary expenses, lent, insurance, gas, licenses, taxes, crvant and clerk hire will cost these due barrooms thirty thousand dollars. Vdd to this the cost of whiskey and the mount willruo up to 8150,000 to 8200, >00 for one yoar. The peoplo nre exacted to pay this and they will do ituabss they change their way of doing. Can he county aflord it? Wo havo about 2,000 population. That is equal to a ux of four dollars on every one from ho cradle to the grave. It is no wonder that our people say he poor are getting poorer every year nd they will continue to do so as long S they pay this itnmooso tribute to the aloons. The money spent for whisky icre would buy corn enough to bread he county four or five months. It rould build and equipa large cotton mill very jt?r, It would put tho highways f the county in first class condition, it rould build and furnish 250 fiuc school ouses, giving to each one 6ix hundred ) oight hundred dollars. Now the pcole are asked to take this immonso capiat and tear down instead of build up rith it. They are expecten to come ut by th j hundred on ordinary days nd by tho thousand on all public days ud put in to the pockets of these saloon ecpers this money which they cannot |)arc. Can they afford it? This is rittcn to abuse thesuloon keepors. They rc acting under tho law when they do ot violate it by keeping painting screens \ frort and unpainted d<fots in the which turn^^|MaMjgMg|^^^r i n for the farmers of the^countj who aro sore impressed in many wayi Will they read thoso words and ponde them? Can they afford to pay this bur densomo, impoverishing tax; which dc stroys their hard oarningsand degrade them in body and mind??One op Till People, in Spautanburo. Maonitude op tiie Pension Sys tem.?The gigantic proportions of thi pension system of the United State: are seen in tho report of the Secretnrj of the Intorior. There is no such sys tem in any other couatry of the world and it is growiog at a wonderful rate The Secretary shows that in the fisca year ending with June last tho amount paid for pensions to old soldiers was 878 775,862, or an increase of 85,308,28( over the previous poar. Tho expendi tures of the Pension IUI Kill. year constituted 31 per cent, of tho total disbursements of the government and 21 i per cent, of its total gross in income. Truly, no one can deny that tho.vetorans of the war aro liberally dealt with. All that we desire in the ease ii that the legislation regarding the granting of pensions be eonsistent with common sense, and the same desire is entertained by all who were honorable soldiers of the Union.?New Yorh Sun. The number of fashionable women in London who are going into business is increasing. Ladv Grar.villn Onrrlnn io'g successfully established a millinery ihop, Lady Mackenzie, Mrs Stuart Menzios, Mrs I'ooklington and Mrs Cooler Oakloy have followed her example. Mrs Wheeler, one of the fashionable jeauties of the Langtry typo, has oponsd a bric-a-brac shop, while Mrs t Charey" Gorncy has gone into dressmaking. Mrs Keer, Lord Duoravon'asister in-law, nakes and sells bonnets and hat). Mrs tVhite has an art repository, ?nq Lady Lioftas, wife of the ex-swbassidor to luseia.bas gone into dressmaking;. A count of the vote etows that the Dajority of tho people of the <United Itates are not opposed to Cleveland and eform. He was defeated becfuse of ho odmbersome and tortuous machinery f the Electoral college; but be pecured j 10,000 more votes than Harrisda, 18,'00 moro than he recoived fouf years go rne majority of th people <jre for iriff reform j Don't eat two mince pic?, a plujm puding, lobator wild, and ioe cream, and lien oomplain that the olimatf don't gree with you. t I I I.. Ill II I ? ' 1 Sound Loaic.*r-a i, uispa^^m Munro, N C., soys: *Tb?Pai(bert Al- # lianco of this county H?rtfJ,"*'bT ? common contribution 'of; from each member, united in.,|, store. > It is making preparations for qiutp 1 heavy stock of goods. UuiOn is oes of the strongholds of tbo A Ills noot^1" -Cooperative 6torcs bavc succeeded In'irfanufacturing centres where rtoucy' eeired every week and cash paid tffti oil goods. It is gravelf questionable whether they can ever sbceeed do our countty under credit BjMetn. Tli#' at- 1 tempt in Texas iuvolved that AHlatioo A in bankruptcy. ' In merchandise two tilings aro csary: Capita), to purchase; and eeii. xnc uicrcbaut lurniilMt capital and pays for the labor! If; his strictest attention, and, oversight, lie is able to m?k* * getO^^^^H forest op his investment ubd paybin^M fair aaTarc for Civ rot j|fl I content. The profit on f!n? pays these expenses. Competition his own interest forces him to boy a^JH cheaply and sell as closely as his expen^^H ses will permit. If the Farmers Allinnoo become tl^HH proprietors of the store, thesa same' peoses must be paid?they must attpi^^^B theoapitnl, and pay the interest They must pay the salesman for tfl H labor. Profit must be added cost of goods to pay these expeots^^^^H both It is hard to see how the maoagei^^H^H pay these expenses and sell goods fl H much smaller profit than his oompeti^^^HH He can only do so by buying oloser,^^^^^H hiring clerks cheaper. aad.it.caOfio^^^HH expected that a hired ageut will in this dircctiotr than experienced M M chants whose own money is at stake. H If the merchants were rapidly. rich it would provo that their were unnecessarily largo. per merchants fail, alii I points truth that, -in u m i/fli B profits ou merchandise arc not suffipu^^^H to pay the expcnsesiof the hu*incM.^H^| Sjxirtanburiji Herald. .Somfj I ?r Domestio Bcoipea ^B^B To Cook Touan Meat.?Buy thick slice of round steak with but littl^^H i a o . ? oone ana int. split it so as to mako ont^HH thin piece. Prepare a largo <^ubfpl bread crumbs, season thoin ffijtK saltHH oepper and thyme or summer eavorj^^H moisten with milk and a little butteq^^H mix well tot-ether and spread it over,^H the meat. If the flavor of onions is liked^^H ohop a very little of it, and add to the^Hj r will bo very tender aud nutritious. * WBSbb in slices crosswise like a jelly roll. jljlKpi s Orange Float.?One quart -:'4ttl|l e water, the juice and pulp of two lemi mate\ one coffee-cup sugar. When boiling add four tablespooo* oorustaroh. j boil fifteen miouios, stirring all tlBm j time. When cold pour it over four i five oranges that have been sliced iettMxra f a glass dish, and over the top opre??ffiffij beaten whites of throe eggs, sweetens! and flavored with vanilla. ^9 Lemon Pie.?Mako a aloo, flaky t 1 crust, line a deep pie pan, sod bake, i Have reony the filling, uasde by taking , the juice of one lemon and yellow rind *| I grated, two-thirds of a oup of eugur, one 1 - egg, well beaten, ond one tablespboofol I i of cornstarch; stir all into one half-pint I of boiliDg water, and boil Irom three to I ' fivo minutes; pour into the orusi, and I - set into the oven a fow minutes. I 1 ? . I A distinguished Democratic leader who , recently talked with the President re- I gardiog the eleotion quotes Mr Clove- JB land as saying;" lam told that without' the tariff issue in the last campaign we shoud have carried the country. Tost may be truo, but tho time ft?*l ??? m ? ? ? when the isauo between the two parties had to bo made, and the Democrats made it. I don't regret it. It is better to bw defeated battling for an honest principle thau to win by a cowardly subterfuge. Some of my friends say we ought to bavo gone before the oountry on olean administration we have given tbe people. I differ from tbem. We needed a clean-cut, well definled issue. We were defeated, it is troe, bat ths principles of tariff reform will surely win in the end/' < Horrible Fate or Two Youno La- A' dies.?Nashville December 12?Jl/ special from th+ American, frost Kuoy >' rille, Teno, says: j "Miss Hinum, age 20, a school teadfer, A and Mrs Lewis, age18, wens ran j by an inooming express train on the Wet- I tern North Oarolina Railroad, Mar ] Alexanders, N. 0., last evening, SOi J both horribly mangled. They ware mk morally ground to pieoea. Th?tMWwt oeourred on a trestle io a sharp carvejb( H| The Sam* M an.?"i don'teey rM h riage is a failure,' said Adam, oaodidlfl I be sat down on ? log ja*i ouUidafl Harden of ?don and lookfl| bangrjfl ibo fruit on the other aid* of tktfl I bat it I had reicaiaed aingU tkk wcfl B > hat* heppmiL" - , -.Tto I \ k\ $ ^I H