University of South Carolina Libraries
PXLd dCS AD POLICIES. A TAvZ WITH COL A. . McCLURE ON IMPORTANT TOPICS. The Editor of the Philadelphia "Times" Submits to an Interview And Discusses Some of the Live Issues of the Day. Col. A. K. McClure, the distinguish a editor of the Philadelphia Times, recently passed through Charleston, and was interviewed by a reporter of the News and Courier. In reply to requests for an expression of his views upon different matters now greatly engaging the public attention, Col. AcClnre said: CIvIL SERVICE REFORM. "In the first place, we have more professional politicians in the North than vou have here. We have a great deal of dissatisfaction as to the civil service reform policy of the President but it-is among the politicians who are so by trade and who expect Mr. Cleveland to do just what he has promised not to do. But there i? no doubt that the overwhelming sentiment of the Democrats of the North is in favor of Mr. Cleveland's policy; and tMat sentiment is growing stronger day by day for two reasons: First, he is iloing more and more to satisfy the reasonable wishes of the Democrats W filling ofces; and second, they are ting to understand better and better w wise that policy is. If the Demo cratic party do not sustain Mr. Cleve laud in his present policy they will utterly destroy the party ; it will go to pieces and be broken up-diiitegrat ed." "There is another thing," continued Col- McClure, "that is steadily streng theing Cleveland at the Nortb, and -ti at is the growing confidence in him of business circles, which, you know, are very largely Republican in the North. He has the confidence of in dustrial, commercial and financial men, and those who regard business as of more importance than politics. As to the dissatisfaction existing, there .is not one-quarter as much with Mr. Cterpland in the Democratic party as there was with Mr. Lincoln in the Republican party during his term of office. I have no doubt whatever that before Mr. Cleveland has filled one half of his term of office, unless some thing entirely unexpected and not of his own creation should ha ppen, he wilt be the strongest President this country has had sir.ce the war." "Are the mass of Independent Re publicans satisfied- with the Adminis tration of Cleveland?" asked the Re porter. THE LDEPENDENT REPUBLICANS. "The great mass of the Independent .Republicans that supported Mr. Cleve land, have entire confidence in him and heartily sustain him. They are very:independent, of course, and do ot sustain any person blindly. They _eqnat approye of everything he has done, but they have an abiding faith in 'his inherent integrity of purpose and in bi'ability, with all his embar rassments, to work out his policy and to make it a success. They are en tirely satisfied with him as President auqwrith his general policy. As I e said before, there are a great mny Redublicans in commercial and 4t nnial circles who voted against h~M,*o now have a great deal more . It~-n him than they ever had ina DmiatcPresident; and whilst he Mitost the faith - of a very few of tbe Independents, if any, he has gained . iljlath of a very large propornion of the miost intelligent business Repub -licans of the country. *ZOW ThE PARTIES ARE AFFECTED. As to the effect of Mr. Cleveland's * pini tion upon the organization f ilities Col. McClure said: The'facts I have just stated will -show that the effect of Mr. Cleveland's conusehas'been:to visibly weaken the ~or ~ ti'on of both parties in the THE PESmmENT AND THE SENATE. IHow is the President's course in the ccntest with the Senate on ques ~ions of removals regarded in the 1%orter?"hbe was asked. Col. McClure asid "Ale is very earnestly and cordially anstaind by the entire Democratic jiarty, and by a very large proportion otahe Republicans in his contest with the Siuate. ' He will undoubtedly be sustained ,by the Republican Senate." THE GARLAND MIATrER. In regard to the general opinion of Attorhey General Garland's relations to the Government Col. McClure said: - "All parties have absolute faith in the personal integrity and confidence --in the ability of Attorney General Garland. Yet it must be conceded that his connection with the Pan-Elec tric affair is a misfortune to himself sud a misfortune to the Admistration. --because it puts the Administration upon the defensive, and that is always - r itau unfortunate position. The chief misfortune of it is that it is visi - fle to the 'public that, in an impor tant legal controversy which the Gov einment has assumed, its chief law ~soffieer, and confessedly its ablest, is nbt in positir to represent the Gov ernent by reason of a very innocent coftnedtionl whiich he formed three yers ago in the organiz~ation of the ~an-Electric Company. He can in no waybenefit his own company or his own stock by any legal proceedings, -.or if he were to set aside the Bell patent he would either give the patent to Grey or decide that the whole thing was unpatentable, and therefore it conld not in any way benefit the Pan Electric Company. But at the same time it is a good sign to see public opinion sensstive on the subject." TARIFF REVISION. After a. very carefil inquiry on the subject for two days in Washington, Col. McClure states his belief that there will be no revision, of the tarif at this session of Congress. The Re publioans nnfortunately have consoli dated against a revision as a mat ter of party policy, and Morrison will not present a bill to Congress that the Democrats would pass. Besides, if it were passed by the House, it would not pass the Senate. SIIVER COINAGE. In regard to the outlook as to the suspension of silver coinage Col. Mc Uiuremsaid: - Theie' will be no suspension of silvercoinage. The silver craze is the outgrowth of the greenback craze with iner'essed proportions, and with a - goodmunsdation of right for it. The only diffculty is that they do not make a dollar a dollar. They might just as well make a 25-cent dollar as an 80-cent d~llar. But I believe that there will be legislation upon the subject, without limiting silver coinage, that will either .wt-e the silver dollar worthy of the nation or will hinder it from tmaking! any disturbance in the financial affairs of this country. I do not look at all for a suspension of the coinage, There i is no need to ao it. The country can stand aul the silhwer that can be coined it the%, will coin an honet dollar. THE NEW SOUTH. Concerning the people of the South, Col. McClure said that "this section is now for the first time in a position to begin a- rapid growth. Never before has she been in buch good pi ition to command the entire confidence of capi tal at the North. While there has been generally a confidence in the tranquii itv of the South, even before the clec tion of Cleveland, still it was al wa% s said: 'Wait until these people get into power, then there will be a dis turbance, a disposition to reverse the judgment of the war, to make prop erty unsafe and society turbulent.' Now it is seen that the South, instead of undertaking to disturb politics, has gone to work to command the conti dence of capital in every part of the word, to invite immigration, and now for the first time money, which is very sensittve, is free from all doubt as to its safety in every part of the South. Our large surplus of money and skilled labor must very soon turn south, where it can be very much better re warded than in the North. They will go to the manufacturing of iron and the development of coal, and the spi:. ning and weaving of cotton and all the various and diversified industries which those things carry with them. As a consequence the tide of Northern and foreign immigration will tu-n southward instead of westward, be cause the West is every year becoming less and less inviting to foreign emi 0ration. "I regard the prospects of the South as even much better than the Southern people themselves regard them. There is nothing in the history of the world that can be compared with the efforts of the Southern people to rehabilitate themselves. Considering-the institu tions under which they grew up, their system of labor which has been so vio lently revolutionized, and the necessity for diversifying their industries, of which they knew little or nothing, it is marvellous how they have adapted themselves to the new order of things and to what a stage of advancement they have arrived in a few years. Pennsylvania has much more reason to fear the South in the manufacture of iron and in the competition than any foreign country. You will draw a large portion of our industry to your section, and we, as we have always done, will learn so nething new and go at it. There cannot be anything more insane than the raising of cot. a' here in the South, where you have the bene fit of a splendid water power that never freezes, and where everything cheapens production, and then to ship that cotton away to bleak New Enz lnnd, and there to have it spun and woven. That system cannot la,.t in the New Soutfi. Whenever capital comes South, where it is bound to conse, there will be a revolution; and it cannot be far distant." FARXERS TO THE FRONT. Call for an Agricultural Convention at Columbia--An Address Setting Forth the Grievances of tho Tillers of the Soil. To the Farmers of South Carolina: Seventy-six per cent. of our State's population are actively engaged in agricultural pursuits. At least one half of the remainder are directly de pendent upon the far-mers for the means of a livelihood. We may justly clain, then, that we constittute the state, yet we do not irovern it, nor are the laws administerell in our interests, and few are passed for our benefit. We pay taxes and vote and there is no further use for us. These taxes do not grw any less, while our ability to pay them grows smaller year by year, and nothing worth naming has been done to foster and encourage that in terest which feeds and sustains all others. The negroes used to be the "mudsills" of our economic fabric; but thousands of white men-land owning farmers-finid themselves low ly but surely sinking beneath the waves to be added to the foundation upon which a few :nen and corpora tions are erecting their fortunes. tIn peding bankruptcy stares thousands in the face, while other thousands are overseeing their own plantations for their victuals and clothes. An insane system of farming large-ly prevails and our lands are growing poorer year by year. Large areas of South Carolina are .being made a desert to feed negroes, while the land owners, giving no thought to the future of themselves and children, stand idly by, or assist and dir-ect this skimming of a State, which, by reason of soil, climate andi geographical posi tion, mig-ht be made a veritable Gar den of Eden. The negroes will "go West" went the bones are pickt d. What will we do? We are "farming towards despair" in thus continuing to impoverish our lands by ignorant cul ture, but nothing is done by our Leg islature, or its creatures, to stop it, or to try to teach the people a better and wiser system. Forty thousand dollars are spe'nt annually in the State, three fourths of it spent by Iarmers, to edu cate men for other professions and pursuits; the farmers get nothing, and are left to grope their way tawar-ds the grave in ignorance and its consequent poverty. Even the pittance donated to educate farmers by the United .States Government is taken from us and ap propriated to sustain the institution at which our future masters are being trained. How thankful we should be to the good Lord for such generosity and wisdom among our statesmen, so. called! Apmai, we pay $25,000 annually by specific tax, which comes out of the farmer alone, to sustain a department of agriculture. A good slice of this is spent to collect the phosphate royalty, which goes to support the State Gov ernment, and the rest is frittered and wasted, so fat- as we can see, the only benefit received by the farmetrs. being a partial protection againist fraudulet fertilizers. A majotilty of the board of agricul ture are not engaged in farming. Who wonders, then, that so little has been done by it to benefit our tarming in terests? Four bad crops out of five and the consequent poverty of our farmer-s cr-y aloud for economy and reduction of taxes. But this cry, which came from every county, was ignored by the last refused to obey a plain mandate of the Constitution to provide for a reappor tionment of representatives by holding a nsus. It is small wonder, then, that nothing w as done to protect the arers against robbery by dishontest fertiizer matnufacturers. The Legislature which recently ad joued thorgh not corrupt, has been 'he tb-3ughtful andt inieligent 1a-ners )f the State cannot aflord to elvci " n ther such body of ]aw makers and lonstituiun breakers. Nor can tuer tfford to allow the a riurai intei ts of the State to be -ub. 'rdi:ated to verything el-C, and no effor u:ade oster and protect tiwm. Outer -tate .Vithl less explendi-.ure that. we art. naking, are d-:iag te tme a- Iuch. o encouraie and aUsist t ho.e e0g ed .n farming. But the mn ev m iC i Iot enti n1ted to ponticians or to tho-, ,lected by 1poditicians. The farner, nanage aid conaltro1i it tO-l es. L;eblevintg, uI ertf re, ! hat ~te erti lemni.ids Iro0II)i an.l unit'd acio: oil he part of tL true :aid luoy a! ftirime. -f the State, and that a convention of ach can only redound to the benefit )f agriculture aid conweneth-tof very other interest and calling, we all such a coniveitiol. to leet in the ity of Columbia, h'lursday, th- 2 9: )f next April, to take lto consih-a :ion the que-tion toutihed ltpon in this uddress, together with sich other mat ers as they may deen of importanlcl e o the political, social, educational or ndustial interests of the fariners and >f the State. Each county agricultural society i, equested to scnd live delegate-. Each local or township a urieuural tub is request to send oie delegzate. The farmers of each cuolty are re jnested to send tive delegates over nd bove those from organized socictii-, md to effect this it is ttgwe..ed th:o hose in sympathy with the iuveneln all a mass meeting or county con:ve ion of farmers in Leir respective ounties to apPoint sai. delegate-. If the wisest and best of our farn rs thus assemble we feel and beieve here is enough of both patriotimsi and tatesmanship among us to find r.:ne ics for those evils; and, w ithamt renching upon the rights of others, nanhood enough to (emalunnd and ob ain a proper recognition of utr rights md needs. While this is essentially a iarmers' noveinent we invite the sytpathy and moral support of good itent of every :alling. Agriculture is the ha-i- or )ur economic structure anel suppoit he rest. It cannot rise without rarry in witb it the superstructure. There is among the politicians in outh Carolina an up-counutry and low :ountry. There is no such line of livision among the farmers. Our in terests are one. Let us come together rom the mountains to the sea, and, xercising the God-given right that the majority should govern, organize as rartners and obliterate this line torever. J. T. Hanna, S. S. Newell, J. Jame son), R. It. Beaty, J. -1. Elgi, B. F. Duncan, J. A. Gray, WM. Wilkins. A. E. Pant, J. L. Wulker, l". P. Clinkcales, N. L. Ervin, 1. N Johnisont, H. P. Duvall, B 11. Mont gomery, T. B. Martin, J . .. Li. draim, C. G. Tutt, 11. 1k. Themvi T. L. H1onces, R. B. Lyons, 11. I. Gooch, J. II. David, J. I. Lane, M. D., J. T. Covington, J. R. .r risonl, J. O. Jonles, J. GT. Wv'lliamls , J. 11. Bowen, 1. L. Donlani-o, 0. P. Hawthorne, T. C. Will-u.zhb' , -am. J. lutson, lharry llanuuand, J U. Stafford, W. J. Gomdinu , i . T. Nlockbee, M. F. Barnett, Wm. Long, R. W. Anderson, John 1Z. ilart i-on, Alex. J. Norton, W. S. Oflen, S. B. Mavs, M. A. Morket, W. L. Dur-t, J. L. Br. an,J. A. MeAIIh-er, G. 1. McDavid, M. U. Williams, ). F. Saddler, J. T Cook, J. Wakinz, J. L. WXoflord, Wtm. Jetleries5, .J. A. M1ajor, WVm. & ooper, J. G. I\Ic ('atchen, Ben. S. William,, C. A. Berry, E. C. SmnithI, Albert fUm-ri -, E. S. Alletn, A. P West. B. Gatu e, W. D. Evans, W. B. Drazle, 1H. -\. Pegues, Chams. CroslandI, .Jas. Bla lock, J. C. Davis, .\1. 5. Stribline, J. W. Sheler, -H. B. Bui-r, S. P. Burbage, J. L. Hunter, .J. E. Tinud:u, R. J. Hiaukinsotn, D. L. .\eLauritn, Win. Stokes, Benj. MIock, J. 11. Whorton, Thomas W. Gold-mith, J. M1. Whitmire, W. A. M.Elvey, Robt. S. Beckham, W. I1. Timmte man, H. B. Galimanm, 0. F. Cheat ham, B. IR. Tillmani. A Deadly Draught. Tuesday afternoon about eighty in mates of the almnshou-e at Lebanon, Pa., were seiz.ed with vmtiitng andt evere pains. Dr. Weiss, the attend ing physician, was hastily summoned mnd at once pronoutnced it a c sz' of wholesale poiso ningi. Measu res werec promptly taken to counmteract the poio on. M1ost of the victims suflered everely from nausea, antd twelve o! them are in a critical cotndition. An investigation revealed the fact iha a; who drank of the coffee prepared for ruesday's noon meal were sick, and the doctor 8001n found the coliec pyt lined with a thick sediment of puit ~reen. The vessel holds a barre! or more, and into this some person ht:!d brown almost four pounds of1 11is5. Dr. Weiss is of the opinion that had it aot beetn that the poison was too) ~trong, causing inlstant vomititng, mor1 Ie han half the itnmates of the almshou-e would now be dead. Was it Cancer? I have been taking B. B. B. for six or even weeks for something like cancer on iy neck, and I would not take ONE THOU. lAND DOLLARS for the benefit received. I had previously tried various so-called blood remedies, but B. B. B. is the be-t, the quickest and the cheapest blood puri er I ever used. I refer to any merchant >f Griffin, Ga. J. 11. BiR NES, Gr iffin, Ga, Were we so disposed, we conlid make a great case of cancer cure of the abov', aut as we do not think that genuine can ters are ever cured, we do not propose~ to lum~bugthe public. Tite ahoyve is perha-.ps >nly a ease of scrolutous uicer, whien B. B. B. cures more speetdily thlan any ~emedy. It will cure any so-ealledi (-ancers one half the time andl one third tile noney required by anv thoasted remedy. 1LUOD BALM3 CU., ** Atlanita, G;a Wedded Over Their Child's Grave. A remarkable wedding occurred at hestnut Mlound, Tenn., on T-~y Lhe bride is of a good inmily aod the ridegroom betrayed hler two years mgo. ie refusedi to redei-t hi- !1r1m1 se, antd to escape i he veangeahce of ier male relatives lie fled, Dutrinig is ibsence a chihi was botrn anda dlied. he father subsequently repented and btaied forgiuientes by a szu-mtu romise to atone by at oncee tanking mer his wite. Thle ceremlonyv took >lace on Tuesday muorninig. The ire aired to the grave of their child with -iends and the minister, and kneelingr me on each side of the tomab wVith Lands above it, they spoke the vows rhich united theum, the service b~eini ad by the minister, who stood at theC 0t of the grave. I ADVICE To MOTHERS. Mns. wIysto's SooThJO si:rr shouthl al 'ays be used for children teetlip . I t soomhes a child, softens the rums. lltey' ilL-. ares wind colnc, and is the tb- remndy :-r .arrhea. Twenty-five cnts a bottle. JnteurL+y1 GIENERAL NEWS ITEMS. ne- ',' i.ne.?:.t1, einered from Tarious -l-h F. Miller, of Cali fr:nia, % dead. -1r. (,adstonle is confinedi to his bed !rVin a cold. -Yhrcih Luubles have become epi demiic UN over .t1i countnrv. -C inty TreaILui rer l[olliingsworth, tf U:~ei ' Id0., is short $78,279. -The rairoad Qtrike in the West seento be losing strengcth. -Mfr-. 31art B., widow of ex-Gov ernor Seymour, fNew York, is dead. -Pnunia and other diseases are now t;iributed to the use of natural -Ex-Setiator Jerome B. Chaffee, of New Y ork, and the wie ofex-Attorney Genera d rew er died ast week. -W. John'. ad his son Frank, are on trial ill A:hCvill7e, N. C., for the :niurder of the Joyce family. -Mrs. Langtry is said to have lost the little prestige she originally had in Lo ni(on societV. -Wiggiins predicts that a terrible stormii wjil rage on the Atlantic some tillie this imionith. -The Prohibit12ionistS of Atlanta have won their case before the Supreme CourI of Georg*ia. --The Chicago Tribune savs that to omalyzl! Marv Aniderson's acting is "l:ke carving' the breaSt. of a cold tur ke-,." -Five thou.;anid ne physicians will be gr:ilu:uted Irom the 101 incorporated 1111ical ceges la the United States ibis year. -- The Emprim D on Pedro, of Dra zil, is 1.ianning the erectiin of all acad emy o ml:! i wlbich will be first of its kind *,n: S outh Americii. -The Virgrinia Legislature has voted down a proposition imking the giving ot railro.;ad pa.,ses to members of the Sate Governmenit a taisdemeanor. -The turohn 'Martel was blown il) by an unexplaiened explosion near 3o.,ton and her crew of five men were drownled. -The notoriou- Archers, who have been confined in jail in Shoals, Ind., charged with murder, have been lynch ed. -A lire in a drying house iu OCIs, lPrusianl Silesia, caused the death of everal woumen and the ,erious injury of man others. -Three thousand and five hundred 0cceS.ions were reported to the M. E. C'hurb at the Baltimore conference la.,t Thar.,day -The 31a-acbusetts House of Rer r-ee;tatives as defeated by a large ma:jority the prohibitory amendineut to tile Constitution. -J. W. Sells, his wife, son and dugiter were found murdered in O~~re City, I Kasa, last week. A youngt Sonl i, suspected. -ellator Vest, of Missouri, who iz -'rionh ill with nouralgia at the base 'f the hrlin, whl go to Georgia and ilorida for rest a;id ti catment. -Jpt. J. E. Brow and M. A. Grace had a ,hooting mitch in the New Oi l us cu-nm, wheni the latter was kil'ed amd the rmier badly wounded. -Ninjor (oneral Joim Pope of the United States Army retired from active ervice Oil lTedy, March 9th. ie silIl hereafter reside at Cincinlati. --Thie Supreme~t Court of Georgia has afli aed thle -emene~le of Gxeorge F. .bwlk-oni, of Augustam, conlvi'~tedi of breaceh of trus!, anid he goes to the penlitilntiaryV for six years. ~The' Nebraska City saloon keepers haIve aill signed~ an agrcelemt no(t to elI any liquor to any man who is kown to hlave signied the temtperanlce pledge. -The Philadelphia city courts re ecently grauted 24 divorces in one day. There is onle branchl of tradeI that enjoys all thle exhilarating vivacity of a cottstatit. -Thle latest neOws frotm theC circle of the "giraind '11d party," is that John A. Lo ean, re-olved to divide literary hnlor, with James (G. Blaine, has taken21 to pioetry. -Menlingiti- has brokeni out among -h riC i3ioners iln the At lanlta jail, and eerld ha~ve died. The othlers have beenl mlovedl to the jails of Cobb, lIar -Thie frien~ds of Dr. Armstrong in AlIlan ta will perhaps build for himlf ant indepenldeit church. One of thle cur.a iirs oif St. Ltuke's Church, Bishop Bekwit b's Cathedral, hams tend~ered his resignlationl. -T'iwo railroad trains collided trains cllidled betveen Monte Carlo and Mnona ill Spainl lat week and m~ore :bant t wenty passengers lost their hvecs. M-iny carriages were smnashed and fell it theC sea. -A railroad shled, a trail! of cars loaded with milk and a quantity of freight at the pier of thle Monarch Steatmship Company in Jersey City, were destroyed by fire last week ; loss over $300,000. -It is niot often that a beggar is eI'outered ill mid-ocean!. Yet a stemller just arrived reports that it was app)roached by a destitute schoonellr that asked for food, and being supplied went on1 its way rejoicing. -Fire Chief Mahedy, of New York, was killed on Friday afternoon while retrnig from a fire. An engine ran i~to his buggy, throwing him11 under the whmeels of theC enginle and crushing i shoulders so that lhe died ill a short time. -There are now 10,000 emnployas on strike alon~g the line of the Gould roads, aind the mlovemuent is still spread ing. Businless on tile Missouri Pacific is at a sctndstill, but the roads show 1n0 disposition to 3 ield. -A ladvy mun~led Bankston, travel int with~ her liandly from Coweta couty, Ga., to Mississippi, fell from ie Itraint Sa trdaLv near Chattanooga and was tatalh injured. Shle had gone ont on Ih hi il formi for fre-h air. -Ilttmnphlries, the murderer of the. two oun l ladies nlear Milledgevllle, as been pIlaed inl thle Macont jail for safe~ keepinlg. lie says if he did thle mur<1er it was while hie wvas intoxicat ed1 anld din't know he was doing. -A Ru-sjan convict is said to have urvived a punuishmenlt of 2,.000 lashes. Xhigh a nlumber as 4,000 lashes is ;aid to have been itmposed in some ~ases, but no0 conlvict ever survived the nitionl of the punishment. -There are indications that the itrnl tide of Chiinese from the Pacific -ouit will t ur! piartially to te South. I' ubtl h soon raise their batting- I t ick and( cry: "The Chinese mustI -Tenoile of t he tug Rifleman ex ploded in Cnuaift harbor last wevk. The veseI ani aund crew, consisting of si persons, were blown to atous. The cylinder of the engine struck a passing Italian ship, a quarter of a mile ditmt, id kiled the pilot. -As !nt as "Obi Sorrel," Stone wail daek-ot's war horse die-, it. frame Will be t urneldI over to a taxidCrmais: who will montt 4for pre-erva ion. A military friend of Gen. Jack-on's has supplie.d tue noeeS~.t-y monyCV. -Ma1hewi Ariald who is now tra eling on tile comtielit takin i re s-arctie- in ed:uil a1:11 ers fOr tle Engish ;ovirmtnent, vri;es to a friend in Boston ihat lie imzends to re:visit thin contry in May and will remain here until A ugust. -An attempt was timade on Thurs day iii Paris to assassinate Jues Verne. Two shots were ired at him from a revolver by a young student, who turied (out to be the authlor's ieplew, and who had cote Pari. for tihe ex press purpose of kiliniig Lis uncle. -Secretary Whitiey is a nephew of the inventer of the cotton gin. The widow ofanother nepliew is a resident of Washington. She is a descendant of the Wollestonecraft family, one of whom, her g andaunt, was t ie second wife of the puet Shelly. -Masquis de Aguilafuente, a Span ish noblenan, has beeln recognized by the Mexican Government as a descild ant of the Aztec Emperor Montezumita II., and has been rranmted an anudl pension of $1,400.13, to be paid him during his lifetime. -The report of the Ednunds coin mittee touching the reftusal of the President to fi:niish to the Smiatc cer tail) papers touchiig the .removal of the Albama District Attorney, was diser'sed last week. The Democrats seem to bave had the bettar of tite arguinent. -The German press loudiy protestl that the prol;oed rebuilding of Rome will reCult in the de"tructionm of it, rCmlaining antiquities. Memorials are being signed by artists and archxolo gists, everywhere, protesting against the sacrilege of Rome by building speculators. -The family of the King of Denmat k may not irreverently be termed a reh (gions curiosity shop. When next lie gathers his family around him, which lie is accustoined to do every year or two,. he will have before him Luth erans, Angticans, Russian Orthodox. qreek Catholics and Roman Catholics. -There is much excitement in Au gusta, Ga., on the Chinese subject on account of the arrival of several Celes tials and the expectation of more tO follow. There are several huidred now in the city, some of whom have married American wives. The feeling seems to be that the Chitnese must go. -The Trade Council o: Los Ange les, Cal., has itsued a circular callinga on the citizens to aid in peacefully removing the Chinese. A large nun ber of employers int consequence are dischargitig the Chinese. About itine hundred Cthinamen has arrived there from the surr.unditng districts since the agitation began. -By the death of Senator- Jolt F. Miller, of California, the Democrati will gaint a tettmporary seat inl tle United States Senate. The Legisla ture is not in session, atid Governor Stotnemant who is a Democrat, wil: appoitt a Demnwrat to the Nacatc - fThe tnew Legislature wvill choose a Sentator witl he elected this fall. --The bus.iness fatilutres occu rrinhg throughtotut the country durig tln Iast week, as reportedl to 1R. G. Dtun & Co., ntutmber foer the United States 214, anld for- Cantada 25. TfotlI 239, against 249 last week anid 248 the week pre vious. Busintess casualties are ott the declitne in every sectioni or the counttry, especially int the Easterti and Midldle States. --The Pan-Electric investigaitionc before the special commnittee of the House begatn in Wasingtotn on Fri day. J. 11. Rogers, the inaventotr tee tifiedi that stock ini t he cone. rn had b en given to Senators Gar-latid and Harri and others, free of cost. He said the stock had no actual, but a p)urely speculative, value. -No tmatn is more untfortuntate ini his lettetr wriitinig thant Gen. W. T1. Shermant. ile ha- just writtn a letter in which lie said that his chilldrent could to tmiore enter a public school thian a commtion tavern. Of course his usual luck followed him, and the tiewspape~rs have p'ublishted the .retter- with severe editorial st rict ures. -The latest tioveity itt the line of boycottingecomes trotm Chicago, whlere the Kntights of Labor have notilied the publishers ef die City D~irectly of their rettusal to fttriiish tlte inames ot somte 30000 memubers of the order untless he coatments to the substitutioni or tntiou priniters in setting the type for the non-uionists who bave hitherto done the work. -Joeph English, of Boston, has wasted ten and a half valttable hours itn writittg ott a postal card the eniiire address of the Hon. h. B- Metcalf, delivetred at the Gener-al Convention of Utiversalists, biehi tast yeain itBrootk vin. The addresseotitains 4,4632 words, ard Mr. Enigli.-h wrote thtemt all with a steel peni, by gatslight, without the aid of a tmagttifyiig glass. - There is no landed class itt Fratnce, properly so-called. Thiet-e ate 8.000, 000 peasanit proprietors. E ttailI and primogetiture are utnkinownt, and a bit of land ctan be bought and sold as easily as a cow or- a famnily Bible. Notwvit.stanidiing, 800 .000 cotnutry folk have, withitn the past live year.-, qtiited the greeni tields andt homieste-ads ofI France itt order to seek a living itn the great town is. -The Savannah Times thinks the astigations admnitered to Boutelle, ot 31aine, by Mr. Wise, of Virinuia, ad the flayintg given llentdersoni, (of owa, by Hoin. Thotmas M. Norwood, ught to deier anyv other Radicalf blaterski ue tromt itrying to wave tte~ bloody shirt mn Cotigress this se-sion.l t is gettincg to be a very ctan.,r;u -Frmn 1881 t 1885 thle pulicl debt as been decreasedt $(;42.17(;,291I, and uringt that ti me the :educt it exceed - d requiremienits by $:312,647,.331. The oly Untitedi States bondsiC(et'eia ble at the optiont ef the Govertnent ow outstanditng are :1 per cent., is-ued inder the Act oIf Jttly 12, 1882, 01 hich $194,190,500 were outstamniin July 1, 1885. Of this amtount SU,5t7 - 250~have since b~eeni redleemled, leavin t this rate $184, ':,250 to hereaufter lbe 1-edeemen d. SALESMEN WANTED [N every nteighborh od, either to travel1 or seil at hiomte, i )key's Indiant anid lood atd Livet Pillls. Apply no0w, givin~ eferetee. JNO. It. DICKE Y, 1 FOR COUCHS Am CROUP ! E E ~ET P 'The swee- gum, as gathered from altree of the same on, growing along the small streams in thec Southern Stats, -- contains a stimulating expectonlnt prmncle that iam-en1 the phLegm producing the estly mornin.- congh, and a:ImU lates the chtld to throw off the fale' meranse Itreronp and whopint-co.h. When combined with the helin nuci ladinon' principle in the maul plant ot the old fleldts. pro seat-' in Ta~vrLoa5 Coinoxis Rs,.EDY oP SW2Er Gre' ANrD Mar.iesre the finest known remedy for Coughs. Croup. Whooping-Cont~h :nd Consumption: and so palatable. any child Is pleaes to take It. Aat- coor drregit tor It. Price, 25c. and Si. WALTER A. TAYI.oR. Atlanta, Ga. Use DR. BIGGERS. Het tr.EIW!i!iY CORDIAL fore bIarrhee. Dysentery and Chiiree T'Cshibng. For nsta bj druggistA. A STATE UENT 0)F FACTS FOR THE PUBOLIC TO CONSJDER. A-TL.NtA. ('.\., .j:t!:: 'rv 12,EO f typhoubi ft eer I di,-w'r' " th1 thea en'vmr lau!M~ ml in i' r :h. !e:vih aus'd'1 i t swe! t ;: :OrmV (' .' le, '' tem --i U .: \ mi y ::Ide .;1)1 ' . n I !t : t!:e* mcd mi m :' :'le f - it rm. n a tohI 1 *. ::: : :'' ::' ii' -r- . Of p s r :-..ry. z::1 of t n'er wI :It : i woawie ini ohe. Aw t on. a ii it : a.:itred t::: te ino titum at e iguou . S ouini Si* l d telr e-1omeR a runnin-: : I mr, its p ei arly labby.spottd :V. un4.uy (:i!.:dton A Cle ar indcate an iS in at thi:.ht osa e a. ey canlia. ay!-. haen citil am the uler wa "r look ikp ma te m it.rt: xaoields.nato dalhm the f!h know:ree o s. arndx. WUhoopa.:ou!: zd the sumo :' d Pog'a -e. an e5 bandS1.et dATR.AiYy u teetaociu f D . B GES CODI. o bagnote.Dsecterydgt lisin Tc ion s. and z3=b F'I IuST-C LAS it--r ,A u-.i: t ec n hg i t - r i acnof ty h intvselfr, fims the' nTher v oniuae o valrpir :wtL~e is. nowAn ia t. V 11. s o! t. o s or . .d co d ri, eedy a;d N:Oeu~ h14) :i: atuiier ofr 'pli-or;:,1: t o r ny ting he sm't.of .N vero uwd.I o i .v; l dhoreierr to ldn ',.-. H . th t::, \r.l h. C Sne thers A o lltiant i t,:' h Als Clea SknVC buith a piat Ete pilady matiy hve t ast,. ati tha t . . Kiit 1. ti' IO ( Am SoF LEYf.! ")SOLU 1 lo01to ilikde t. Mgoi BJrali btojijtht. .ehn and1 \SlI.e X ('O:1ndtheO :- n ) ()":I '0 P0 beati es 1.B IIII S-C L cASS CIl. NlEd awliztr fur tov Ct 4ltt'l >ati-lI anrd tt im eittlint to hva en pr enn i t Wur J Lcks, ennt:ot.1,s mL '. Sa d 1-tc -1 Ia any breedersv in TIns se Fa rudNashvLX IS. Tenn.OE AIIE rv'.'a L V. 11. Kn'iijilt.,: W .N & ep. Major 1)mt't" * incto ', Ji'.ti1 tla' an fc 3oention hIsppr Fetat HE !EY PIOLUJ Thes is wubeGan i a rI~i icngy.o coherted. loead Franlzer ofo dcia! e norpt.aoud ASH LEY COTTO AND COsN C1P1 v A pind l eareay wi, l ys Trucket roe SoderyOon, Corn and ma Gored amCrs i ane s Conu. t ... AowdH is Dbissuoly OE:AHE otrad.-or ousnc e adi o ps ep F ort aTerms, Ditonsf etnnasn o ub tertiond. ifth Co pmy dde e r venessh o.I nzakn ogh o n e.Sld er ywhere, r snt by mail or 25. mi s~ tamps. y i ~l othe re I tpad.irs5. Did I Zu SupM se Musta-n Linirnent only good r horses ? It is for inflamma In of all flesh. FaIENDL!" Not only shortens jhe time of labor and essnS the intensity . - . pain, but, it ' reatly diminishes the daIir to life of both ,-uther and child, and "e-ore ager!;"aves the mother in a 'i' iltioln highly fa V irable to speedy re ov and far less other or Oild, t'o flooding, coi. vu-Isons, and other -- a:iarwinsymptoms Dfideidet to slow or The Dre? o. painf'l labor. Its i uv wo)nderfful effica r thr h d .. ! is respect en to be called Tr:r& TIliE MO TH E R'S F!IEND and to be ranked as one of the e-saving remedies the nineteenth cen a rv. rIl the nature of (case it will of n-mrse be understood atwe cannot pub h; certificates con eArnin this REMEDY without winuding the d-elicacv of the writers. . Yet we have hundreds itfety and Vue of suei testimonials on Iile, and no mother -T-- wi has once used it wiP ever again be Ifferig 70m without it in her time A promv"nt pyilan lately remarked the. vro etor, tha ft were admissible i~e :e te h-iters uxe receive, the olthe: -:I woiu outsell anything ':- :N:---D ::1 nw career in the ee I use'your "MOTR I. Ni'" in a roat number of , th p i-tsilts in every t ance. it :' t* :tor easy, hastens de ,-ery":: I'.1.,....l.INsURE s SAFETY >ND CHIL . N o woman 11 be lot i a go through the ordeal ithout :it aIter once inlg it. TE.PENNINGTON, M. D. P,'m tto. . u. :' 10, 1SS4. m for u Tre' ise on "Health and p: 04." mailed free. : ;-. Ein aCLATOR Co., Atlanta. Ga. Z -_ TRA: I MARK. nheT~it e rownt Cuntries ofEurope, th uset :ithis edicatedWineisuniversal. Itis comapcsed of the most approved VEGETABLE TONICS, which areintroducedinto apmre generous'Wine, Thevecry finest JAL C~NiNCH ARARK, 'in..,its me icalba isitis confidendly rec ot nc::ide as a cure andhpreventive of FEVER A'so AGUE, andalloiher diseases originating fromL rialesrious causes To r p urifying the :etd:lving the Secretions,CironiO. R hwatiSn',BloodpoiS~fnin(,a Certain crei::Dyspe psiaCrz'rtp inrthe stomach. aninediaterelief fr Dysen'try,Colic, Choera-morbous an~dkindre8d diseases, GeneralWeakness,Nervous and Mental Debility~ asuuvereignremnedyfori~iver Comlaitanddiaeases ciths i~dnies:an excellent appstizei'; anda. TONI C without a r-ival inshcrt:Tor invigorating allthecfuncians othec synomn. it is un equalled. A samer~e!assfuJllthretimes a day. Sodb bpi!Druggists and dealers generally TPAZ CGiCHOH4A CORDIAL CO., oe I cprietozm c Ntanufaer.' SPARTANBURG. S.C. SPrce per Bottle $1.00. BLE JUANo. tmati'd Gunano',a complete High 'NI) -A 'o:rinlete Fertilizer for these near Ci:arle'ston for vegetables, etc. and exc !:ent Non-Ammoinialed Fer ,1( an li-o for Fruit Trees, G;rape AID PHiO$PHATE, of very High the vriau' attracive :2d instructive A TE (CO., Charleston;'S. C. Caar.Cholera Morbus, Dsentery, Chr'onio t free. Dr. I . Johnson & o., Boston. Mas MAKE EI 3LOOD. ethem in the w orld. Wiln pozitively' cure or cihbot is worth ten timcs the cost of a box of Dfu. S Jo 1-id00I. fsrntc pamphlet Nottung on earth chicken oholera and all diseases of hens. Is orth its weit 21-41 la rtight i a