The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, September 19, 1901, Image 4

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HttRTS CHAHAt 1 KJEt. ; . 1 I Folly of Allowing Forebodings of , Evil to Influence Action. < nr. T*ln?(? In Ilia S?rmnn l)?clnr*i ( tb* Llf* of Kvery >l?n, \\ uiiihh 1 and Child to Do Cloitlf < I pilrr Divine Card. < {Copyright, 1901, by Louts ICtopsch, N. T.) ^ Washington, Sept. I. ' I 1 In this discourse Dr. Talmag* | hows the folly of allowing forebod- , tug's to influence us and how expeo- J talion of evil weakens and destroys. , Text, Matthew 6:34: "Suflicieut unto the day is the evil thereof." , The life of every man, woman and \ child Is as closely uuder Divine care ? as though such person were the only ] mnu, woman or child. There are no j accidents. As there is a law of storms ( In the natural world, so there is a j law of trouble, a law of disaster, a ] law of misfortune; but the majority ] of the troubles of life are imaginary, < end the most of those anticipated j never come. At any rate, there is no j cause of oomplaint against Qod. See < li/R*.. -WI _ S A _ ? wvvr muuii jae nns noue vo niaKe you < happy, lii? sunshine filling the earth 1 with glory, making rainbow for the 1 torm and halo for th? mountain, j greenness for th? mon, saffron for < tha oloud and crystal for tha billow and procession of bannered flam? , through th? opening gate* of th? ( morning, oh a flinches to aiug, riror* to glitter, seas to chant and spring* to blossom, and overpowering all other noumls with Its song and overarching ali other pjdendor with its triumph, oovaring up all otliar beauty with its garland* and outfla.sh.ing ull j thrones with its dominion?deliverance for a lost world through the j Ore&t Redeemer. i If discourse of the sin of borrowing trouble. First, such a habit of mind and j heart ia wrong, because it put* one Into a despondenoy that ill fits him for duty. 1 planted two rosebushes 1 In my garden; the one thrived beau- 1 tlfully, the other perished. I found ? the dead one on the shady side of the i house. Our dispositions, like our < plants, need sunshine. Ejcpeotanoy ] of repulse is tha cause of many mo- 1 ular and religious failures. Fear of i lander and abuse has often invited < all the long-beuk^d vulture* of scorn < and backbiting. Many of the roi<ifor- ] tunas of life, like hyenas, ilco if you 1 courageously rnoet thana. * How poorly prepared for religious 1 duty is a man who site down under J the gloom of expected misfortune! If ^ k. k- ' ? - - - ' ' ' us pi?ra, uo kjiyw: i ao no* ijjiqk i hall b? answered." If h? gives, h? * aye: "I expect they will steal the money.** Helen Chaltnera told ine 1 that her father, Thomas Chalmers, in * the darkost hour of the history of * th? Free church of Scotland and when the woes of the land seemed to weigh 1 upon his heart, said to his children: 1 "Come, let us go out and play ball or * tLy kite," and the only difficulty in the play was that the children could not keep up with their father. The MoCheynes and the Summei fields of the church who did the most good tolled in the sunlight. Away witli the , horroral They distill poison; they dig graves, and if they could olimb o high they would drown the rejoicings of llenven with sobs and wailing. You will have nothing but misfortune in tho future if you sedulously watch for it. How shall a man catch the right kind of flsh if he arranges hit line and hook aud bait to catoh lizards and water serpents? Hunt for bata and hawks, end bats and hawks you will find. Hunt for robin redbreasts, and you will And robin redbreasts. One night an eagle aud an owl got into fierce battle. The eagle, unused to the night, was no match far the owl, which is most at home In th? darkness, nnd the king of the , air fell helpless. Hut th? morning rose, and with it rose the eagle, and th? owl* and the nlghthawks and the bats c&me a second time to th? ?o/n- , bat. Now. th? eaffle in the snnHorht with ? stroke of his talons and ft great cry, cleared the air, and his en emics, with torn feathers and splashed with blood, tumbled into the thiokets. Ye are the children of light. In the night of despondency you will hare no chance agalu9t your enemies that flook up from beneath; trut, trusting In God and standing in the sunshine of the promise*, you < shall "renew your youth like the eagle." 1 Again, the habit of borrowing trouble Is wrong because it hus a 1 tendsnoy to make us overlook present bleating. To slake man's thirst the rook is cleft and cool wators leap Into his brimming cup. To feed his hunger the fields bow down with bending wheat, and the cattle come from the clover pastures to give him milk, and the orchards yellow and rlpsn, casting their Juiov fruits Into his lap. Alas, that amid such exuberance of blessing man should growl as though he were a soldier on half rations or a sailor on short allowance; that a man should stand neck oaip in Harvests looking forward to famine; that one should feel the strong pulses of health marching with reprular tread through all the aTenuji of life and yet tremble at the xpeoted assault of sickness; that a men should sit in his pleasant home, fearful that ruthlrsa want will some day rattle the broken window eash with tempest and sweep the coals from the hearth and pour hunger Into the bread tray; that u man fed by Him who owns all the harvests should expect to starve; that one. whom God loves and surrounds with banadlotlom and attends with angelic People Who Make Sunshine. t CjThero is a society that has for its 1 motto theso woid:s "If you have a a kindness shown you pass it on." Thoro 1 is a sermon in a few words. Thoro aro f thousands of pooplo who seo much of ' the dark side of life. Thoy aro poor, ? miserably poor. Thoir livos are pinoh- ^ ed. They hardly know what kindness 1 means. Siokness to them moans tho 8 hospital and oharity. Bo the Bunshino 8 Society was organised, and it grow and 1 broadened. There were noblo women c behind it. Their hearts throbbed with 1 good feeling. They read to the siok in * Fairmont MUle. 46,800 46,200 ( Mi . ucmH and hover# ever with tnor?than motherly fondntbi should be looking for a heritage of tearsi Has 3od been hard with thee that thou : ihouldst bo foreboding? Has lie tinted thy board? Has Ho colored theo with rags? lius He spread trups for thy feet, and galled thy t sup, end rasped thy soul, and j wrecked theo with atorm, and thun-j lered upon thee with a life full of sulaintty ? If j'our father or brother come Into four bank whero gold and silver are lying about, yvu do not watch them, for you know they are honest, but if in entire stranger come by the safe you keep your eye on him, for you 3o not know his designs. So aome taon trout God; not us & father, but > stranger, and aot suspiciously to* ward llliu. It is high time you begun to thank God for present blessing. I'hauk liim for your children, huppy, buoyant and bounding, frulso film for your houie, with its fountain of long and laughter. Adore HUtn for morning light nml evening shadow. Praise Him for fresh, cool water bubbling from the rock, lo&plng iu the :ascado, soaring iu the ruist, falling Ln the shower, dashing against the rook and clapping its hands In the tempest. Love Him for the grass that cushions the earth and the clouds that curtain the sky and the foliage that waves in the forest. Thank HUu for a llible to read and a Saviour to Sollver. Many Christians think it a bad sign to be iubiliint. !>/< ?? . ?w ? * - v - r, ?.iu ?M91A "Ul A U1 C 1 1 ' txnmtna ties la u bowing j?wn of their brighter experiences. Like a boy with a new jackkulfe, hacking everything he comas acress, so tbelr telf-examination is a religious cutting te pieces of the greenest things they can lay their hands on. 'J hoy Ixnagsuo they are doing God's service when they are going about borrowing trouble, and borrowing it at 30 per oaot., whloh is always \ sure precursor of bankruptcy. Again, the habit of borrowing troiv hie la wrong because the present Is sufficiently taxod with trial. Uod sees that we aLI uocd a oert&ln amount of trouble, and so he apportions it for all ihe days end years of our life. Also for the polioy of gathering it all up for Dne day or yeur! Cruel thing to put upon the bauk of one camel all the ;argo Intended for the entire caravan. [ never look at my memorandum book to see what engagements and dutiei sre far ahead. Let every week bear its own burdens. The shadows of to-day are thick enough. Why implore the presence of other shadows? Tho cup s already distasteful. Why haJdoo to liaaster.* far distant to wm? and vring out more gali in the bitternese? Ire we such champions that, having won the belt In former exsoountore, we !ti go forth to challenge all the injure? lie re arn business men Just able to nauago affaire as they now axe. They san pay their rent and meet their notes iiid manage affairs as they now are, >ut how if a yanjo should oosie and ny Investments should fall? Go tonorrow and write on your dayboek ir on your ledger, on your money safe: * ..? a- ' * ? guiutiuub unoo me aay is ma evil .hereof." Bo not worry about notes that are far from due. I)o not pile up an your counting desk the llnancial nuxioties -of the next 20 years. The 3od who has taken care of your worldly occupation, guarding your store from the torch of the incendiary and the key of the burglar, will be as faithful in 1910 as in 1901. God's hand La might!or than the machinations of stock gamblers or the plots of political ieiuagoguos or the right arm of revolution, and the darkness will fly and the storm fall dead at his feet. So there axe persons in feeble health, sod they are worried about the future. They make out very well now, but they are bothering themselves shout future pleurisies and rheumatisms and neuralgias^nd fevers. Their eyesight is feeble, and thsy are worried unless they entirely lose it. Their hearing is indistinct, ausl they are alarmed lest they beoome entirely deaf. They feel chilly to-day and are expecting an attack of typhoid. They hava been troubled for weeks with some perplexing malady asul dread becoming lifelong invalids. Take care of your health now and trust God for the future, be not guilty of the blasphemy of asking Uiui to take oaro oJ you while you sleep with your windows tight down or eat chicken salad at 11 o'clock at night or sit down on a cake of ice to cool otY. lie prudent, aud then be oonlldent. Borne of the sickest people havo been'tbe moat useful. It was so with "Payson, who died deaths dally; and Ilobert Hall, who used to stop in the midst of his sermon and lie down on the pulpit sofa to rest and then go on again. Theodore Frelinghuyson had a greathorror of dying till the time came and then went peacefully. Take care of the present, and let the future look out for itself. "Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." Again, the habit, of borrowing misfortune is wrong because it unfits ua for it when it actually does oomo. We cannot always have smooth sailing. Life's path will sometimes tumble among declivities and mount a ateep and be them pierced. Judas will kiss our cheek and then sell us for 30 pieces of eilver. Human soorn will try to crucify us between two thlevaa. We will hear tha Iron goto of th? aepulcher creak and gylnd as it shuts in our klndrad. But wo cannot got ready for these things by forbodlngs. They who tight imaginary foes will coine out of breath into confllot with the armed disasters of the future. Their ammunition will have been waarted long before they come under the guns of real mis- i fortune. Beya in attempting to jump a wall sometimes go &e far baek In order to get impetus that when they ocme up they are exlmueted, and thee# long races in order to get apring ' enough to vault trouble bring ua up at ho hospitals. Thoy established froo ibrary sootioos in tenement distriotp, tnd bright faood girls gavo up aftertoons to instructing and amusing ohilIron who neodod just that kind of help, n addition, work was found for young ;irls rooovoring from illnoss and too voak to resume their regular positions. n'ow ton now reading and amusement notions aro to bo oponed, and sunhino, as warm and bright as good imrnlses oan make it, will enter the lives ?f many people. It is a noble philanhropy. It is praotioal, and it is found o have an elevating and enoouragiog x/t.'kt. isortuu v * m . mOTM. wrnm m m fat to tSi* dreadful reality witfc nt strength gone. Finally, the habit of borrowing trouble is wrong because it is unbelief. God has promised to take care of ua. The Hible bloom* with assurances. Your hunger will be fed; yoursiokntss will be alleviated; your sorrows will be healed. God will sandal your feet and smooth your path, and along by frowning crag nnd opening grave sound the voices of victory and good chesr. The summer clouds that seem thunder charged really carry in their bosom harvests of wheat and shocks of corn end vineyards purpling for the winepress. The wrathful wave will kiss the feet of the great Storm Walker. Our great Joshua will command, and above your aoul the sun of prosperity will e'and still. Blenk and wave ?truok Patrnos shall have apocalyptic vision, and you shall hear ibe cry of elders and the sweep of wings and trumpets of ealvutloD and the voico ol halleluiah unto Qod forever. Your wsy may wind alon* dangerour bridle paths and amid wolf's how] and the soream of the vulture, but the way till winds upward till angels guard it nnd trees of life overarch it, obs* thrones line it, and crystalline foun tains leap on it, and the pathway ends nt gates that arc penrland streotathat are gold and temples that are nlWaye open end> hills that quake with per petual Hong and ? city mingling for ever Sabbath and jubilee and triumph nnd coronation. Let pleasure chant her siren song; 'Tis not the song lor ma. To wesplng It will turn er* Ion?, For this Is Heaven's decrse. But there ts a song the ransomed sing To Jesus, thalr exslttd King, With Joyful heart and tor.gnu. Oh, that's the song for me! Courage, tuy brotberl The father father doen not give to his nou at school enough money to last him several years, but, ns the bills for tuition and beard and c! *' hiug sad boobs ensue in, pays them. So Oodwill aot give you grace all at once for tbs future, but will meet mil your e*ig?noles as ihey ome. Through enrneat prayer trust Kim. I'eopls ascribe the success of a ocrtain liny ef steamer* is bualne&a akili and know isot the faot that when that Hue of atea mors started the wife of the proprietor passed the whols of etch da/ when a steamer etarted in prayer to God for It* eafet/ and the success of tha He*. Put everything Id Ood'a hands and leave It there. I.nrfe interest more v to pay will soon eat up a farm, a atorc, an estate, and tha interest on borrowed troubles -will swamp anybody. "Sufficient unto the day ia the atil thereof." HOW MEN MAKE LOVE. Some Do It In h Wrandlloquent .Mnnner and Fall to Fluke An Imprvanlou, All aorta of men in all kinds of conditions have inuda love to me. While I won't say that I loved them all is return, they?that is those? who sent me fruits and flowers and bonbons, not diamonds and gems, 6Uoeceded best with me. Stage women don't want big things; it is the trifles that touch t heir hearts, Bays Mario Dressier, in St. I.ouls Pu.stDispatcU. Handsome men have never ancoeeded with me. They are generally too overbearing and make you feel as If they did you a favor by making lovs to you. The Little gentleiuauly things a man does win a woman's heart. 1 like a man who takes his hut off Ln my presence and tha cigar oul of his mouth the moment 1 come neai him; who rises from the tablo and remains standing while 1 am being seated. 1 like the man who divines when I feel a draft and gets up to shut the window even if it is in a garden. The man who wants to win my heart mustn't do theso things only for a few weelcs, while I atu getting Interested tn hi in, but keep right ou doing them. The straightest way to a woman's heart is by small and gentlemanly courtesies. It never fails. The man who showers diamonds and costly presents npon a woman is usually very ostentatious about it. The fellow who comes along with a bunah of flowers or a bonbon box makes you feel as if you did him an honor to aooept his present. He'll win where the other will get the cohl shoulder. Lore-making Is an art which women understand muoh better than men. -?Marls Dressier, in St. Louis TostDinpatoh. rightiiiK Yellow Fever. If tl>e ship enters the mouth of the Misalasionl with a clean bill of V>1 +vx And ao sickness o> board the is allowed to proceed to quarantiue. There the quarantine officer and hie Assistant physician go aboard. The report* of the master and physiolon ar* received first. Then the crew Is mustered, the roll Is called, aud, as each man's name is reached, he steps out of line aad extends his arm to the physician, who feels his pulse, and if th* slightest abnormality is detected indicative of fovrr the clinical thermometer Is used nt onco to got the degree of fever.?Karl Mays, in Leslie's Monthly. llnrlal Stopped by lleea. While the body of a child was being lowered lata a grave at Salem, Iud.,a swarm of bees attacked the mourners and drove them away. It was only uftor dark that the eexton and his attendants were able to return .to oomplate the burial, the bees remaining At the grave until the gloom of night caused tJaem to depart. Slow, "We call our little southern branch railway the G. O. P." "What'a that for?" "Get out and push."?Chicago Beo* ord-Berald. offoot od thoso pooplo who only Uok opportuni'y to beoome ornaments to sooioty. Don't forgot tho Sunshine motto: "If you havo a kindness shown you, pass it on." The "average Amorioan," says Dr. Ilenry Gannett in Everybody's Magazine, is in a measure a slave to tobaooo. Ho consumes twonty pounds of thenarootio weed a yrar, or ono ounoo per day, and although ho has used it freely sinco he was grown, as did his father and grandfather before him, it does not appear that he has suffered any montal or phvsioal doteioration in oonsequenos ofsuoh indulgenoe. in. r*. i^Orw**? ' * ii ^iwinnaaii i ,, i A GREAT NATION MOURNS. I continued from pago ono j rctary Hitchcock, Mr. and Mrs. Hermann Baer. Abnor MoKinley, Miss Helen MeK nloy and Mrs. J. T. Duncan, sisters of the president, and Mis Lafa>< to MoWtJliams, in addition to John G. Milburn. fornior Postmaster Qeneial It' roll, John N. Boatherd of Buffalo and UoprosentaMve Alexander of tbo Buffalo district. TUX I.AST PARK WELLS Bcforo U o clock it was olear to those at the pros dint's bedsido that he was dyirg, and preparations wore made for tho last sad otfiors of farewell from thiiro who were nearest and dearest to him. Oxygen had been administered steadily, tut with littlo cffcot in koop ing back tho approach of doath. Tho president oaino out of ono period of un oorseiouFnrss only to relapse into an otlcr. Hut in th's period, when his mind w?s partially clear, occurred a scries of cvoDts of profoundly touohmg oharaoter. Down stairs, with strained and tear stained facos, mem bcrs of tho oabin?t wcro grouped in anxious waiting. They know the ond was rear, &Dd that tho timo had oomo when they mu?t seo him for the last timo on earth. 1 h's was about6 o'clock. Ooo 1 y ono they asoeDded tbo stairway ? Scorctary Kcot, Seoretary Hitchcock and Attorney Goneral Knox Seoretary Wilson was also there, but held back, not wishing to sco the president in h's last agony. Thoro was only a momoutaiy stay of thooabinet effioers at tho throbhhold of tho doath ohambor. Then they withdrew, tho tears streaming down their faoos, and words of iutoDfo grief ohoking their thorats. CALLED HIS DEVOTED WIFE. After thev left tho siok room, tho physioians rallied him to consciousness, ar d the president asked almost immediately that his wife bo brought to him. Tho doctors foil baok into tho shadows of tho room as Mrs. MoKinloy oamo through tho doorway. Tho strong faco of tho dying man lighted up with a faint sonic as their hands wero olasped. She sat bosido him and hold his hand. Despite her phyeioal weakness, sho boro up bravoly under tho ordoal. Tho president, in his last period of consciousness, w. ioh ondod obout 7:40 p. m., chanted tho words of tho hymn, "Noaror My Qod to Thee," and his last audible comoious words, as takon down by Dr. Mann at tho bedside, woro: "UOD'8 WILL HI DON! I ' "Good-byo all, good byo; it is God's way; 11 is will be dono." Thon his mind began to wandor, and soon afterward ho oomplotoly lost oonsoiousnoss. His life was prolonged for hours by the adminibtration of exjgen, and tho presi dent finally cxprossod a desire to be allowed to die. About 8 80, tho adminis teiing of cx)gen erased, and tho pulso grow fainter and fainter. Ho wsb sinking giadually, liko a ohild, into tho oternal i-lumtor. Bv 10 o'olook tho j u bo oeuld no longer bo folt in his extrcmitit s, and they grow oold. Below stairs tho griof-ctriokon gathering waited sadly for tho end. At 2:lf> tie end camo, and the good man passed to his reward. A Pathetic fcene. ' The j resident is dying, isn't ho Mr. Cortljou, said Mtb. Mi Kinley as -he met tho secretary in tho hall. "He is vtry ill." ' 1 knew it," Mrs. Mi Kioloy sobbed. ' The dootor said 1 must not go into tho room when 1 went thoro this morning." "You may go into tho room to soe tho president now, Mrs. McKinloy,' sa d Soorctary Cortelyou, later. ' liow is lie? How sad you loDk. Oh, 1 hoc 1 'J ho president is low?tho president is vuy low. My God?is tho nrrnidpr.t dvina'f I Irnnw it " In iho rcom, tho preiidwt, undor stimulants, was oonsoioua. He recognized his wife. IIo smiled?or tried to. I "My dear?. Then tlio wifo bowed her hoad to tho I bed oovor. Sho rooovered hirsolf. Sho rmot thid iho pationt'a brow. He looked at her?looked bis th?nka Thero was lovo in thog'anoo. Tie wi'c took tho nueb nd 8 hand, holding it in hora. Ho oonsolcd her Ho bado her good bye. This was shortly after 7 o'olcrk. Still -ho was bravo. Her fortitude was miraculous. Mr#. McKiDley last saw her husband between 11 atd 12 At that litno she fat by tho bcdBido holding his hand. rl ho numbers of the oabinot wore admitted to tho t-iik xOciu singly at that timo. Where the President Died. A difpatoh from Buffalo to the New York Tritur o saya the namo of John Gcorgo Mu burn, in wboae beautiful home President MoKinley died, has become known to every quartor of the I t t T? . - --..I mom. it is sometntng ttoat Mr. Milburn wou'd not have Bought or dosirid under ordinary oirjuaistanoos, lor ho has always disliked everything that approaobed parade and notoriety, and has never put himsolfin the way of publio applause. For twenty years or moro John G. Milburn has been know as one of tho ablest lawyers in tho wc-torn part of tho state. In Buffalo he has bclo^od to that olass of men wh.) do not intrude themselves into publio matteis, but whose opinions, w L on given, oount for muoh?;ho sort of a an whom tho nowspaper roporteis tly to when the soundest jundgmentup o j tho gavost t ffail s is to be had When tho business men of Buffalo decided to build the Pan American exposition it was this sort of man thev wanted at the hi ad of the great undertaking, and they aclcotid Jjhn G. Milburn beouase ho wts a giant intellectually, a gentleman a'.wayp, and honest biyond the ru*pi o'on of aoy man's douot. Bv birth hr is an Englishman, and in Politiocs a Domoorat. The Funeral. 8 -crotary Hay Sunday issued to the publio the following annonnooment oonoerning tho funeral of President MoKinley: Department of 8Ute, Washington, D 0 , Sept. 15,1901. Tho remains of the late president of tho United States, after lying in state in the oity hall of Buffalo durinf the afternoon of Sunday, bept, 15, will be removed to Washington by speoial train on Monday, Sept. 16, leaving Buffalo at 8:30 a. m. and reaohing Washington at 9 p. m. The remains will then be carried, under esoort of a squadron of United Suites oavalry, to the exeoutive mansion, where they will rest until 9 o'olook in the morning of Tuesday, Sept. 17. They will then be oarried to the oapitol, acoompanied by a military ? 111 ' and civio escort, the details of which will be given in a separate notico The remains will thorn lin in e'a'o. Kol'gious scrvioeH will bo fb'd in He rotunda of tho capitol on Wednetdav at 12 o'olock noon. At 1 o'olock tho rcoiaina, under a military c-ort. will bo transferred to a funeral oar *' <1 oar riod to Canton, Ohio, v a tho Pcuus)l vania railroad arriving thero on H um day at 11 a. uj., whrro arrang'in.nts for tho Coal sepulluro will ho oommit ed the ohargo of ?ho oitizens of Can ton, undor the direction of a committoe to bo aoleotod by tho mayor of that oity. No ocrcmonicsa'o expeotod in tho oivios and towns along tho touto of the funeral train beyond tho tolling of bells (Signed) John Hay, Sooretary of S:ate. A Stormy Career. Etnma Goldman, from whom Czolgotz says he reooived the impulse to murder tho President, is about 35 years old, tho daughter of a Russian tailor. Without oduja'ion, tho was brought up in a hotbed of anarohy, oar Koona, Russia. Sh) cauio to this country seventoen years ajo and married a man by tho naitio of Gruencbaum, with whom sho lived in Riohoster. Sho doserted him after a year and a half and followed Louis Rerastcio, an Aoarohiet, to this oity, Sinoo then sho has had many partners, disregard of tho marriage tie being part of her doctrine. Assuming tho namo of Goldman, sbo joined Anarohistio group kcown as the Pioneers cf Liberty, llor language was so violent that thoy expelled her. Sho astooiatcd herself lattr with the Ujr man Anarchists and wroto signed artiolos for l)io Freihcit, John Most's paper. Sho quarrelled With Most and onDooemboi 18, 1892, lashed Lim with whip as ho was about to 6pcak in Old Fellows' Hall. Aloxaudor Rerktuarn with whom sholived, shot llcnry C. Friok at tho Carncgto works. Roth she and Rorkman then joined tho cxtromo wing of tho Anarchists. Sho made bor living by speaking. Sho was ar rosted for inciting to riot iu 1893 and served a year's term on Rlackwoll's h land. Whilo thcro she began lo eturty mcdioino and took a degreo alter hor rolcaso. Sho loft this oity several months ago. Sho spoaks sovoral lan guagos, but her tirados aro merely donunoiations of oapital aod tho laws of sooiotv, without login or argument ? Now York Horald. One Hundred Livos Lost. A special from Olenwood Spriug , (Jol., Bays: A frightful gas cxplosiou occurred at 5:30 o'clock this tvot ing in tho coal mino of tho Colorado Fuel and Iron oompany at Spring Gulch, probably resulting in tho iu&Unt dot h of all tho minors at tho time engaged in work, an ostimato of 100 mec> Tho oonoussion of the oxpiosionY was torriffio, and tho entire entry waa badly caved in. Threo men wero fiteioa from noar tho entry soon after tho ox plosion, but thoy woro td frightfully manghd as to bo unronogniziblo. Tho tolophouo lino to Spring Gulch is out of order and a messenger was dispatoh od to tho otlioo of tho Fooohontai oight miles distant were tciophono eon neotiun was had with Glonwood. A special midland train was ordered and all doctors in Glonwood Springs wero at onoo sont to tho bcouo alter the aooidont. No doGnilo information has yet boon rocived hero as to tho nuunur of men killed, but it is supposed that tho men at this mino work until t) o'clock, exoopt tLo.-o who do contract work, and in that almost 100 men mast have been iu tho mino at tho time of tho explosion. Tiioro is cot one ohauoe in a thousand for many of them to esoapo with thoir livos. (Ghosts Use Telephone. A nunbtr of Spiritualists aro interested in ghostly voices over tho teltphono to Mrs. Mary F. Bringmai, a mod um who keeps a boarding hou o at Springfield, (Jaio. Tho uiyciorous lolepuono is on the wall of a l?r.crcoai, and had boon thcro for some timo beforo tbo manifestations w re notiocd. Oao ovoniug a vlsiior was startled by l.oaring tho voices, and finally tho story was spread through town. A woll kuowu spiritualises hra said that ho had no dcubt that tl o voioes woro from friends in tho othtri world. "1 have talked through lite telephone in Mr-i. llrinuUm'- " v.. naid. "Thero oau bo do ui stake in to s manor, and it in not a subjoos to bo treated flippantly." State House Grounds. Tho work of making a park of tl 0 state oapitol grounds is being priseouted by Mr. M. It. Coopor, tho scoretary of statu. His assistant, Mr .Jos.-e T. Gantt, is also taking a great amount of interest in this work, and has some woll defined p ans. This office will ro qnrst tho lcgislaturo to appropria'e $25,1)00 for tho purposo of bui'ding granito retaining walls around tho teTracos which surround tho oapitol budding. It is also tho purpose cf tho so< rotary of stato to havo iho walks b ?rd erod with granito curbing. Tho monuments and statues in tho oapitol grounds aro in nood of bettor mounting and tl 0 seorotary of stato will try to \iavo tbo bases made for these minumcats. Maggio Arrested. Chief Wilkio of tho scorol snv;ee has reoeived unofficial information thaf An tonio Maggio has boon arrostod ia Now Mtxioo. Massio was tho travo'.iug with tho Audrows Optra com pany, and is said to have wide a sfat meat not long ago that Prosidoot Mo Kinloy would bo shot beforo Ootobi r 1st, and that he was sorry he. himself, was not to do tho sheotiDg. Upon this statement reaohmg (Jhiof Wilkio. tie seorot servioo operative wi s directed to proceed to New Mexioo, whoro Mtggio was reported to 1)3 and plaoo Lim under arrest. Spanish War "Veterans" Tae Spanish war veterans aro to hold a seoond reunion in Columbia during fair week, and a banquet will bo given on the night of Ootober 30. Members of the Firat and Second Regiments and the Heavy Artillery will partioipate. About So. As Parker, the Georgia oolored man whooaught Czdogoez, said: "A man might have boon able to shoot the president in the south, but ho would never have gotten to tho Jail." [The World's Greal For nil form* of fevor tnk?* JOMNSC times better tlmn quinine mill clot1* 1 do lit lOUnys. It's splemllil curve nro mode by quinine. COSTS 50 CEN 1851 FUKMAN UI GREENVILI A. P. Montague, Ph. D, L. L. D., L wo coursos are offered leading to the de Mutkh ok Ahm (M. A.) Library and Keadii cal Laboratories. Jmao.n Alvmni Hall, 0 juHl comp ete.l und furnished at a coat of I Dokmitoky Expenses reduced to a iuiuitn circular* of information onrequeat. For rocnta apply lo Prof. II. T. Cook, Greenrille, Want Him Lynched. Tho people of tho north, oven that tin northern press and pal pit, secin wi.liDg to admit at last "tl.oro aro rorno crimes whioh would | secin to justify lynching on the spot." Such a crime they consider tho ruthless shooting ot so noble a man as tho na , tion's chief tx.outivo. As rovolting , *3 ii really is, oan it be cocsiderod more i so than tic assault and murder of a i puio woman by a black tiondV If the oowaully shooting of a president can ' so srouf.e rtop'c as to call forth aenti ' tucutj 111 jusliticatioD 11 lvnohing, what ' in the barno of heaven must bo tho 1 frenzy ct tho neighbors whon liny find , sorno innocent wife and mother oold in death, with, perhaps, her tolpless in i fant lying beside her in a pool of its i mothers blood' As awful as is the 1 punishmout that so swiftly follows 6Uoh crimes, how light does it soem in oom panson with tho orimo itsolf.?Atlanta . Journal. State of Ohio, Citv of Toledo, ( Lucas County. i Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of tho firm of F. J. Cheney ifc Co., doing business in the City of l oh d ), County and State afore- i ba ?I aid that said firm will pay tho sum of ONi HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and ovory case of catarrh 1 that cannot be ourod the uso of Hall's Catarrh Curb FRANK ,J CHENEY. Sworn to bofaro mo and subscribed in my proenoo, this Gih day or Dcoem- , ber, A. D. 1886. , A. W.GLEASON. ' Notary Public. Hall's Catatrh Curo is takon iotornaily, and acts diroctly on tho blocd and mucous surfacoH of tho system. Send lor testimonials, freo. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Tolodo.O. Suld b> Druggists, 75 oonts. LI all's Family Pills arc the boot. Not a Bad Idea. At the old fashioned inns and rostaurants in Sweden it is oustoruary to ohargo less for women than for-mon, on tho theory that thoy do not oat so much. At some hotels in Swedeo a man and wifo aro charged a* oao and ono half persons if they occupy the same room. A husband and wifo may travol as one and ono half persons by railway, and also by tho post routes, ' turnishing their own oarriage. From This State. Ia the uail y bulletin issued by tho ; president's physicians appears the ! oauio of Dr. Eugeno Wasdin. Dr, VVaudio is a South Uaroliuian being a na.ive of Georgetown, and he has \ attainod cminonoo in tho praotioe of , ?urgory. Dr. Wasdin about fifteen years ago tutored tho nav y as surgeon \ and his success wai sujh that ho ha* boon ujrrig .td to many important m idi oal niijsious by thy govninnunt. Wanted.^ Ilutincss activity createe a demand for * oueiness experts, and thoie who hold diplo raus from our college are business experts t They h ivo little trouble finding places, and < no trouble keeping them. Such diplomas t are gu irantees fitness. It's not guess I work, and the possibility of disappoint ment in tho now,employee, but a guaraa ? tee from us to your ability. j For full information unn.t nn?? ?W? ? I UVHO uv n ?v ?uv " Columbia Business College, 1 COLUMBIA, a. C. W. H. NEWBERRY, President 1 PILES lauflTbred the tortures of the damned r with protruding piles brought on by constipation with which I was aflllcted for twenty years I ran across your t'ASCARKTS in tha town of Newell, la, and nerer found any thing to equal them To-day I am entirely free from i piles and feel like a new man " C. 11. Kkitz, 1411 Jones St., Stoux City, la. /SV CANDY M CATHARTfC ^ fawcciMto rnaot mama nwims Pleasant, Palatable. Potent, Taata Oood, Do Qood, Nerer Hlcken. Weaken, or Orlpe, 10c, 36c, No. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... C IStHi| Rtta.tr Cowysar. CblMt*, iMtral, R.w fat. M Hn.TA RIO Sold and guaranteed by allSragHU" I U'tfAu gists to CVHE Tobacco Habit. The World's Greatest B Cure for Malaria. X - 1 For all forma of Malarial polson B tug take Johnson's Chill and Paver B I onic. A taint of Malarial polnon Ing In your blood meana misery and K9 failure. Hlood mcdtclneacan'tcnre 9 Malarial poisoning. The antidote for It la JOHNSON'S TONIC. ^B Get a bottle to-day. ?urns- .1 i > mi ;est Fever Medicine. I IN'S CHILL AND FEVL'R TONIC. It Is 100 I n a single <lny wlint slow quinine cannot In striking contrast to the focblo cures I: TS IF IT CURFS. 1901. ^ivkkhity, le, s. c. - - - President. grees of Baoiirlok or Abts (U. A ) and ig-Room. Physical, Chemical and Biologi- j ontaining AUDITORIUM and SooiRT Halls, jp weniy thousand dollars. Nkw Koiitt Room urn hj the Mesa system. Catalogue and Address Dr A. P. Montague, Urcenville, S, C. 8 C. SHERIDAN TcacherH Agency, Orkkhwoou, 8. C. departments Tbaciiir's Aobnov?Wo supply schools, oolleges, and families with teao lers, without charge. We aid competent toaohers in boouriug positions, l'nose wishing teachers siid teachers wishing positions should write us at onoe, Souool Fi'i?niti.'uu?Desks, Maps, Charts, [)lol>e?, Ac , at lowest prices We aro Oensral Agents for largest factory ia U. 8. Local Agents wanted, nverythiug strictly firstb1*m.' School amu Collkok Books by mail at publithers' priooB?new ami secondhand, Wo take old books in exchange lor now or socoudhanded ones, saviug half the oost 10 you. We also supply books recently Adopted by the Btate. WILL SAVE YOU TIME, TROUBLE AND MONEY'. F, M, dhoridan, Mgr. THE YOUNGBLOOD LUMBER COMPANY AUGUSTA, OA. Ornoa and Works, North Augusta, S. C. DOORS, SASH, BLINDS AND BUILDER'S HARDWARE. rLOOKINO, SIDING, CEILING and INSIDE FINISHING LUMBER IN GEORGIA PINE, All Correspondonoe givea prompt atten Lion. July 2?ly COLEMAN-WAGENER Hardware Company. (Successors to C. P. Popponholni.)| ?Wholesalo and Retail Dotlors in? Anns, Ammunition, Agricultural Implements and Hardware of Every Kind and Description. tWSeudJpostal for Prices. ^ King St., - - Charleston, 8 C North Greenville High School, TIQERVILLE, 8. C. Thorough, cheap, aud beautifully.locate'!? J| Mountain Scenery; Good Water; Milita?f Cr feature, under auspices of Citadel graduaJ^ ? Students from eight tountiei. ? No high school gives a more thorough Bourse. Diplomas awerdea to graduates. Due lundred and fifty dollars' worth of soholarihips awarded annually. Board $t> 60 a month. Tuition, $9 00 to ^'26 00 a year. An illustrated Catalogue will tell you all. Season ipena tuptcuioer 12, 1901. Come to Greenville and telephone to Hgorriile. FALL ^romtiie STYLES. n| UP-TO-DATE 1617 Maiu Carpet House. Columbia, Street, g q II TVfnt t . ? -- mutual, CARPET CO. >Nrius us for sMnp.es of aoylhing in our liue. Goods shipped anywhere in the ^t*te free of freight. We are always busy. No dull days with us. When in Columbia, come and see us. Anybody can show you the plaoe. EE-M MEDICATED CIGARS AND EE-M SMOKING TOBACCO, For uses of tobacco that sutler with Caarrh, Asthma or Urouohiiis. We guarantee in absolute and permanent cure of Catarrh ind it is the only known remedy for for llay Fever. If your druggist or grocers does not keep It *riie EE-M co., Atlanta, Ga., for the sample. Trade supplied by Mukray Diumj Co., yolumbia, H. C.,and Ukkk Driki Co., Chareston, o. C. Hgents Wanted "Z?Tot T. Booker Washington." iVriueu by biinseif- Every t?ody buyt; agentsure now making over #lt>u per month; best 1 >ook to sell to colored people ever published. | iVrite for terms, or seud 21 cents for outth uid begin at ouce, 1'ieasu mention this m taper. Addiess J. L. NlClloLS, *1 Atlanta, Ga. ' & #50 INVESTMENT I That will pay . to S100 DIVIDENDS MONTHLY I it a thorough, practical HuhIiichh or I Shorthand training at Stoker' Business Colleqb, \ Write or call for Cataloguo and full particular. < OW KING ST., ^Charleston, S./..C. . j educate for Business ... , ?AT Till? Charleston Commercial School. 1 (Y MCA Building.) J KINO Street, - - Charleston, 8. C. 1 Bend .for Catalogue anil terms. I Ipics^r ^yl^SCHOOl'' SHORTHAND Actual Business^,^UGUST/&CS. I jChesp Board JflTtjluATI ONajrcgwto. j flPllIM MfiMWE'-wwUM I I III 111 TIabtta (Kiro.1 at uii HanatnrI BW-" tain, la SO a ay a. HatidrwL* of tefweneee. IB raara a apooialtr Book o* I Hocaa Traatmant aont rSKI. Addroaa a MP M. WOQLLKY, M. O.. Atlanta. Oar mgggawkw*11" 1