f The Parson's limit. oi He'd been preaching and exhorting ol For a score of years or ao, ui In n portion of the vineyard p( Where the harveeting was alow; Where the temporal enouoement ' For hia oe ageless diligence . Wae a promise of four hundred * For his 3 early recompense, in Unrelenting was the ardor j He devoted to the onu?e, , . And though slowly came the dcllars 9 Still he labored without paute; to Till one day they came and told him, As he kicked against the pricks, lc That they'r raised iBeir ctiered stipend tl From four hundred up to six. w Then the good man sank exhautted, tl As he feebly made reply: 0( "Don't, 1 prsy you, men and brethren, d< Thus my patience overtry; tl For to glean the four you've promised j j Hath so warped my vital store That 'twould kill me if you taxed me To collect two hundred more." ? Boston Courier. y k 8! I TALMAGE'S 8EKM0N. f The Sluggard Advised to 8tudy re I The Ways of the Ant. I In this discourse Dr. Tslmsge draws BI [ his illustrations from a realm seldom ?j utilised for moral and religious pur- ? poses; text, Proverbs, vi, (5 8, "Go to | the ant, thou sluggard, consider her p ways ana do wibo, wnion, naving no \ guido, overseer or ruler, j rovidcth her J, meat in the summer and gathcrcth her L. food in tho harvest." The most of Solomon's writings havo perished. They havo gone out of exist- JV onoo as thoroughly as tho 20 hooks of J Pliny and most of tho bookB of .Esahylus ? and Euripides and Varro and Qututi "c lian. Solomon's Song and Kcoleaisstes and Proverbs, preserved by inspiration, .1 are a small part of his voluminous pro- K duotions. He was a great, scientist. u' One verso in the Bible suggests that he ! was a botanist, a zoologist, an ornitholo !r gist, an ichthyologist and know all ls about reptilia. I Kings iv, 33, "Ho a" spake of trees, from tho cedar tree that is in Lebanon even unto tho byesop | that springeth out of tho wall; he spake also of beasts and of fowl aud of creep- 01 ing things and of fishes." Besides all theso scientific works, ho composed ai 3,000 proverbs and 1,005 songs. Although Solomon lived long before a! the miorosoope was constructed, ho was also an insootologist and watched and J dosoribes tho spider build its suspen- ? w sion bridge of Bilk lrom tree, oaliiog it tho spider's web, and ho notices its 01 skillful foothold in climbing tho smooth ?! wall of tho throncroom in Jerusalem, J?! saying, '"The spider takcth hold with j1 ler hands and is in king's palaces." But he is especially interested in tho ant and recommends its habits as worthy of study and imitation, sayiDg, ni | "Go to the ant, thou sluggard, consider her wave and bo wise, whioh, having V* , no guido, ovcrdeor or ruler, prcvideth her moat in tho rummer and gathcrcth P( her food in the harvest." lc But it was not until about 300 years ago, when Jan Swammtrdam, tl o son 91 of an apothecary at Amsterdam, llol ac land, began the study of the ant under m powerful lens that the full force of Solomon's injunction was understood. The groat Dutch scientist, in his ex Jj,1 amination of the insect in my text, dis- jv a oovercd as great a display of tho wisdom of God in its anatomy as astrono- 11' k mers discover in tho heavcuo and was ^ so absorbed and wrought upon by the * wf wonders he discovered in tho ant and f other insects that body and mind gave uC way, and he expired at 43 years of age, a martyr of tho great scienoo of ins-.c one but G^jjflflBK'o fashioned the -j thtrrm 6r "sr ^B given it suoh genius ol its wis th dom for harvesting at tho right timo, trt W its wonders of antenr uc. by which it fm gathers food, and of mandibles, which, I he ^ instead of the motion of tho human jnw I io| up and down in mastication, move from fa: i side to side; its nervous system, its en- gc Urging doors in hot weather for moro rif sweep of breezo, its mode of attack and ca defense, olosing tho gato at night ea against bandit invaders; its purification to of tho earth for human residence, its an (sooial life, its republican government, cv with the consent of the governed; its mi maternal fidelities, the habit of thcBo ro] creatures of gathering now and then bu under tho dome of tho ant hillock, >1: t seemingly iD consultation, and then ad i departing to cxcouto their different co | missions. n.i But Solomon would cot commend all the habits of tho ant, for some of them rol aro as bad as some of tho habits of the oo' I human raoo. Somo of theso small crca- f'?' tures arc desperadoes and murderers, de Now and then they marshal themselves rai into hosts and march in straight lino wa and come upon an encampment of their ho own raoe and destroy its occupants, tx an oept tho young, whom thoy carry into asi captivity, and if tho army come back ck without any such captivis they aro not oh permitted to ontcr, but aro Bent forth < d ^ to make more successful conquest, ou Solomon gives no oommendation to mi suoh sanguinary behavior among insects thi any more than he would bave com- thi mended sanguinary behavior among ha men. Theso little creatures have i sometimes wrought fearful damage, cr and they have undermined a town in io| Now Granada, whioh in time may drop 901 into tho abyss they have dug for it. dc But what aro the habits whioh Solo- ?ci mon would enjoin when ho says, "Con cai 9 aider her ways and bo wise." First of ici all, providence, forethought, antioipa- an tion of coming necessities, 1 am sor ly ry to say theso qualities are not charac hu tcristic of all tho ants. Thrsn ?v>. lures of God aro divided into granivcr- no cu9 and oarnivorous. Tho laiicr are ly / not frugal, but tho former aro frugal, ini While the air is warm and moving roi about is not hindered by ico or snow- dc bank they import their cargoes of food, wc They bring in their caravan of provi- do sions; thoy haul in their long train of wc wheat or corn or oats, Tho fanners wc are not unoro busy in July and August Yc in reaping their harvest than aro the lot ants busy in July and August reaping nc thoir barvost. Thoy stack them away; of they pile them up. They question tic when they havo enough. They aggro th gate a sufficient amount to last them or until tho next warm season. When us> winter opens, they aro roady. Mow, an yo winter blastt! Hang your ioiolcs co irom tho trco branches! Imbed a11 tho po highways under snowdrifts! Knougli an for all tho denizensof tho hills. Hun dr gcr shutout, and plenty sits within, no God, who fecdoth every living thing, on las blessed tl.o ant hill. dr< In ooDtrast with that insrotile hehavior, what do you think of that largo number of prosperous men and women n'' who live up to every dollar that tliry ^r' make, raising their families in luxuri us ',u habits and atdeath expecting some kind y? friend to givo their daughters employ tc< ment as music teachers or twrewritcrs *1' or government employees? Such parents havo co right to children. Kvery neighborhood has speoimens of ,no suoli improvtdonoo. Tho two words jn that most strike me in tho text aro |Q "summer" and "winter." Some poo 'n plo havo no summer in their lives. From tho rocking oradlo to the still t,K grave it is rolontlcss January. Invalid |'cj infancy followed by tomo crippling ac ',u' f I It ?? J dent ordimnc s of tytsight ordulness ' hearing or privation ?r disaster or sfortunate environment make life rpetual winter. Bat in moat livos >ero is a period of bummer, although may bo a short sammer. and 'hat ia iw time to prov do for the fntnre. Oae of the beet ways of insuring the iture is to put asido all you oan for laritable provision. You put aoruming stone in tho foundation of your rtuuo if you do not in your plans reiri tho suff. rings that you may alviato. You will have tho pledgo of lo high hcaveus for your temporal olfaro whou you help the hclplo?s, for 10 promiso is: "Biosscd is ho that >nsidoroth tho poor. Tho Lord will alivt r k m ia liuie of trouble " Then icro is another way of providing for 10 future. If you have $1 000 a year oorno, save $100; or $2,000 a year, *vo $500; or $3,000, savo $1,000. Do >u say suoh economy id moanness? I iy it ia a vaster meanness for you to ako no provision for tho future and >mpel your frionds or tho world to ,ko care of you or youra in ease of bo avomcnt or calamity. Furthermore, go to }hc ant and condor that it linro nnt iK-ntinn tn. iuso it is insignificant The frigiuont : seed it hauls into its habitation mav ; so small that the unaided eye cannot e it, but tho insootilo work goes on, le carpenter ant at work above ground, ic mapon ant at work undor ground. Dmo cfthese creatures mi* tho loaves " the fir and tho oatkins of the pine for 10 roof or wall of thoir tiny abode, and hers go out as hunters looking for tod. while others in domostio duties ay at homo. Twenty specks of the lod they are moving toward their anaiy put upon a balanoa would irdly make the scales quiver. All of work on a small scale. TVco is no so in our rofu'ing a mission bocauso is insignificant. Anything that God i bis providence juts before us to do important. Tho needle has its offioo i certainly as the telrscopo and tho iadc as a parliamentarian scroll You sow what became of tho man in the irable of tho talents who buried the so talent irstosd of putting it to 'aotical atd accumulative uso. His lology was of no avail. There is no need of our wistiDg timo id energy in longing for some other ihero The re aro plenty of people to ) tho big and resounding woik of the lurch and tho world. No laok of rigadicr gcnmals or master builders or igincers for bridging Niagaras or tun eling Rooky mountains. For every ig enterprise of tho world a dozen can dates. What wo want is privato sol iers iD tho eonimou ranks, masons not ilauied to wiold a trowel, candidates >r ordinary work to bo done in ordiiry ways in ordinary plaocs. Right hero we are there is something that od would have us to do. Lot us do , though it may seem to bo as unim irtani as tho rolling of a grain of corn ito an ant hill. Furthermore, go to the ant and condor its indefaiigahiencss. It by tho icidcntal stroko of your foot or there oval of a timber the cities of tho in otile wrtld are destroyed, instantly l< y go to rebuilding They do not s't ound moping. At it again in a second heir fright immediately gives may to icir industry. And if our schemes of esulne?s and our plaDs of work fail, by >it down in discouragement? As rgo ant hills ?s have ev< r boon oon r\ oled will be constructed again. Fat tur fruit in God ar.d do your duty. st days aro yet to come. Ycu have ivcr heard such songs as you will yet lar, nor have you ever lived in such and abode as you will yet occupy, and I the worldly iTenures you hau oannot make mo believe that God >ks down indifferently upon the gailod ok of tho ox or the cruelly our'jod bit the horse or of tho unsheltorod cati in tho snowstorm or the cockpit or o bear bait'ng or t.ic pigeon shooting .he laceration of li-.h that are not ed. Go ?o tho ant, thou uiisorcant, d sou how God honors it. In tho great llcgo of the univerfO it has been apintcd our professor. All over tho land d all over the world there are over Ivcn horses that ought to bo unhar c?nd, eaged birds that ought to be put their wings in tho froo air of heaven, fiycs of oattlc agon icd of thirst on e freight trains w ?ero they ought to watered and crustac^a being broiled vo that ought to he lifted out of the B. Christ ohoso 1- apostles for tho man raoe in tho first century, and u know their names, but in tho nino inth century ho ohosc his thirteenth ostlc, who wrought for tho relief of a brute creation, and his Dams was tnry Ucrgh. In my t. xt tho ant is t impaled, is not dead, but alive, and tho warm fields providing her meat the summer and gathering her food the harvest. furthermore go to tho ant and learn s lesson of God appointed order. Tho ug who taught the intsct how to ild was geometer as wo'I as architoet. Tho | iths inside that little home rcidi* ate from tho door with as oomploto arrangement as ever the boulevards of a oitv rm'idiated from a triumphal aroh or a flwowered oiro'o. And when they maroh they keep perfect order, moving in straight lines, turning out for noth ing If a timber lie in the way, thov oltinb over it. If there be house or barn in the way, thoy maroh through it. Order in arohitootural structure, order in gevornmont, order of movrmont, order of expedition. So lot us all observe this God appointed rule and take Batis faction ia tho fact that thinrs are notat loose ends in tbiB.world. If there is a divine regulation in a colony or republic of insects, is thcro not a divino regulation in tho 1 Vf J nf immnrl?l mon woniei ? If God oarcs for tbo least of his creatures ana shows them how to provido their meat in tho summer and gathor their food in tho harvest, will ho not be interested ia matters of humau livelihood and in tho guidance of hu man afairs? 1 preach tho doctrine of a particular providence. "Are not two sparrows sold for a farthing, and yet rot one of them is forgotten before God? Arc yo not of moro value than many sparrows?" Lst there bo order in our individual lives, order in tho family, oid.r in tho ohureh, order in the stats. In all the world there is no room for auarohy. Bit wo livo in times when there are so rainy ola&hings. There seems almost universal unrest. Large fortunes bwallow up rmill fortuacs. Civilize nations trying to gobble up barbario nations. Upheaval of creeds and pooplo who onoo believed evirjthing now be Ikviog nothing. Tho old book that Mocbos began and St. J ehn endod bombarded fr tn foiooiitn observatories and college classrooms. Amid all this disturbance and uncertainty that whioh many good j eop'e n cd is not a stimulus, hu. a sedative, and ia my text 1 had it?divine obscrva ion and guidanoo of minutest affairs. And nothing is to God lirge or small?planet or ant hill? tho God who easily mado tho worlds employing his infinity in tho wondrous cort?" ruction of a spider's foot. B.foro wc leave this suijeotlet us thaok God for those who wore willing to ouduro the fatigues and self Haorifiees necessary to mako revelation of the natural world, so re enforoing tho Sjripiuros. If tho miorosoopo could speak, what a story it could tell of hardship and proverty and buffering and perioveranco oa tho part cf those who employed it for important dis ooverj 1 It would tell of tho blinded eyes of M. Strauss, of tho 11 abcrs and of scores of thoso who, after inspecting tho minute oljcctsof God's creation, staggered out lroin their cabinets with vision destroyed. This hour is a any a professor's study tho work of putting eyesight on tho altar of scionoois going on. And what greater loss oan ono suffer thau the loss of cyo.iight unless t no loss of reason? While the telescope is reaching farthor up aud tho mi eroscopo is reaching farther down, both arc exclaiming: ' Tnero is a G-.d. aud he is infinitely wiso and infinitely good! Worship and worship him for ever 1" And now I bethink myself of the fact that wc aie olco to a season of tho y? ar winch will allow ui to bo mora out of doors and to ciofiout tho lossous of the natural world, and there arc voioes that ace ilia to say. Go to tho ant; go to iho bird, goto the flowers; go to the ti Id-; go to tho waters. ' Listen to the oiatatas that drop from tho gallery of ho tree tops No ha ;n the path whore you walk tho lcte-oua of in dustry and divine guidance. Make natural religion a commentary on revealed religion. l*at the glow of sunrise and sunset into your spiritual experience. Lot every star speak of the morning star of tho Redeemer, aud every aromatic bloom make you think of him who is the 11 si of Sharon and the Lily of tho Valley, and every overhanging cliff remind you of the lloek of Ages, and every morn ing buggets tho "daysjring from oa high, which giveth light to those who are in darkness, and even tho littlo hillock built by tho raodsido or in tho fields reminds you of the wisdom of imi taring in temporal and spiritual things the insootile forethought, "which hav- , iDg no guide, overseer or ruler, pro- ' vidcth her meat in the summer and gatlureth her food in tho harvest." Joint C. Calhoun's Wooing. l'bough en ardent lover fretting at timo's slow course until his wedding day, John C. Calhoun wrote but one 1 letter to his swecthc&it?his protty , cousin, Floride Calhoun. All tho other communications, when tho lovers were sl'i aratod, wero made through her moth er. Rut shortly before their marriage, "the Great Nullificr, ' wrote expressing : his anxiety for the arrival of the happy day, and tho letter recently come to light is published in tho Ladies' Homo Journal. After giving hearty expression to the joy he has found in her company tho letter runs: "It gives mo much , satisfaction that time and absenoo make no imprcesion on my levo for you; j it glows with no less ardor than at tho moment of parting, which must be a happy ciucQ of its permanent nature. When mere personal charms attract. the iuij reesion may be violent but cannot bo lasting, and it requires tho porpotual presence of thaobject to keep it alive; but when the beau'y of mind, the soft and sweet disposition, tho amiable and lovablo character eoilellishid with innocence and ohcerfulneas < are united to the attractions of personal beauty, it bids defiance to time. Such, my dear Floride, aro the arms by which yc u havo corquercJ, and it is by . these tho durability of your sovereignty is established over your subject wlnm vou hold in willing servitude. May (iod preserve you. Adieu, my lov<; my hearts delight. I am your true lov>r." ( Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot ri aoh the diseased portion of the ear. 1 There is only one way to euro deafness, j and that is by constitutional remedies. Doafncfri is osuscd by an inflamed oonditon of the n ucons lining of the Kustiohian Tubo. When this tube gets inflamed you havo a rumbiiog sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed dcafners is thn r<>. ' suit, aud unless tho inflammation can be taken out an 1 this tubo rcsto-od to its normal oonditioo, hearing will bo destroyed forever; nino eases out of ten are caused lyca'arrh, which is noth ing but an inflamed oonditioo of the ] mucous fu-faocs. Wo will givo Oiio Hundred Dollars for any otto of Deafco s (au-ed by catarrh) that oan not bo cured by II >11 s 1 Catarrh (lure. Send for oiroulars, f'reo. ' K .1 CHENEY vV CO , Toledo, O. 1 Sold by D.ucgi ts, 75c. llali's family I'lils are tho best. 1 After all, it tinns out that tho man . under arrest at Oxford, Miss., was not tho muoh desired M. 11. Kceso. Mr. , Ncwbold, when ho left, stated that ho did not bc'icvo that tho Mississippi . authorities had gotten IOopc. I'ho ( authorities there wrrrc soposiiivo, how- , ever, that tho fovcrnor thought it ? absolutely necessary to at least send , some one to seo whathcr it was tho , man wanted. , ?? ^ - . HONORED AT LAST. Memorial to Henry Timrod Unveiled in Charleston. CAPT COURTENAY 8 WORK. An Original Poem on Timrod Read by Mr Henry A Austin, of New York, Its Author. A dispatch from Charleston to Tho State ?aya tho Timrod memorial was unveiled with appropriate exeroises Wednesday afternoon under tho auapioeB of the Timrod Memorial Assooiation of SoutL Carolina. Kx-MavorCourtonay, president of the Timrod Memorial Assooiation, presided, and said: Ladies and Gentlemen: We are here assembled to dodioato with public ceremonies, a monument in memory of Henry Timrod. The exeroises will now be opened with prayer by the Kov. Bi-hop Capors, D. D. Tho soldior priest thon made an eloquent prayer. Continuing Capt. Courtonay said: Mr. Mayor: In behalf of our association, I thank you for your presence hero, and your participation in our piooocdinge; wo desire, also, through you, to thank tho honorable city oounc 1 for this ideal site, so freely granted to rcocivo tho memorial! "Amone their graven ihapea to whom Thy civio wretha belong. Oh! City of hia love, make room For one, whose gift was song. # ? Fair City by the 8*?a! upraise Ilia veil with reverent hand?; And mingle with thine own the praise And pride of other lands. * Our lips of praiae must soon be dumb, Our grateful eyes be dim; Oh! brothers of iho days to come, Take tender chargo of him " Tho unvoiling no* awaits your friendly offices. Mayor Smyth unveiled the monument and accepted it in behalf of tho oity of Charleston. Ex Mayor Courtonay, resuming hiB remarks, paid: The chief duty of this oommcmcrativc hour is now discharged?the unvoiling of tho memorial of Henry Timrod in its oomplotonesB? crowned by tho toulptor's art?faced with appropriate inscriptions; in its graceful significance as a gift from thousands if appreciative admirers, stands seouro on its firm base, out from tho g'anito hills of his native State! The end not only crowns the work, but does somoihing more, "It is tho public recognition of literaturo as a felt influence, to bo commemorated bido by sido with statesmanship, scientific in vontion and every other form of high public service." Tho occasion is thus .... - u.. : - * ntvvft U|* auuvc IUU VIIUUlliUUL UI ptrHonal memories, which inspired it. and marks a now period in our culture; it declares in a foicoful way that "the poetic literature of a land it tho finer and purer ether above the material ad vanoo and the events of its history." We symbol ze, too, our intellectual growth when we dedicate this beautiful art work to the memory of Ilenry Timrod! '"It is tho poet and tho artist who . make baautiful the temple." An original poem was then pro nounced by Mr. Henry Austin, of New York, as follows: Forever fair, forever young, Leaving her Iced Olympian hill, The Goddess of the rhythmic tongue Visits her chosen still. Nol with a lou 1, tempestuous rush, Or sudJen hash of golden wings Descends the highest Muse; a hush Of balmy calm she brings. Mysterious as a spectral ship Kmergiug from a spectral mist, Shec-ines with fresh, with floral, lip, By winds auroral kissed, To him she came?that dreamy boy, lvnight errant through the vernal camps, Where j asmincs, in iheir virgin joy, Heluuie perfumed "lamps." On him she smiled in many a glen By many a wild and weird lagoon, Where erst the songs of Marion's men Hang to the midnight moon. She gave him of her grace antique Of deeds divine, divinely sung: She thrilled him with the surgeof Qreek And Rome's inijestic tongue. Deeply he felt that anoient grace, That power, which bade the song outroll, The song of Helen's fatal face Aud iiector'a patriot soul. So deeply?that in after days To his own Troy, beleaguerred long, Serene amid the battle's blare lie sang a clarion song His Troy went down, but oe r the hush (If the spent storm jf blood and tears, Sweeter than lilt of lark or thrush Up tho resounding years. His lyric music echoing flows, Each vital note as crystal-clear As dew of morn upon the rose, Or l'ity's perfect tear. I) Poesy, so tjuick to thrill And soften e'en a foeman's breast, Mo compass bounds thy scope and skill? No South, North, Last or West. The whole world trembles to thy charms; lr chastened by thy mystic cpell, Art rose a victor overarms When Hermes strung the shell. Measured by outward shows alone, How sad our Poet's life would seem O'ershadowed by a cause o'erthrown? Tho chaos of a dream >w mtrkcl for g'ief a nJ set apart! Nay, whensoe'r the Muse is kind, She makes a hey-day of the heart? A May day of the mind. Mii-Mcis eye us owd reward, lis own rich reooinpense is Kbyins; [tright, when the splendor of the swoid Kusts in tho shea.h of Time. rtius, now that Carolina c*l!s No longer on her soldier song; And Peace, with sweet oblivion, falls I'pon the ''festal guns." The lyrist of her valiant past, The limner of her radiant land, Receives his monument, at last, From Carolina's hand. Tho addross in honor of tho pool was next delivered by l'rofessor Thos. Iclla Torre, of tho College of Charleston. Kx Mayor Kicken paid oloqnont tribito to the memory of tho cldor Tim odfl, tho grandfathor and father of tho [>00t. Bishop Capers pronounced tho benoliotion. Tho raomorial is a handsome but tin[pretentious monumont. The simplicity >f tho memorial aooords with tho quiot, 'ctiring and modost life of Timrod. rho base and pedestal aroof Winnsboro granite. Tho baso is five feot square, tnd tho pedestal and the baso meastiro lix fcot in height. The top of (he pedestal is twenty ioohes rquare, on which rests the heroio sire bronze bast of Timrod. The bust it three feet high sad weighs about 150 pounds. It is a strik ing likeness of the poet. The bust was designed by Scu'ptor Kdward V. Valen tine of Richmond, Va., from a painting owned by Capt. Courteoay. Tho bust was oast by the Henry B >nnard Uronzo company of New York. The stonework was dono at the Charleston yardB of Mr. Thomas II. Reynolds, who also srt the bust. The memorial is a worthy and fitting mark to the memory of tho South Caro lint nn?t. tnd Inn mnnti nr. cr nothing else. The Girl?Then I'll lell you what t do. .Tust. keep your eyo 011 me, an when I laugh you laugh when I cr; you cry. Chicago Chronicle. Self-Con* let ion. The man who t.1 ik.-> about himself, \\ ho Haunt* his "moV and "1'n.* Hut gives undoubted proof to those Who hear him that he lies. ?Chicago Record-Herald. 1 A Kurrlin u?l?-?l l.nttr, " \ "Shall we eloi?e, George?" "Yes -if you think it will please you father. Financially, I'm. not prepare to get liiin dow n 011 inc."-? Detroit Fra Pros a. f V. . . C 1 "^1 ^^^^^^ESCRIPTION IS Tasteless Chill Tonic. is plainly printed on every bottle?hence yoa pu are taking when you take Grove's. Imitators :heir fo rmula knowing that you would not buy you knew what it contained. Grove's contains put up in correct proportions and is in a Tasteless l acts as a tonic while the Quinine drives the c system. Any reliable druggist will tell you that rigfna/ and that all other so-called Tasteless imitations. An analysis of other chill tonics shows superior to all others in every respect. You nting when you take Grove's?its superiority having long been established. ' Grove's is the # sold throughout the entire malarial sections of No Cure. No Pay. Price. 50c. ^ M< morial Day. A Bloody Battle. y. April 20th was a sacred day A di-?pV IIIg * arms, and believe that it is bet- ~|_> oi i ter to have one great united re- AXIT) J^aWS^ ? public than to have two rival lurt all otW kind f d governments in this country, workinc. machinerv \fv and whue the right of secession . ^ ? lneiT- ^ , f may have been irrevocably set- Keant Bog Beam baw mill is it tied, this does not determine ^'ie heaviest, strongest, and ' that in 1861 the southern states most efficient mill for the e- went to war for wrong princi- money on the market, quick, ides, or that in decidintr to with- accnr?t? Auom "a ? ? draw from the Union they B. Smith Machine Company ' were rebels. The loyalty of wood working machinery, southern men to the reunited por high grade engiuea, plain e country needs no argument It valve?Automatic, and .s not in dispute. But in order to,,,orli wrU me. Atl be loyal now, it is not necessary , m J ,,T.a a,rn,i,n? to be disloval to the memory of i ^ * ? * ' >e the brave men who fought and an<* ells n died." V. C. BADHAM, 1326 Main St., Columbia, 8. C 2 Ginning Machinery, seems as if they simply can't lose. _ n?r?ii ** i ? jo matter wi,at happen.? ^ Saw Mill Machinery, "And still the people who lose, ? ,e said the amateur philosopher, "are Planinri lVTiil c" not always happy. I know a fat a lcUllIly IVaIJA s" woman who would like to lose about ? _ ? , 00 pounds and can't, and it makes IVlaCllinCFy? her hopping mad every time she ** thinks of it."-('h?cago Times-Herald. jgpJcJ^ MaCllinerV, 18 I.rnten >Ie?lltnt Ion. *? j * ycu *""" my Engines, all Types; I "I am Kiir.tr to church, kinTunrnunnva i.iniunci long time."?Tit-Hits. N KVS BLRR* S BU3INES3 COLI>rtt<1 In.n Man. LEGE, Columbia, S. C. Mrs. Linguist?1 want to get a di voroe. My husband talks in his sleep. ? ~ - ~"l . Lawyer Soozem?But, my dear j is R_. *_/ madam, that is no ground for di- V?\ I D ANTS voree. There is no cruelty in? fl i .-?.??<* jCpOTON DUGS. Mrs. Linguist?But he talks in r 3S36,, Fl.!E6,Fl,EA5. t Latin, and I don't understand that ; A \0 ALL i\'5?CTLIFE-. k language at all. -Baltimore American, i > - ? .. ,5 'or.:ont 6 Death to iiuecrs i'iirlor l>l|iloinnor. : io an^ cents o Mrs. ltrago Tell tue, professor, will ; ' ai.l. dbalerfic-. * r i . > I iV,m \XJnr ( 40mh ro\ Cnt*K*i C a d my daughter e\er become a great . A?i nK'OH s'D. Y, pianist? " ' Herr Vogleschnitzle I cannot dell. ,f Pca(h Du>l not for >%1# by yoor "But has she none of the