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BOAT OF RiUSa3 ?R. TALMAGE TAKES MOSES S:TER AS HIS THEME Hs Admir's.th t: h aviJr 01 aziM. Brilliant and strageuc drIam Exhor : Sisters to Is:tow Cart ou Thtr err, Some Tnough:a. In this sermon Of Dr-T s chara:ter or a wise. s-a:a e self denying sisteris set u: Lrts a; c ' ample, a:na Lne story ated of men to tahmaing Jser U: ?t. text. Exodus :, 4, Stood a.ar of. -u WL ;' w . - done to ni. Princess ?her-m''s, c.autro Paaraun, ?oaking om rua ir uce of neroa.iani A.u ii : Of the N:e, sas a. river. It .La..u n.sr Ara:. ; - and thenyv woLuL nae ocen as m-e howv. Tere was only one .am.. anitfnat a noay ixy. B32. LLC M~ fl wer, that brou w!t tue pil:r era to Aaueries, carrici a; z e a load. Tie . ras Ad; u= tie broaa leaves o pap rui, t:s e t getnler Oy LiZtme. 13 .as er : um:s mace o. Lilat m lear itrain Pany .t iuo u Tneupurasits. --lit1 a: ile r children .r?e," hauc e.. P...ar. order. To save ner uo , Juc.., the mothetr or litue Aluses, can a him ill afL queer oat aC -!L.Let: him. His slater 5riaul st :u on' L. ban watcaing Lic prw eu Sie was 1&r eougn c..t t dz ur .- E attenuoL to1 We coas., OZ; Le'r cam : ; to sife: pro.ecion. racc s t=t-' On tae onia-hr?a. i uti e Miriamu the quica wase.!, Miruia l t1. faiaLaui, LLuiuga very au,. iur it alter Liune silo ucdiutar.i :. ?rjatu? wea a aJCtIt J:~t ct.. had nr aulw, :iac a.i ile re; o u. How carubly sne WatCut :.ne i'.i contamLL1ug ner Drutnler: A troung WinU migut upStt 1'. .Le ulttaiats of.en .Ouse muere angu i att la a piunge l iuir si S1K.Li i. Jaii r Ven uus ~weer.o0i LLugtLL swoop anu pc.; lia eyeS oat wiau irwa ocaia. m-. crueou.e or nipupstamiaa cr'.i tb.rvugn Lae rusuas uiina crmuc. tan bane. 2iri:. wageeauu WAtCaUta iazul PruCeas ner uLLLI:, a maicea on eaca 5iae of Ler nuiutng palu leaves over ner hen ito n;wer ner from Lne sun, caue do wn and eteie.i ler Daulag uuLLe. Wneu ir.Li tno latuce sLee aw LnaL Da., ane ordese.a it Drought, and Wue.L tLe leaves fiere puleu LeLO irum :Le fa;.e ut mne cltsa and LLISe .'y luu5cu up tie Crieui aLdU, for he (4at aunry auu t1rg enJ.e anu Would tuL eveu uet Lile p?uics tail: him. hne idalanb Wulu aLLuer s.> hungry Luau acanuwleuge any one ui Wne wuart as nmmfler. -,.J uLriam, snesLer, inCaLLnU, noOne ausiecC.ug her reldiuLL o toe LaUL , l..us iru.. tSe an and ruza.S do wn ata uffe: to get a nurse mu paciy ine caaI. ( onsent LS gi reu, aend sne annlus J a e bea, Wne oaby's mutner, incOQ;?ih, none o1 the coutrt no wing taL sue Wan the molder, an vvneu Juenebea arrived Lane chall stpuped crying, for its Lreign1 was calmea and ita L auger appeaseu. You dmay ailmflre J uaeLo , Lne mutner, and all tate ages may ad mire Maess, out 1 cia my nales li appiae aLt ne DenavIor of alimah, the faisnial, brillian t and sirategim sio Ier. "Go~ home," some one might have said mo Miriam. - Kny rias yourlf out there alone on the tDanis os tne Nile, breathing tne misia andi in danger 01 Deing attacked of wiid beast orruaffen? Go name!" No. Miriam, the slater, more lovingly watched aa bravely ateended Moses, the bcoaier. Is ne 'worthy ner care and courage? On, yes; the 60 centuries of the world's history nave never nad so muca in volveai in the arrival of any snip at any port as in the landing of tia'. papyrus boat calked with ttaneii! Ats one passenger was to be a nonsu.:n in history-lawyer, st atesman, poli cian, legislator, organmzer, cong &eror, deliverer. He had such remarkaole beauty in cnildtiood that, J Usepnais says, when he was carried along t'ne roa people stopped to gaze at hni and workmen would leave their work to ad mire him. When ine king PaY fully put his crown upon thus DO.9, ne~ thretw it off indignantly and put his foot on it. The king, fearing that this m'ght be assign that the chid migat yet take down his crown, applied anotner test. According to the Je wish legend, uge king ordered two bowls to be put lie fore the child, one containing ruoles and the other burning coals, and if he took the coals he was to hive and if he took the rubiss he was to die. Foi some reason the child took one of tne coals and put it in his mouth. so that his life was speared, although it burned. the tongue till he was indistinct of ut terance everafter. Having some to mannocd, he spread open the palms of his bands in prayer, and the. Red sea parted to let 2.500,000 people es cape. And he put the palms ;of :his hands together in prayer, and tue Ri:d sea closea on a stracgulated iost. His life so unutterably grand, his burial must be on the same scale. G1od would let neither man nor saint nor archangel h'sve anything to do with weaving for him a shroud or digging for him a grave. The omnipotent God lef t his throne in heaven one day, and if tee qumstion was asked, "W aither im the King of the Uaiverse goindi" tae a es~ver was, "am going down to bury Moses." And tae L~rd took this igh--ies: of men to the top of a hill, and the day was clear, and Moses ran his eyve over the magnifica~nt range of coiuntry. Here the valley of Esaraelon, where the fiual battle of all nations is to be fought, and yonder the mountains Hermon ana Igubanon and Genziai and the hils of Jac m &and the vial age of B&thlenem there, and the cuty 01 Jericho y onder. and the vast streten? of landsclcaps tnat almost took the o1a lawgiver's breath away as ne lo~ien at it. And then without a pang, as I learn from sne statement th~a the eye of Moses was unaimu~ed and mll naiti ral force unabated, Goai teuntied the greatlJawgiver's eyes and in~y closed, and his lungs and they ceaseu, anu his heart and it stopped, and commzandt d,~ saying, "To( the skies, tanu immorwa spirn!~" And then one divine hand was put against the back of Mloats asa the other hand agamnst the pu..e less breast, an d God laid him Soieuy down on Mount Nero, and then the lawgiver, lifted in tne Aimighty arms, was carried to the opening 01 a cave and placed in a crypt, and onle stroke of the divime band smoutntd the features into an everlasting calm, and a rock was rolled to the door, and the only obsequies, at wlucu Go du all the ofices of priest and tuner and gravedigger and mourner. were ended. On, was not Miriam tae sis~er of Moses, doing a good thing, ao important thing, a giouAns time when she watched the bca. woven of river plan:s and nat: water tight with aspnai.tuni, carryn4 its one passenger? Did sre notPi the ages of time and of a commg t1 nity under obligation wne- she dc ended her helptess brother from i perils aquatic, reptilian and -aveno' She itwas that brough;tiat wono" ful babe and nis mother together, " that he was reared to be the denverer of his nation. waen cZemia, anrd at all frcm ree~s of I ?neo a u r , c 4.7 r xr lier ce.es t. e- l i .ess by uood sens e by C r.stian prin. er, not of a i-P Psra O, bat O: a oly Gad, anda brightr prino sf thai leasnessil ad ali her pats arei e'e The older sister, w mach "h wor'd c o:s er Brn while ye: les aml waseinselmby circastaut ces she had to roid and take_ care o& ber youGder broter And 1i there s any thing !;at m:"tUs my ayfpathy is a little girl laying reund a great pat cild and getting her ears ord ecuse she cldao ketep him quiet. th twerme sue gets to youg ow a eanhd she is pale and Wora cut ad ner .tractiveress has been sar ised on tue atar f sisterly fidelity: id se is corsignd t> cdiiOacy, aa -aciety canls her by an uaeair nam-, at in heave a they call her Miriam aI most amilies the t .vo most unde rale alsces in t-ie record of birtbs re the first and the lst-the first be ause she is orn out with the cares f a home that ca miot atard to hi--e ejt ai the :st be.ause she is ~pled as a pet. Amoug the graad st mog.tipages :hat seep through the streets of neaven wiA oc tnose occu pied by sisters woo sacrificed them ieives for brithers Tey will have ate firest of the Apcaiypte wite orss, and many who on earth looked anunsa themn will have to turn au.to let them pass, the charioteer oryoe: thear the way ! A queen is omiz.g. Let sis:s not begrad tne tise -is are bestowed n a rother. I s ard to believe that a.;y y that y now so well as your brother can ever turn out anything very useful. NVe.!, e may not tue a Moses There is onli one of that kind needed for 6,UtC ears. Bat I tell you what your roter will be- ether a blessir.e or a turse to society and a candidate fos appiness or wretcheess, He will, ike Moses, have the choice he'.ween abies and living coals, and y our ia flunce will have much to do with his ecision. He may not, like Moses, be he deliver of a nation, but he may, fter y cur father and mother are entce, e the deliverer of a hoosehold. Wnar housands of home-s tcday are p lated y brothers: There are prover:res no z well inveasted aSd yeiding income for: the support o' sist rs and youawer brother because te older brotuer wSI leaer from the day ihe father lay own to die. W batver you do for your brothers will come back to you ain. If you~ set hima an ill natured, ensorious, unaccom-nodating examn 3, it wiir ecollupou yout from hi nairritated and despnLd nature. If you by p tec ihhis inferaaities nr by nobilit o' enaracter, de=L wita himn iu tIhe :ew years of you: ofpiioshiP, you will have you: usels re:!-e e' back up~a you somet day by his splend ar of behavior it some crisis where he would have fai ed but for 30.1. Dn't snub him. Don't depreciate his ability . Den't talk discourag ingly about his~ future. Dan't let Miria get down off the bault of the Ntle an wade out aad unset the ark of bul ruses. Don't lease hi-n Brothe-r and sisters da rit consider it an narmn to tease. Tnat spirit abroad i nuefamily is one of the meanest an most develis-1. There is a teasiusr Inat is pleasarable a'd is only anoth er form of innocent raillery, but taa' which prov.skas and irritates and nakes the eye ~Iish writh anger is te be reprehended. It wuuld oe less lame orthy to take a buvsch _oi thorns and draw them across your s ter's cheek cr to take a karfe aud draw its sharp cadge ac:-oss youi rahers hand til tj-e blood spurts, 'or that w'ould damnage only tae body, out teasing isthe thor n and the knife c:ataig andA lateraing the dispc S:tion atd the sou!. it is the curse of nunrabie households that the brotners tesse the sisters and t le sis ters the oro4 ners Sometimt-s it isthe olor of the h.ai or te shape c'th tres or afnor o' the hem Somfe in t ;s by re'realing a :sor by smest ye lok or a 'utav or au -Aen'Tease: Tesm: c'ase! er~rc a uke, quit it Carssys U that hatetn al~s brothe is a mur d-rr." N ny, svien you, byt tesn ake your brother or s:s er iate. you turu :im or her into a murder-- o? ure. ss. Een Miriam, the herone of the ,v' was 'rjck by ti'at e-i pa.so of u'r. S-:e had ioessed u.?li x aries, an~d not o?siv so bu.. :n rrie a lak WalSai Iroa E hiopia, ad ira is so drag'-ted ad cut.e a o-.eis. st btca..Ses h a - d at all, andu ner. tecause he ad rarce " ie"0tin ta. see ir .e?. into -~e.y.ad - r begv ors an thrn sm . -r OeCr - c 0pe o : C i: i "rb cueorjaosci-. . y i . n , trl'e with1 Gi:-.ra c ildreu in S i 0. a Cr, :zas -x"1' C' -n II p y . i is :' t i lu r .. d ~ tce d .. l so a Se .i ..O a Sr' W r:'l as . i..tr 2:-: :mothl .r .are gne :.. .:.C i , -o :. .1 b , if .hey i..:e L -.1 - ' r 1 .r.. ibt il ol t.C fa iy o :-:. ii: wan. reasn-s for our ya:0 i -r. R acea in t'-' sam cr" :.-: ' 1. !!v r by the sme m th r if te :Nernes ; to.:td for by 7 s'c:ne m weer -. weary a a aching bre v; ith COmt0n id eri:a:.c_ of all t.e a ui y s-c :.s arid w.t names g::ea on by parents who sarted you' with thLe iGts nopts for your happiness arind pra p-rity, I Charge you b- lov isg and bind and orgiviog. if the sister see that the bro:her never wantst a s, n m nze, tre brother will sec I that the -ister never want; an escort. O , if the sister of a househoid gae .v t1. r~utthf wLat terrific aod danninu temuptations their brotner goes ia city lif, thr-y woul hardly sle : nights in anxt'ty for his salvation. And if you would make a holy conspiracy of kind words and gentle attentions and arn est prayers, that woud save his soul from death and hide a multitude of sins. But lpt the sister dash it in one direc'ion in discioleship of the world, and '9. brother flee ed ia another dr rec:ion and :iisstpati n, and it will iot be long before t ley will meet again at the iron gate of despair, their bihotered feet in the hot ashes of a con surned Ii etime. Ala, that brothers 'La sisters though living together for years very oitea do not kao T each other, and that they see only the im oerfections and none of the virtues. General B fuer of the Rissian c-tv airy had in early lire wind-red tf in the army, and tnc fanily supposed he was deal After he gained a fortune he encamcei one day in H isa-n, his native place, and made a bt qu-tarad among the great military m.n wilo were to amne be invited a plim n21Her and his wife who lived near by and who, tif-ibted,. came, fea-ing sonC e harm w.ould be done them. The miil er- adc bis wife were placed one o Ie cl sideof the gener d at the tabl T e general asktd the Lillier all a oou hizamily and the mile said ta he had tvo brothers and a sitr N Iother bro hersi'- "My younger brotaI er went off with the ar:ny man~y years ago and no doubt was long atgo kill ed." Then the general said, "doidiers, I am~ this man's ycounger brother, wom he thought was dead." And ho v loud was the cheer and ho s arm was the embrace. Brother and sister, you need as much of an introduction to each otherI Ias they did. Yext do not know~ each Iother. You th~na your brother is grouty arid c-oss and quaer, 'and he '&uLas you are se ilh at~d proul and unaiovely. B~th wrong. That. brother )l be a prince in s'om woaau's tees and that sisar a qjue n in ic.eI est'aion of some man. Taat b .other! is a magnificent f llow, and tasi,Ler is a orning in June. Come, -t me int-'duce you: Moss this is Era am. Miriao, this~ is Mos~es Adi 75 per cent to your prcsent appreciatn of each other and when y ou niss good Imorang do not stick up y vur eca cheek. We: fromn the iecent washing, as though vou hated to tousn e'c other~ 1.ps in e~trc:ionate caress a it have all the fonisran s i a cordiality of a laying sister's kiss. Mahe yourself as agreeable and membering that s->on you part. The few years of boyhcol and girlhood wilJ sao slp by, and you wil go out to homes cf your own and into the changing vicissitudes and on pathe cresatd writh graees anid up steegjs hard to chtuib anid trirough shad!on ravines Bat 0 my God and Saviour,. my the termirius of hie urney b the same as ttte star:-.zanely, atI 'father's and mnm'her's zanee, if they have inherited tie kingdom. Taeri, as in boyhood and girihood days, we rusied in after the day's absence with mach ta tell of exciting adventure, and father and mother aujoyed the re cital as much as we who made it, so we sriall on the hillside of heaven re hearse to tiem all the scenes of cu earthly ex~aedition, and they shall 'welc~ne us aomne, as we say, "Fatner and nmotner, we have crue and brought our chi'drera wlth us " Th e old revival hymn described it with glo'tous re petitionl: Drothers el sisters there wilt meet, iDrLoters a:. I siters there wtU! meet, Bir.:uers an-i isters thiere wid mee WVI:1meet to pairi no r I read o' a child ii ithe ciunitry who was detained at a neighbor's htouse- on a . storany nigtt by same fascinating stories that were bWing tid t::n and then lookedQ out anid saw it wassol srk he did not dare go homir. ~.'.e * cidenit impressed mne the mre be cause iin my childhood I h vd much thLame esperience. Tnie boy aue hi comnrades to e > with o m, but th-vy d .ared not It go: Later aud later 'lc.8o'clock. o'clues.--. hesiJ I wish 1 wvere huane?:" sn opened hedotr the last time a lid in' ilah o! lightning and a deafeniu raroecamei uim. Bu't aferawhie' esainthe distance a iantern, and, o0 hs brote was~ comn.. to ft LL ai~ hoeand te lad sttned ou; -:~hrwa tokhin ee *&UOLhr i . 8 LOaia nit wn .i:eC '.uc d~~ comes' nidou' eat: :r nd o aloe: ma our ro.: . e: edr a u 1Li : r and the 'i dree'2 aso :e ae s .\.1013 edae ay :lt 'le SEFjATE CTACH BILL TE HOUS_ BY A B G M.a a. L *'ego s to 'I: hb of '... w,2 u :s r e H '--:- I+ dAy fat week Mr. Gmr::c::anJ's w~r-r-to elach bill was - e u- id t : substite bill ? a isnic~;.c: iha a of Geor" h 0tthe i !lroad mn ' act, o '"7: 1 -si r. Tbe .. i dfr e:, ::d only o e lit c. r i. arthrrnmre the ! 1i Lc ': e r' t of rate one rate 9.Eisc..i~e - ~ tC : n~~ uu c.?e i. P "S~c i. surprima at Mr. :s Eas a r.iihcac bill. Mi-. Cad.C'au sai:1 . wts his opin .>.: the raiiroad faa..r'd the bi.l. rr PI' e- said 1ha bil was offered b the c.mit t. t su:t all interests. A1-. C( Ju' bal did .ot ooSSs all the dc!(:nis L.e luwe Tie comrmitee dn teat temembhers wanted ;.r 3 at cae and the committee .rt to -7ork to set the best possible i n e substitute bill was the re ul:t. Tue Tuastitute bill is largely a'ter the Gcr,.ia law, where it has 'racd .ell. 'Lere is nothing wrong i 1 ing gocd laws from Georgia ;:- says tais is a liv the railroads saat and not the coamission. Tae railoa'd c mpa ies want no railroad leislat:on at all they want no sepsrate c:.iches at all. His frind seemed to be afraid of lawyers. He was a iaw y-r, and was proua of it He defended r: nmeif and the committee. He did not care what the commission wanted, but was acting for the people. Mr. Caughman said he Lever said the c.ommfission did not want this bill. Mr. P.llock said the railroad c-m mission did recommend the passage of the substitue bill. Mr. Caughman's bid dces not touch on separate coaches for second class travel That would necessitate a car for first-class whites and a second class coach. The com mittee substitute manes one class. The first class rate is decreased to 3 cents fron 3 1 4 rates, and the second class increas;d from 2 3 4 to 3 cents. He understood about 60 per cent o' the 'rivel was second class. Toe objec ti)n to cjops is equally an objection to Mr, Caughman's bill. These "coops," under the substitute bill can be put in only by order of the rail road commission, but under Mr Caugh man's bill the railroads can divide up a coach The railroad committee was unauirnus in favoring the substitute bill. Mr. Caughman said he was accused o b-in; mad, and he wanted to say he had not been mad in ten years. When he was advocating any measure he was in earnest. IP he had been moad he would have run Mr. Pollock out of town. He did not ciain& to have the brain of the House. and no one otner than Mir Pallock thought so. He' did not care to bring any per sonalities iato the matter. Mr. Caugh mnan said Mr Pollock told im in pri vate the railroads did not want his bill. Mir. PoIlck said he told him the raisroads wsnred neither bill, and the commission wanted the substitute bill. Mr. Caughman said one member of the c~mmission told him the substitute btll t:ok a way the rights of the comn mtission. He never claimed honor or credit. He was not seeking honor or gloiry. Mr. H J Kicard thought this mecas n-e dese rvedi more serious thcught He' hod heard that a Pallnan car only cost $5 0' , and it was no hardsh:p to re c re stuara:e ceaches. fr. Cu'sbman asked if it was not a hardshi'p to require mixed trains to carys.'arate coaches M-. Kinard didn't thick so, as the e~'ra ca'st would not be large Mr. Ma ill moved to table Caugh manr bil By a vote of 3-7 to 33 the the House refused to table the Caugn man bi 1 M-. KIard moved to amend so tha f's-lass claches shall be pro vied, and so as to prohibit aivi~ion of the coaches. Mr Garris said the amendment would kilt the bill. The idea was to separate the razes at as little expense and inconvenience as possible The amendment will only killithe measure. Mr. Cuts'aan agreed with Mr Gar ris. Tue amendment would do for throtugh lines, but would not do for short lines. Mixt d trains, it was said, would not come under the bill. Mr Gadsden feared the personal is su had somewhat obscured the real :ssue. He then explained the real pur pose of the bitl. A separate coach for each class would entail the hauling of a -parate c~aches No company could ifird to haul f-ur coacues for the travel it gets. It would mean ruin to tne railroads. The committee thought it fair to comoroniise on tue rate. TL.e 0agmnbi requires four coaches, wnen Lot a half dezmn ride in eacn ciach As to the division of the coaci es, it was shown that ome small roads exiuld not even run t vo ccaches, and Se substitute gave the commnissien the authority to allow fhe division of a coscri. S -me roads actually could not buy a coaca. The commission is clo.n~ed with such power as it shculd nave. Tuae commission has b -en given autaurity to permit a 35 cent rate sviere the road absolutely needs it V.ne sub~titute btl is on the lice of a comrpro.nise. The rate would be three cents Mr. Cushman: "That is what we do not want. Mr. Gadsden said all pissengers .vruld be benenited. The edlet on the railroad cmpanies was to give about the same r su~ts. Mr. H3 drick wanted to know if the is. cass :dres at 3 cent rate woul: not beftl: the long i:nes. say the S mitnera agaiust the Glenn Springs R~ ,ad i Mr. Gadsdea, said first class passen gers ou.umabered sect nd-class passen gers. Tue Snuthera people did no: -vant the bi!! at all. Tne pian of the ounstitute bili nas worked succe:-sfuill. :n G -orgia !cr ten years. There was ao discrimnatiou b:tseen lines. Mr. iSmith moved to iucefinitely pos p3 me tue origl m d bill. TAis wa' carried by a vote o' 30 to 37, so the Ca i~ bil was k'iad Mr. Pol loci vt-n:ed to put the chnc' er on the' :heclicr was not out on the bill. 'dr Wnlr called the previoui as on on. me whole matter. Mr Vae 5 'avedt a the~ substitute The Ho ' e oded the question Mtr. TooL wate '> adjnrn the de -r ;ae ated :he biIl to apply o-~ to s- .ar gug e raads. The -oe -oi ran 15 raads i-nd ne wordt- the' narrov guage roads ex eaIte f"r'om the billo.eb~l and cpposed the amendment of Mr. Gage. as the matter of expense should not affect the bill. Mr. Williams thought it very un necessary to exempt the narrow eusge roads. Nobody but iome people were interested in the enterprise. The Lan- c caster road had only one coach and r that was divided. t Mr. Meares said this is snecial legis- 1; lation and the bill should be called a d bill to discriminate in favor of certain a roads. s Mr. G -'s am~ednsment was killed. h Mr Rogers msoved to amend to ms ke c:nductcrs prace (ileers, s) as to give them full su hority to make arrests. s Tbe amerdmeut was lost. c Mr. K'rard wanted to limit reads h t>at should divide coaches, to roads of 6 'l'iv miis or less Mr. Pollock thought no arbitrary t limit shou'd be fixed. Some long R roads had less travel than shorter ozrcs. There was r o use for the amerud- h nrt, as the:e was no need for an ar- G litrary limit. I Mr Kinard said a fifty mile road s could afford to haul separate coaches. c He wanted a passenger train on the E Mcorroack division, of the Charles :.. and Western Carolina Road. He n said the ou-scion was whether to ai y l3a the coa-:hes to be divided or have eparat coaches. t Mr Pollock's motion to table the amendment was passed. 1 Mr. Thomas said he was oppsed to o the substitute bill. Said the object s should be to pass a bill satisfactory t t the people of South Carolina. Said th'e substitute bill only did away w:t Z second-class coaches and second class i rates, and asked if this was the object I to be attained that people desired. The a bill in its present shape would entail f d.scom'ort and would not be satisfac e t yrv. I Mr. W. S. Smith: "Are you in favor d of any bill of this kind?" 7 Mr. Thomas: "Yes, sir. I think re- e f m is needed in this direction," btr c he wanted a satisfactory bill, if any." n Mr. Cushman offered an amendment p that, when the railroad commission so directed,the railroad companies should n put on extra c a'h for a smoking car a open to both white and black-that a passengers shall pay 2- cents per mile v to ride in this caoch. Mr. Kinard thought this amendment a met the objections to the bill. I Mr. Gadsden obj-eted to this amend- s ment unless the whites and negroes 1 were divided in the smoker. Couldn't a see the difference betweeen consorting p with a colored man in a smoker and c on a first-class coach. If the line was t c rawn in the first-class coach why not v in the smoker. i Mr. McCullough called for the pre- C vious question on the whole matter. V Mr. Cushman's amendment was c tabled by a vote of 30 to 40. Mr. Caughman moved to strike out c all after the enacting words and sub i stitute his original bill. This occa- I stoned merriment. Mr. Caughman said the skeleton of s the whole matter was now left. There s was no longer any kernel or meat in l the bill. 'lhe original bill was the only one that should pass, as that was s the kernel and and not a skeleton. Mr. Kibler wanted the previous J question on the whole matter. s Mr. Dukes, cf Orangeburg, said - separate coaches were demanded by I the white people. Mr. Follock said he was surprised at Mr. Thoma's speech. The House and the people want legislation for sepa rate coaches. Mr T aoma's view was that the bill only abolished distinction I in the races He also calls attentiont to defects. Why does he not offer tot amend the bill? The House was alto< gether advised of the closet arrange meats, and if objec~ionable it could be ' amended. The vote was then taken on Mr. Caughman's bill; this time an aye and] nay vote was demanded. The motioni was to accept Mr. Caughman's bill as an amendment to the substitute bill. It resulted: Yeas-A1sbill, Austeil, Bacot, Bedon, Bethune, Breeland, Carraway, Car son, Caughmnan, Cushman, George W.C Davis, DeBruhl, DeLoach, Dukes, I Elwards. Efird, Fairey. Fox, Garris,i P. P. Good win, 0 P. Good win, Gra ham, Hamilton, Harver, Hazelden, I Hen derson, Humphrey, Hy drick, Hor-1 ace E. Johnson, Kibler, Henry J.C Kmnard, Lester, Limehouse, Mauldin, J1. E Miller. Joel H. Miller, McCul-c iour.h, McDaniel, McKeown, Mc.c White, Plyer, Pzince, Rainsfoad',t Rogers, Russell, Skinner, E D. I rm th, Speer, John P. Thomas, Jr.,r l'cole. Wolling, Welch, Westmore- I land, Wilson, Wirgo, Witherspoo~n, I Y eldell-60O. Nays-Sneaker Gary, All, Anderi son, Colcock, Crum, Gadsden, Gage, Hiott, Kennedy, J. D. Kinard, Lof-c ton Magill, Mehrtens, Mitchell, Mc Laurin, Nettles, Phillips, Pollock,c Pyatt, Reynolds, Sinkler, W. S. I Smith, Stevenson, W. H. Thomas, Whisonant, Williams--26. Mr. Meares said he could not select, between two evils. The two bills were fraught with evil. It wcuid tend to strain the relationship now so very pleasant between the races. The aouse refused to excuse Mr. Meares from voting, but on his appeal, excus ed him from voting. After the Caughman bill had been adopted, Mr Gadsden wanted amend meits; so did Mr. Rogers and others, but they were not in order, in vie w of the tangle. Mr. Stevenson, Mr. Kinard and others offered amendments, but one a objection made these amendments out of order. The bill was finally ordered to its third reading exactly as presented by Mtr. Caughman, and as the bill had a previously been killed. The bill as passed reads as follows:s Section 1. That all railroad compa *ies engaged in this State as common carriers of passengers for hire shalla furnish separate apartments in first lass coaches for the accommodation, ~A white and colored passengers: Pro vided, equal accommodation shall be I supplied to all persons, without dis s inction of rate, color or previous con dtion, in such coaches. Section 2. That any first-class coachr f such carrier of passengers may be divided into apartments, separated by , Ssubstantial partition, in lieu of sep- e rate coaches. t Stetion 3. That should any railroad r railroad company, its agents or :mplyees, violate the Drovisioni of I his Act such railroad or railroad g :ompany shall be liable to a penalty C f not more than ive hundred dollar a or less than three hundred dollars or e ach violation, to be collected ny I uit of any citizen of this St-.te, and a re penalty rwcvered shall be equaliy I ivided between the ci'.z-n britbging : suit and the State of South Caroli a. S &ction 4. That the provision of mis Act shall not apply to nur-es on c rains, or to relief trains in cases of I .ccident nor to through vestibule rains. Section 5. That the provisions of th'is Act shall not go into eiffct until a July 1, 1S98. Section 6. That all Acts and parts of C Acts inconsistent with this Act are nereby repealed. Bloody Work In Texs.s A special from Bonham, Te xas. says -a hat in an attemnpt to arrest William :s Green and Bob Hunter near there, aotlh men were killed and Ofiicer Tomn 1S lstead and Charles Hill were so bad- e injum-ed that they will likely die. h 'he tn-Lier of K e .n 1:: A. i d L =t i r d1 ?y. John L:gr. .sT.un >lcred, about 2? ) y''rs 'ld fjrm esiding at Mill Po:d in Ai'se: e a'u y, was hung in eO .;a ast!rdy hrifD~ i rpulies had every r ssry a r fdm r a b r r a ?'g d t , : ac '. : ; c ::i h *r : . ~d c u r b e ' o r j b e x J u v . f I iiC'a -1m I t: a?... : '_ n CI;m . }Je s .: :. r. ecieeir.d Mr. W-, eA:-ChC pi--itul adv .i r, Ripv. "'-. L V J se :lodwh 1:dcwe:I ane d unto him and: .:... Up _:2 a e or tI r : t Are w-&s no response. Aa'_ out 12 30 e. m , aiu r as ken from the c -1 _- nd- fdnd uarded by de puti., he x :-e di d wimr+ te.dy tread the cat?>:d, .and i" as ot unt: theb ck e1n s'a: ou fr . ver from his ision all things Eearhny hat hi- shoe ed any sig1.s of weorTenhaken-.)h r0't~ ogken mthe ase to, ne -uorte d T. said a few v ords of thatkr; it.-r-. ted his frm b:lief ta'. he had been : I orgiven by his Maker, and aniounc- r d that he had nohin.: more to sadl rhen the spring was touchd by a eputy. and the body of John B tier, ith neck broken, sivuug betwen the artb and sky. The bands of the d lock pointed to 12 43 p mn. A few ainutes aftervard D: T. C. Doyle oucunced the man dead. John Butler, lavirg' about niie aonths ago committed a miner , :ace gainst the wunicipal laws and also an esault upon another policeman a arrant was sacra out by the city au- o horities before Magistrate BruLson, ad P. LcemenJ. D. Wolfe and Joseph d /ghtfoot were appointed special cmn tables to execute it. They f un d Bat er about seven miles from the city in cotton field picking cotton. He sp eared innocent enough until the oii ers got in reaca of his pistol, which e had concealed in his cotton seck, Then he q iiekly whicped it cut an~d egan firing at Wolf and Lizhtfoot ' ).ie bullet struck Wolfe, itil.cting a round in the throat, from the tf"cts if which he died several days later. Bitter is said to have been struck by nc of the ofii:ers' shots. He went to biding in Barnwell county near 3amberg, R- 'ards were offered for is capture by State and ci:y. A de cription of a tctally different man was published-and it is o lieved toat ad the other man oeen caught instead f Butler, who c )nfessed, that he could have been convicted. Butler was finally apprehended by Constabk A Walker and a few others by the tatements of a negro who knew his iding plale, but not before Batler lad atteri p ed to take the life of one f the pose. Bu':lr was brought to )rangebu'-g, and owing to tne advice nd goud managemeut of the count) nud city authorities, escaped lynching. a.t the last term of court in January, le was tried and convic:ed and sen enced and Fr.diy paid the ;.enaty he law attacbhed to his crime. i'ne p'estion he asked while over the dicata rap shou d be a warning to all who nay be temrpted to criane to stay their and. The hcdy of Bitler was shipped toj )nmark, several oft the clord miin sters at his regast having raised by unscription money to defray the ex yenses of burial, as he did not want he State to bear the expense.-State. POTATO EXPERDENT -T. B. Terry.~ >f Onio. maideac itere-iui ex"eri nent with a potat-e :his year.Ti >otato he cut into 74 pieces eac p' c iaving cne-sixth <u an e'y. T: ieces w-re plarnted in 74 hills 33 :lover s'od, the planting being done ate, after a crop of clover had bee-n ut, and the crop suffered from lack >f moisture, but by the time the pota ces had matured the vines cvered he ground. and from an exact square od the yield was over five peas of arge tubers. at the rate of 200 bushels >er acre. Mr. Terry does not recomn nend the use of one sixtfl of au eye1 a panting, but he thinks that one eye o a hill is sufficent; his (c eriment lught to prove this. Hie says only otatoes of strong vitality wou'd be apable of making such a yield as his otato made. GRow MORE HAY -The Southern armner and Uortteulturist gives the ollowing good ad ice: "The heaviest rields of hay per scre on record are rom the South, and yet vast sums of ard earned money goes to the West or hay. .N arly every pound cf hay onsurned in Southern cities is broug ht rom the West. Why should not the armers of our Southern States supply .110of the nay c )nsamned in the cities nd towns and keep the money in, irculation at horn--. We can never rsper so long as so much &. the noney received for our products goes way from us to circulate elsecshere. sow is the time to prepaie land to be own in grass and clover next month. twill pay better than cotton." PROTECT THE ToADs -The S-ath-' ra Farmer and H jrticulturist says: The quantity of food that a ta' tmach can accommodate is wonder ul I one were seventy-five mnyria ds, in another fifty army worms, in' nother sixty fire gy psy moth ca-er' illars, in another nine antr, six cu-. rormns, tire myriegods. six srv cu :, ne weevil and one wire wcrm beetle n tweenty four hours the toad cou-~ ames enough fxod t> fili his stona'h our ttimes. kkeding at the rate ayove aentioned, a siegte toad will tn tee lonths uo:sumne over 10,0Wl1% iets C ievery ten of th-se sould do a Ceu' orth of damasg, tne toyd wol thus if:cts aving o' i!.0. Do nt kiit e IT looks as if the Teiler resolution as knocked the gold Democra::c or anzaton into pie. The \ Wasontenv orrespondent of the Atianta Journial K ays: "The gold D:-mo'ratic oraia f ion as falien to pieces, oe-'. jare y to the fact Inw Mr. B~ num of Idi na, who was at the head of i ~i o ssess the conienc' of tv mn wh~o rod give it pii ad digxnit. c as ore the coniu r-, A--'easor Bacn 'a 5, thli VO~e on1 te Ieiier r.:sltc ractcal y uniie L be. pj-y n outr:butis to the- disrde in '-''e - e TiH E Petr is~uz n~u.N tru of tryIiZc t:- fo'2 t' pa eIi ate issu t as O a r~ t r e d rc 'tf a 7 suppIlme ti be senr.t 0r )rdtta lie. W e meutrre we~ ar .. .. ' nough moneyu~ . .u .- ..P (.2;5!:% A CURCYARD THE SCENE CF MURDER. e -.c c Wr4 ked - Mr~ Lait the S r 'c ' -orute Mn:do-er and K-31ed '. in - .ort !)'; a=.c! from the Chu'cb. Sm ne Ridge. G:. : c:>mt sarou- d hee exert_ d o-:.r'a ildccv ir.u-du: d1 c etllingo' the mur b-t b c ,! e as the c a:'rch, the V.r r t? :.;lc; in a ctunta reh Sna i . Therfl ofi . W'- - oedl ,)pin the sU u d~ 10 ope t : 1e ' o t e:iy a d rstore quiet, bioagN .1 :Int es .. the t rrib'te o-:eur S . h t g e ti n ao Sc u:re s*u:ated ny',ut welv r l.id >e.a d . bl d 'cr the mir;cs: V "in 7 --:e o' the yo a men m:::,d: cui eto di-cu.s t e tc'pi -s th d~lv (. e than:..11 cater the h. a e . n, om) N rh C.1r K na, .:ho s be z I- g ils ac in,:nd is 'pp ::stce a d was proseying Sward the church door w-en >me f -_' bays buan p-king fun tn: be 'ie :f s5 re pa-cuiier ty in s g. iTe wo d= spoken we -e so Yeare i^t Rat .i wi ns turi.ed around ) p'y to wnat was aid, vhen a u:n r'fn nrnaed ' -y b:-g.n a':usi' g mrs. Tae tmw me. cr". c togetner atd 1' varn No:t Carrliaian wasabout 1'a the best of tree fight whets Wnit llrd at.other of tre on-loukers, e - a-s p'stcl and fred at Riwl;ns. e bA:l - n-d the man's race on the 'ft cheek a" d renting o the b~c cf is neck, k:1 d h-m instantly atnd he ed in the clutches cf his adversary. By this tin e everybody w:thin hear ,was aroused and the Cespest in. gnt'oa pr:va 'el that the ycuig en sh ul have trcipitmt d a trege y in such a pla:e. Dillard had q net r slippei away wit*a reveral of his mpnanoos. E quire Gailoway, one ' t- leading c;:iz n=, and anumb:r fresp)nsible m -n got togette- and ecided that the foul tragedy should e av?ned. Mounting the horses they at out in pu -suit and soon overtook ae flying homicide. H - was c alled poa to surrende-, but oaid no atten on to the c ammand. Finally, when e saw that the men were in earnest, e backed himself against a tree and unr:unced that he would die game, een the firing began, when a bulle r-m the posse struck him with fata. ifec: and he fell to the ground with is fir g:r on the trigger of his pistol, .ying in the very act of giving re poise to his assailants. T-1l Th'm T.)n Saw Mo. A Greenville sjeeial to the Colum ia State relates tee following: Th rily ways of a Weary Waggtes art ist faoiog out. A sharp specimet th- tpamp genus recently perpetrat d a Foetic trick on a lady who reside. n one of tne principal street of Green rille The tra:na called at the lady' iouse and asked for food. The lad' eglied that sne would not give hia nytbiue uul-ss he would work fox , and directed himn to the wood pile le said h2 was too weak to wor] *ihout aurishmeat, so out of thi indeas cf her heart the lady gavy im something to sustain him, an' ben handed him the wocdsaw ao< ert him to tackle the wo dpile WI i he m~et about her accustomed du es sometime later sae thoughti ight be trll to see how ine trami *e. gettong along, arnd she went'. he b.ek door only to fiad that he had ot along better than was expected lewas cut of sight, but the saw wa tuck in a s'iek of wood and on it wa: note. She opened the note and thi s what she saw: "'Just teLl them tha ou saw me; b.at youm didn't seem: aw." Toma' BIU hKied. A dispatch froam Washington say he House committee j.diciary Frids: iid the sena'.e bill to permit th< a'e of South Carolina to contrc quors brought into the State in ori2 al packages. The mction to repor t favorably was lost on a tie vote 'e sction of the committee toda: Sds a lor g contest that has attraetet ational attention. Orne of the pritnc )al obj e~ions developed is thati rould give the States the po ver t< )trol in'er Sta'.e commerce an< ight lead to tbe invccation of powe a the case of other com-oditmes. Be re the direct vote was taken toda: n ame d ment to the bill providio i at the States should not discrimi ae against the li sor of any particu r St.ate was adopted by a vote of 7 t . Toe vote on the motion to favora le report the bill was then lost on ie vote, as it requaires a majority t< eport a bill favorable. An Ethical '.aestion. The principles cf justica require at xact and searching investigmton intc e circumstances atrd motives o: very crime, in order that the fact: ay be brought out, and no innocen: an condemned. But does this justi y a skril'ul lawyer, who knows his et's guilt, in making use of everl ick, device, delay and technicality i misrepresenting the truth, in brow eating opposing witnesses, in taking d vantge of perjury on his o an s de, order to shield the cffnder fromr e rightecus cos quenc~s of hisactal FARMERS SHOULD INSURE -E rery roer aucuid see that his oa con nts are welt insured. Nearly every a~ the daily papers contain accounti i fres in rural districts, bares and o>ments and outouildings, ar.d in :me cases the whole season's croi o:nz up in smoke withcut a cent of L;Surance, leaving the un fortunate :r mer pennliless. Frre an d life irnsur ce are t wo things that should neve: e netglected. The cost is trilfling cnm ared with the benedits in case of acci 7 HE Ne v YDrk Her ald tells a stt ry ' a pen on sharfper in Alabama who uceeded in drawing forty four pen , us in thh r a-as of that a any si g-d widows of veteraus, but wbc umbled and failed on the forty fifti -Cow, L wsppr t.ublication wtould are stopp~d th felb a-tsr his drst UDux the passae of the bill for the ce. of the e ~ ass lav the Llher day, Mr. Mc ua ough pr3ooed a-a nd1:ent- "hic prov:ded that aers who ue fre p sas must not m~meup ilee t meS:ate. Bat tis tm bdcit eors refusea T erod r ';o broken 'n - o -a Gre :bur mill. .wwe lise to - e o s edi; West - ' em -c make it at o - e' eterprise i 1 - o ese. the ills tht~n declarel Candida e Royal ma ke s the food pure, whoe7rsozc and delici>.as. POWDER Absoluteiy Pure The Me_- 'ihrown Aide. The Republicans in the House of R 'presentatives assisted by two so called Damccrats, came up to the help of the ;?iden call of Wall sircet and voted down the Teller resolution which passed the Senate by s.ch a large ma jority "eclaring that the ptblic in debtedess shoui.1 be paid i. either gold or silver at the cption of the government. The Teller resolution has done all it was intended to do. It has compelled the Republicans in the House to come out in their true col ors, and throw aside the mask of bi metallism, behind which they mas qieraded during the last presidential election, and declare for gold By their vote they say silver is an inferior money, notwithstanding during the last campaign the boast was made that McKinley would keep all the money of the government on a parity. These Republicans declares that the bonds of the government must be paid in gold, regardless c f the fact' that the law under which they were issued stipulated that they could be paid in either gold or silver. It will be re membered that when Cleveland sold bx ds, he asked Congress to authorize the sale of gold bonds, and told con gress that so many million dollars could be saved to the treasury if gold bonds were sold. But congress right ly refused to authorize the sale of gold bonds and these bonds were sold at a silver bond price. Now, the Rephbli can leaders declare that these bonds must be paid in gold. This is bare faced, bald-beaded robbery of thepeo k ple. As the Benton Standard says the . simple fact is the Hanna-McKinley combine now in control of theRecut - can party, have sold out to Wall Street and the great trusts of the Unit r ed States, and they have no regard L for the people. McKinley and Cleve land are exactly alike. And Cleve .land's chief shouter, Lymin Gate, is :McKinley's chief in charge of the Streasury. The Wall Street end of Sboth parties have combined and now I .call themselves the Republican party. 1 Tne People of the United States can a see plainly where theii interests lie. - The people who are being robbed - t mut uiteand 'wipe this unholy C lvea.-ein-aecmbina tion off the earth. They are not Re publican. They are not Democratic. .They are simnly Plutocratic. The SI Demnocracy kicked Gage and Cleve a land out and now they are running s McKinley. And Cleveland'sappointe- a t are holdling fat places all over the I United States. The blocd of every honest Republican oughbt to boil. The Wall Street ringleaders of both par ties having cambined under R spubli s can leadership there is only one thing for the p:eople to do. and that is to get together and vote these robbers into everlasting perdition. GoodorTma Senator Tillmnan scored a telling point on the Republican Senators last tWednesday during his speechin oppo - sition to the Hawaiian treaty. Most t of the Republican Senators are in fa > vor of the treaty, and when Tillma ire'erred to the recent Hawaiian rev e lut-oa.'and to whi' he termned the effo~t of the R'rpublican party to establish a rgovernment in the interest of the Swhite people in tne islands, when they -numbered only a bout one out of thirty .of the inhabitants, and in this c~nnec tion referred to the reorganization of party lines in the South after the war. " We were then," he said, "in Scuth Carolina attempting to establish a white man's government. The R: publican party interfered with us then or attempted to do so. professing to hold opinions above the sacred rights of the majority to rule. I should iike to know," he continued, "whether the Republican party has changed its opinion on this subject of the right of the white man to rule, for if it has and will extend it to the Southern States I will vote for the treaty." The Atlanta Journal compliments Tillman on his speech, and says "the hypocrisy oI the Republican advocates of Hawaiian annexation has never before been so neatly exposed, and we have read with pleasure one speech of Ben Till man's upon which we can heartily ecngratulate hin, and for which we -would like to shake his hand." A Mystery. A human thigh was found Friday ficating in the water at the foot of Pa thit stee Brocklyn. It is thoght thtinay have some connection with the dismembered bcdy of a man found in New York at the foot of Rosevelt s:reet . NF.~XICO is a lard of mixed races, earthquakes, epidemics. revolutirns aL d silver dollars Thera, according to observations of W. J Bryan during a recent v sit, c aton mills are ping 16 per cent divider ds, every nody is working full tiame at go:d wages, and the who'e cuntry biessoms as the rose New Eaigland is a land of churches and ser ool bcuses, pension a bundance, savings banks, high tariff arLd the gold standard, yet last month the wages of 125,000 e.> oi? mil work ers were cut 10 per cent. SEN-ATOR Wolctt's speech on the work of the Bi metallic c >mmissionl, irdicates that he has litdle faith in an y urthe r attempt to secure an inter naional aareement, at a ratio greater ~reater than 20 to 1 His only ho~pe apreato center in India's course re ga'wdng silver, and as th at count: y :vill be ruled more or lesS by:Englana, I in whatever it dxts, that hope is very SEN~AoIC John M. Thurston, of Ne ora:-ka, addressing a Repudican club, declares t'hat the trusts a: rt be driven ou of the Republican par:y or that oga'ion will lose the nc xt con ees. Senatecr Thurston is the gener si ceunsel in Nebraka of all or C. P. HuLntgrs Pacine rai'rcads. The -enator' will hardly be considered a