University of South Carolina Libraries
_ -.---j:.' -~ - VEHU Vol 41KI____ - S. C., 81 - THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1891 3. 0. 00wM. L. X. CuwIaes. OWEN & H)IIDf ESS, Attor neys al Lawq Oct. 5, 1893. D T. J. W. NORWOOD, Dentist. Dr. W. M. NORWOoD, Assistant. Office, 88. Main Street, Greenville, S. 0. Jan. 9, '9o y 1. J. P. CARLIBLI, DenUtist Orend vkle,4*. C. Olfice over Addisl 4ee's Drid Store. DR. J. F. WILLIAMS Is nOw iH'Ml' nevtly located att pigkonet nd ofrets ha-Profesional Se-victe to tle peOUI" of ftretown and surrounding cOln. fiee and reideee at tie (rin E (Ot. 26-S:n The Exchange Hotel, GRCENVILLFJ. S. C' . . RND1RS0N, Proprietor. Esdjta IMpt*1OInts. TArgf lom' plat atteni en to CumaterCinI Travel an 'ourists. Table Fare Unsurpassed. Fine Climatethe year round. Ap. 7, 912 4. H. HAGOOD. J. L. THORNLEY, 4it L. C. THORNLEY. HAGOOD & THORNLEY BROS., U , 7ll, slaleI E4la14 U6161, Eaulo andPickens,!8. C.. pposite Hotel.) Carriages, Buggies. and Saddle Horses, at reasonable rates. gW- Your patrouage solicited. ADE CLARK. GEO. E. COOPER. Clark & Cooper, Dealers In .guile Wl otanite monu1102i, TOXBSTONES, of every description Also. MANrE8, STATUARY, VASES and Wrought Iron FENCING, Oreenvillo, 1. C. SePt. 19, '91. If you want the finet PIuTUREs made in the State, go to Wheeler's Studio, III McBee Avoune Greenville, S. C b&- Crayoi Portraits a specialty April 7-y. f'isses ~1cI5rg Has ready for inspectio). Latest styl.s in Walking Hats for Ladies and Children. Infants Caps anl H tIs, All the Novelett "All Goods at Cost for 89 days." PRIZE WINNERS lfirnlshed ont 15 dar re-t Tr1-iakl when lie proper cotiact s sign ed. If yan want am organ of Iteplration BRnu the Carpenter Organ. LOWiMTPitCNAPOK U AS11, W. J. B. STILES. . *,93 Dealer in tches, DIi ndS & Jeory, *GREENVILLE, S. C. REPAIRING A 8PECIALTY. Oct. 19.-3m CO TO DRUQ STOE To .Buy the best DRUUS, at the Full line of BLANK BOOKS, STA: TIONERY and S C HI 0 O L SUP P'LIlES. Closing out our PAl NTS, AT COST!I A full line of ARTIST'S MATE. RlIALS. D. T'. BACOT & CO., West Greenville, S. 0. Oct. 5, 1893.-6m. $100 Reward For the Merchant that gives you more Goods for your money then I will. Just notice the following pri CY.orar1ma-NPw S-rooK. Tensth's Snits at ' .7 Do. do 4.7~5 Do. do 5.50 Man's 'do .4.75 - Do. do . - 6.50 Do. dlo '7.00 and up to *15.00, cf l0 pouinds to the dollar. Cottonm Cheeks 4.3 c. bv the bolt. 8-4 Shirting 4.1o. " a Prints, all styles,.fronu 4 1.2 t o Go. all colors 7c... Good Ylrogan Shoee '15 centn-~.eth. er Shoes in propor-tioni. A lot of Shoos, small andl large Nos., at cost. Childrens course shoes 123& cents Jean at 18, 20, 24 and 80 cents. Can't be b'at at the p,-ice. 1 will buy yonr lint Cotton, seed Cotton ,and Cotton Baed, at market prices. Also, dry or green Hides. *Mr. C. H. ,Parkins arid Richard T' Hlallum, are now with me, anid will . be glad to meet their friends. Respeotfuilly, J. HI. Brown Smith t Smith Is the Place for CHEAP FURNIURE Split Bottom Chairs, Cribs, Cradles, Tables, Washstands Wardrobes, Bureaus, Bedsteads, Mattrasses, Carpets, Coffins and Caskets, D ay and Night. Telephone Nos. 64 anl 38. Night calls will be answered by Tele. phoue N$o. 38. MI'IJ MTI SMITHI & SMITII, 63 and 65 Mtaiu 8treet, Greenville, S. C. The Best andg L8aest STOCK or, SASH, DOORS AND BLINDS, BOTH WHITE AND YELLOW PINE, CEILING, FLOORING, WEATH IERBOARDING, BOX-BOARDS, WASH-BOARDS. PARTITION MOULDING, &C. HOT-BED SASH, 3 FEET BY 6 r E ET, at $1.75 Each. Q1r Ploase give u a c1l when you need [ iiding MAterial. T. C. GOWER & SON. 10 1, 1. % i: . , Drugs! Drugs K AVE on hand at all tinw a ruh lint 1. of pre DRIGS, CHEMICALS, Ti LET ARTICLES, FANCY G O O D 8. PRIFUMERY, FINE 8TATIONERY A large stock of COUGH SYRUPS that will cure your Cougbs and Colds. A full line of Diamata EYE GLASSES and SPECTACLES for your eyes. I wil: fit you up so that it will be. a: pleasure for you to) road. As it is now time to go to Gardening caine and see about Garden Seeds, Will keep a ful. line on hand. Then t.hero'are PAINT~ftand OIL8 ;iD full line..-and every thing usually found a a first-ctass. Drug Store. 3.' Phyaleians' Presc.riptions carefully com pundo-i, day or night. Went you come to Easley give me a call. Respectfully C. N. Wyatt, M. D). -Quilliau's Old Stan. Eastey, 8. 0., Feb. 0. 1893, l y NEW GOODS JUST ARR IVED. CHRISTMAS GOODS COMING IN. Dry Gooda~ to be sold cheap than ever. Arbuckies Coffee at 25 ets. per po&uncl. .YTou can uave money by onuying goods from me. James E. Brown's, (Central. 5, -C.. Nov 30 9.3 VALUAE3 LE PREM1[S -11ItN AWAY A\ valuablie Book~l 1or I iPa:;iii .r;o! ita.. .Comaibina Eesveir Spoon. The Weekly News & Courier, Thle Great Southern Pamily Newspaper. Offers to, every Yearly auobuiire,' ,eit , of the above Premiums AfBROLUTEL~Y FRnsE i The Weekly News and Courier, 1 year (with Premium) $. 00 The WeekI/ News and Courier, siz months (wit houit Premium 5 Send for sample hopies and circniat's. Address. T HE W EJ5LY NEWS 4 COUrR Cha....tn, 8 . . Ma.4 WEA RY. I'm l, ati t i o heat of life's battles las blvaclelo my brown hair till it's whitt And teardrops that sparkle light diamonds Have stolo from my eyes their old light. And low, whoro cold marbles aro gleaming, I laid what the world gave to ine; But high, whero tho pure ones are waiting, My treasures again will I see. Tonight I have heard strains of musio That floated away long ago, But soino mystic spirit has caught them To chant to me now, soft and low. I heard an old story tonight, too, That memory lingered to toll, Of youth that built eastles in midair That crushed hopes and dreams as they toL I've seen an old picturo of sorrow A vessol that stik in tho sea But safe in the har.bor of heaven A fair sailor boy waits for me. I listen in dreams for his footsteps, I ahnost can see his whito hand As it lifts from my heart lifo's dark shadows And pointa me to his spirit land. o Time, I am weary of traveli Uife's pathway is lonely for me, And breezes that whipi;or about mo Seem filled with a voico from the sea. And now I am tired-so tired And some night 1-11 Ieo down to rest And droam till I wako in the morning in jeaue in the homes of the blest. -Floronco Bailey Farnsworth. The Screaming Habit. No two persons hear exactly alike. Tho human internal ear is best de scribed by likening it to a grand piano. That instrument has a key for every note; the human car has a nervo fila mont for every tono and its variations. Did I say for every tone? That is a mistako. Seone pianos havo sovon oc taves, somo have eight; oino have bot ter tono in one portion of the keyboard than in another. Exactly so with the humen oar. Somo persomis hear acute ly; they catch sounds that to others are but silence. Somo tones strike tho ear drun, but are not conveyed to the brain becauso their corresponding nerve filament is missing. We know of defective hoaring, but wo do not ap ply our knowledge to our reasoning when we are stating our opinions or im presslons. To some a high note is a positive pain, and to such cars a soar ing soprano will do nothing but shriek. Others will detest tho lower tones. An hnals are moved out of their wonted calam by the sotiid of certaint notes. It should bo our ondeavor to cultivate tones of softness and sveetness. A low toine is the voico of comfort and conso lation, of deepest, iost sacred enotion. Our society weann ould do :ll they can to counteract. the creuninng habit of Americans. -- Di Vcrnon in ban Francisco Ncw-Lottcr. Two Ugly Men. Tho Due do Roquelatire wns a man of groat ugliness and mcli hnmmor. One day hoi met ;n the street a most unlllove ly looking Aaxverganat, who had some petition or ineiorial to present at Ver sailles. Ho iminediatoly introduced hini to Louis XIV, remarking that he was under a special obligation to him. The king gra:ied tho favor asked for and then inquired of tho duc wliat might be the naturo of tho obligation. ''But for him, your majesty, I should be the ugliest man in your dominionsl" I nan reminded of Hleidegger, the manager of tho opera liouro in the Haymarket when Georgo 1[ was king. One day ho laid a wager with the Earl of Chesterfield that lie would not find in all London an uglier face than his. After a long search the earl produced a woman of St. Giles' who at first seomed to outvio the manager, but when the latter put on the wotain' headgear his superior ugliness was at once ad mtitted.-All the Year Round. A Chinaman's Claim For Inisurance. One of Boestcen's insurco men in sured a small building which serves an industrious Chinaman both as shlop and home. The policy covers damages caused by fire and water,. but John Chinaman evidently thlought lie was protecting himself againlst losses duo to any cause whatever, as is shown by tihe following letter addressed to the insur ance company: Some bad boy brake my one glass. Now all tore. Comoi you my house--look-fix new. Jon LUNo. Joe expected the company to make good the damage donoe 1by the "bad boy,'" wvho is the Chinamnan's worst en emyl in the city.-Bostonl Tiravollor. Crimnal Womton. Professor Lomnbroso, tihe omlinent [talian scientist who holds sulch very strong adverse ophmiions as to the abil ity of womnen to feel pinl as5 aceutely as men do, has lately been piursuinag his investigations in another directioni, and he has now delivered hhinself of the ulnqualified epinion that womieni of tile criminal and immioral type are invari ably larger of hlands and feet and smal er in the hlead thlan average womlen. Goat raising is an imiportanlt and grewinlg industry in Oregont anid 50om1 other northwestern stat es. Cnio raincher in Bonton1 county, (Or., hats a fine herd of 450 goats, which inclu~ids a numiher of thloroughbred Angora biucks. 'T'wenl ty-two conta a pound is the lowves.t this an has received for a fleece in a dozen years. * Jack rabbits fioini tho far wvest ar~o soild ini lhe New~ Yoerk mtarkets. Th'iey' are i t as:1t il g.rmat nulimers by firmjs thait bu 'of (th Is I hunaters. Thelay are0 soild si'ie by side wvith the native hare if the i1t, and1( each jack rabbit weighs l aiu twice ams muchI ias1 his eiatern The fanmous trout ipondms of tile Cats kill mnountainis atre to hlave ani addition in a lake near um monsvi lle. Tw'~o othi or nowv ttront pondsul wvill also 1ho pro' patred inl tile moun)tainsu beore long. To keep toirt(iSe shmell combils bright rub thecm afiter eatch wearing with soft leather,- When they becomo imI, cheain with rotten stone anad oil ajplied with chamois. Japanese cooks are the most t-ruel in the world. Thley cut (every atom11 of flesh of! a living fish piecemaitl withlout firet causing (deatih. Before you boast too much how bad you have been be sure that you havo gotten entirely nvra' it. GLASGOW WAYS. Points That Interest an Anterlean In the Scotch Metropolis. "Let mo take you tomorrow to sea :ur municipal buildings, and you will Seo a palaco which cost several inillions if your dollars, of whicI M not a sxponco was stolen nor jobhhd." re marked a Glasgow bailio to a Boston Herald correspondent, who was his guest. Next morning I went to the munilci pal buildings-what we would call the Dity hall, writes this correspondent. I found the placo no less palatial than it had been described to me. It is far and away the most beautiful building of the kind I have ovor seen. Its marbles, Its stairways, its reception rooms, aro exceedingly beautiful; its business rooms are in admirable taste. The building is the palace of a king-King Domos-and no crowned colleague bas m lovelier dwelling. Thoro were no loafers in tho hulls; no largo jawed politicians were holding up the exquisitO iron gates; no o(ilico seekers were sprinkling tie yard with strong language and toLacco juice; the place was more than respectable-it was tttractivu. In this palace of King Demi there are stato apartmrents most riclly lhe lecked; thero are at drawing room, a lanceroom, a banquet room, and I know iot 'what, and these apartments are used onl festivo occasions hen offlici:al citydom is oxpected to displort itself to the credit of the community-which latter by one, two, three, four or iioro thousand representatives comes to join In the gayety. Tho mayor of Glasgow is called the lord provost. He is chosvn for three years at nothing a year. J-o is expcet ed to live ill solme State and lospitality and to uphold tho gentle dignity of the town. It costs im from $10,000 to $15,000 or $20,000 annually to do this, as circumstances serve. Obviouil, it 19 easier for a rich man than it is fo'r camel to iter tle provostsidp of Glas gow. But thmo Glawegilins propesO that if the1 camel bo not available, thlu shall not tile rich man Iavo it all hiisi own way. Tihey ttlk now of enmdowih ng the provostsiip, so that the suml nee essarily spent upon splendor may lience forth come from to puIblie purse. iut they do not proposo to give thu loi d provost a ilary. liti services nmst bo gratuitousi as before. (ihmisgow is a solid lookilng tn. Every building is of stone, atter iti' Scotch way. Ono rarely we s 1brick i Scotlarad. The ribs of tho hills art d out for building withal, so tilat a Scotch town seems built to endure. Wherever you go you find ton1 stairs in the buildings of Glasgow. The ditferenco between British build ing and American is not moro marked than. in this matter of stone, stairways and brick partition wvalls-dwelling houses, I meam, as well asi wareiouses. Deeming it ncessary to prevent ti construction of sky cloaving buildings, which abut out light, air and every tiling but ugliness, th) Glasgow folk enacted a law that no building shall h) higher than the widti of tio street on which it fronts. You can build a milo high if you have a thoroughfaro as wido as tlat. A capital tiing they have in Glasgow which we havo not. The municipality has constructed a number of bath houses, fitted with hugo wihito tiled swimning tanks, 0ach holding tiron 80,000 to 100,000 gallons of water. 'lil w~ator is kept at ai temnperaIture ot 70 de grees. These baths are open dlay id evenin~g throughout theo year. Th'ie ad mission to these baths is 4 cenlts per p)er BOll. Half a million bathers uso0 thlPlt tanlks in a year. Connlected with the hath buildings arlO washhiouses wVhero workingmehn's wives do) their fatnily laundry work, ha~ving for a chargi. of 5 cenlts per 110ur1 thle usO of a w'ehinlg stall withl hot anld cold watier and11 steamii drying appliances. Ho 1 otrop im. H-ellotropiuimi is tihe peculiar prioperity BhlOwn by3 manyll 1p1ant s, nlotaibly th e sunflower, oIf aliways turninig towaird t ho sun. In1 tile case of seedlings theO phe-~ nomenon~ is especially mafrked. Tiho cells on thle lighlt sido are appa~rently retardedl In growth, thlus causinlg a curvature toward that Aide. Professor Romnanes 1has experinmnted with an in termilttenlt lighlt, such ats thait of anl electric spark dischamrge, upo01 n musta rd seedlings, and hlas found thlat thle 1be11 tropic effect produced in this way is far greater thlan thlat cauised by tile sunl or an~y othe~r formi of light. Strango) to say, hlowever, thlMe abnormual -liluenlco is unfaccomlpanlied by tile genleration of' phlorophlyll, the green colorin~g matter iln plants whlich requires sunsh51ine for its proper production.-Pall Mall (Ga zetto. Phtotograuples lRelort flutter Than~ Eyesi. At a) mleeting of the Acadelmie des Sciences, Paris, M. Zenger exhiibited two phlotographls which lhe had taken at miidnlighlt from hlis winldow, loking on thlo 1lako of Geneva1 and1t M~ont, Bln. Th'io lake and1( tho mountai arl tle fe(ebly imaige'd on1 thlo plates, althIough tie y wereO bofth quilto inv'isiblo to1 tie (yV in tile dairkness5. It is well known that nlumy stars8, inlvisiibl to thle ('y', are r, s0o11 years aigo an1 adive'rliserneit (on tihe h1u11 of' thlo Great Easternl, 1' t~ irk< ii head, whichh hadl beeun tarr'e'i over so 1as to be0 inisible, was quito legiblo inl a phlotograiph whichl had bieen takenl of tile vessei,.-London Globo, Modest A bbe .)eilo, It is said thait the F- ench A ble Delibo onco hlad iln is hou1sf ho1( ld v'ory quiick temllpereid relativye, with wholm 110 s0111 someltimes~f wenit so far as to thlrow books at thle abhie. The abbe must ha11ve bieen a1 person~f of great amniaibility and self control. Onc(e, whlenl a parlticulaly large and hleavy v'olumo was thrown lat imi, 110 caught it gracefully) anid said: "My deair friend, I must b)eg of you to rieember thalt I prefer' smallller gifts."--New York Mail an~d Express. The average self-made man has relieved the Creator of - a grrnrt~ rnananihilit.v. THE DATE OF THE EXODUS. It Would Seem to Llo Inetwoon the Years 1430 and 1300 13. v. Although the monuments and papyri givo us no direct information upon tho mubject of tho exodus, they do indiroot ly indicato a certain period within whieb it must have taken pinco. Thoth lies I1, who wits tho most powerful king of that dynasty (the eighteenth) which finally drove the I Iyksos invad 3ru out of Egypt and refQunited tho wholo couintry under one sceptor, extended his coclusts as far as Mesopotamiia, over runiling Palestillo on his way. Hie left lists of the conquered nations, bit does iot mention the Israelites among them. Ranies II of tho nineteenth dynasty, the supposed oppressor, who reigned ibout 200 years later, also subdued Palestino and left lists of thoconquered peoples, but he, again, does not mnoii1 tion tho Israelites among them. What is perhaps still more impor tant is that, while the Israelites havt left records of invasions by Mesopota mianms, Moabites,Calianites, Midianmites tad P'.iihines, they do not mentioi it Iv in vasion by the 1gyptians, and the onclu4ion is that tho Israelites wor not settled ol tho west sido of the Jor dnI till after the wals waged by Ramtin. sess I1 at th coimioncement of his reign, which began not earlier than 13813 . C., or, as sono now *ay, 12L06 B. C. It has been iatteipted to explain thi. lifficulty away by suggesting that Ram Lsos 1.1 kept cloSo to the seaceas t on hi. march through Palestine and did not strike inland till h was sein distuni to the north of the Israelites, but it i. inconceivablo that lie should not lma:n secured his long line of communicatioini by estaliiiiing pusts so far inland thal they imu.t have been brought into con tact wilh tho Ilehrews if the lattir bm:e att that timo bcenii settled in their own cobt ry. The earliest date, therefore, at whiel the Egyptiam history will periniit ilt exte'u: to have taken place, even who fill al14~lowmwo is imdo for the tiln -spenit by flteJews inl thll wildeornevss aml in con(que ring Pilestine, vouititld scom c he about 1130 h. C., while, if tho:shortel hli-onlology ho molpted, it: Could no have b. . it inihAl ci-lier thanl 1.00 3) C.-Seibner's- Magaine. A1 Motnaut Hear Io ry. "outsin:t is a zol :ical gard'n ih its I 'ative sth.Juh 'ln l .i .1uthers. " We have atl ll(4 W ind o fwi htu , from griuzly hears andi priairi dotsg i down. Fp1almig of leurs reumii meo of once utponl at tiie. It wats hef4tir the stato got polluted by tho trolley and when it wasn't good form to weNz a collar. It was beforo Montana got i he the greatest state in the Union. was prospect ing away in the Bull mom tai ns. I hadn't seen anly dirt tl looked as though it had the right rill to it. Tho sin was turning in, Jni shadows were coming out of tho east. look tih phiack off on1e of 113' Iorse. picketed the animals andl(] made a sup per oft hot coiffe anid hacon and bread Then I coilt-dil up in a blanket and knmti no( moilre. The nighmt nmest have beeni hatl spent when I began to dream that wass washiig iiy face itn onl of tho gvy surs of the Yellowstone. The soniatioi became so realistic that I awoko. hot breath was breathing on my visage and a straingo tongm was swabbing 111 down. I was sort of dazud with fen and remaiied perfectly ut ill. Presenti; thle licking piroctssi cased, and thu h1( breathi was wiithdawnm. A hig. dark aw~ikwardd somethiing' shambled off, an I sank to rent onco 11101. When dau (enmo, I found thalt my pirovisioni ho lad been raided, and th11 soft earl avoumd imoi wasi full of hear tracks. shtiveired a little bit and1( mioved onl. Thie cotlonel told this as thlough Iho real ly wated to ho believ'ed, and the rc lporter loft. --Washington star. The now seiencoe or psychology wvil daetorino tihe mental~l laws exactly-thm laws (of the indivldual and oIf scity the lauws of aeuthetics, of eiducationl, . (ethics and~ of evermy human f'aculty. It will comtpel 11nen to1 live by tiheS laws, lwennlhs(, it wvill miake them plai t. all1 ien---as plaina as thme haw of grauv ity'. Thie world wvill then go forwatn becausei~ it will se(e ho(w. WVo shall the have ai higher mtainhoodi, beanuso It type w.ill1 be clear to us-. We shlut hlave it now art andl ai new litera:ture , b< caulso wve shalhl khnow the secrts of. boal ty. .Its standarttds shall 11( biroatder I proporltionl as thley shtall be tiruer. W~' imaiy thenl illicietltly loro (lurt un1fort' naito birt her. 1by knmowing ho0w toiil mai himl lovable, and1( how to mauke' hifti lo' ahlo1( to himti. Pstychloigy will seemi to mi tan wealt and ar11 it, wisd5(otimia t hem. P.sychoogy wvill miako ceducatic. iho chie function oIf govertmntent 1 4ivijtg eduen~ition~ a) hcopiO heretofo u conceived of.---McClaro's Magazine. F'nmil Freiy, pr-sidenit of I ho s r1gitutil th1iim the warnm oh 16. ~ lion. \ A the iiiingi ofh , I i it i. - hand, 1 Ia <>in ,Jiy 8, l 1), h Ien . Coeile:-acyt ad cofinIIEI inl Libb i 1i ji onR. lie left thet armyii at maltjor w ih record fori distimigiishied service, hi: w.itim a shat tered consti tuit i o.--Ch~Iicag Star photographly is one of the ga tedions era~'ItionlS known. In soin caSes te (exposumro of til)he lato muslft lai for1 several hours. D~uring all this [ini both tho1111 pltand telescope must I mol(ved 1)o thatt the imuago of the atua-r wi be stati'onary oni the platto. The exp sure of au star of the sixteonth nmtgni tudoh is tu.o hours, and only tho imnaj of (lie at au time can ho soeured unile thmoso adjoining happen to lbo of LI 50am1 size. -Elmcanige. .'As a drop0I of ink destr'ovs le1tter so one bad act nuimv ruin ehnrnefar it took vnnrai to buil UNCLE SAM WILL BE AT THE END o1 'THI FISCAr, YEAR. WHiERE WILL GOLD RicsERE, BE? '=Washington, Jan. 31.-In the e house, the last day of general ( debatelon the tariff bill opened f with a fair attendance in the v galleries and a rather slim at tendance on tlie floor. After the committees had been called on for reportsi, the house went into a committee ofi he whole to con. sider the tariff bill. The official statement of gov ernment receipts and expendi tures to b issued soon will show the expenditures for the first seven months of the current fis cal year exceed receipts by $46, 000,000. Receipts $175,0'r,000; expenditures $221.,000,000. If this i rate should be kept up through the .entiro fiscal year, the doficit would be $80,000,000, leaving the t treasury with but $4 1,000,000 of $l21,000,o0 with wvhich it enter. ed the fiscal year July 1, 1893, Mr. Tate, of Georgia, offered the first amendment to the in ternal revenue bill. It proposes to strike out the last three see tions of the bill which includes a tax of $1 a gallon on distilled spirits, and also the clauses re ferring to the bonding of distill ed sl)irits and their witidrawal f ronm the w a r e h 0 u s es. This would leave the existing law as to th1e spirits in force. Mr. Outhwaite offered the fol lowing tliemnilent . t on and Ifter the paLsage I (f tisii act, there shah I be levietd and collected ia tax on all distill ited spirits prodiced in the Uni ted Slates on which tax has not b)n paid elfore t hat (lay, per' piroof gauhll, or winme gallon whIon b.)elow Iroof, 90 cents if r paid within five days after 0h (date of distillation or entry into bond; $1 if paid after five days t tnd n ithin one v'ezar; $1.10 if paid a nfter one year and within two years; $1.20 if paid after two y and vithiun three years, and $1,:30 if paid after three Air. Onth waite's substitute for whiskey sectionis of the revoiue bill was defeated. Yeas, 42 nays, 87. Mr. Bland offered a substitute to permit distillors at expiration of the bonded period to pay into thei~ treasury the cost of expor undler aow present regulations, product to r'e'.en in this coun Stry. . Mr. Onthmwaite said the 1obs of - revenu le unider Mr. 131 a n d ' s scheme wvould be four tdimes the amount the treasury would re 1ceive under it. W \henm the hour of 2 arrived, the bill to repeal the election aw's was p~ostp)oned, and the debate on thie bond resolution - was continued, Senator lormuan having theo floor, replying to a Senator S hi o r am a n a~ previous -RlIgiouIg~~0(i4eie TakeI~ a Ulland Washmingoni, Jain. 3i *-Religi ous 05societies alppear to be mnak ing a systematic fight on wvhis key an h11(eer', amld desire to tax i t.hese a rtices to1 sneh a (1egree as to make themu prohiitory luxies I. Pet itIins presenmted dingI 1' iibe nloring iiby Senator/ 1 ulhal n and1( u other' ray that 4i4d . .nt's bS ni *l nme(P up m~' he( senat e, andl Senator .\ hh-n 'i took the floor' to rep~ly to 1)h( ar o gumnent oif Sonator Sherman. Found~ Dead In Hell Hole. at Waihalla. S. C., Febh. 1.-Yes C terdlay morning a young man's It body was f o i a n < in wvhat is 0 knowvn as Ulell Hole, where Hen drIix's miil and limo kiln is. .This young nwan 's name is Clem ~. Loedbetter and ho was from Ala baina, and had lived in this ie county about three years. 't'he "' body wvas supposed to have been lying there for several days. He must have boen trying to de a scenid the clift and fell and kill a ed1 himself. No inquest has yet d. been hold.---rennv11ln Nnwa. Raagersa Reseaesge4 rA.0ARA FArdS, Jan. urbines of he NU r company are no'7 iM r arnest, and the 8,800 ho, .aW levoloped from the vertical. ron the depths of a W85-o 0heol *pitsi turningthe pulp grind. re of the greatest paper making nachines on the American conti. ient. The official test of the leels was made Thursday, and ince then a small army of work. non have boon making the shaft i sonnoctions and arranging the ;earing to the various parts of the >ig mill. When the word was giv. )n to start the wheels they began ;o do their work magnificeptly. This is the first development of 'iagara's great tunnel power, and he big.turbines have proved a ,reat success in every particular. t was a fasoinating eight to see he ponderous machinory turn as f it wore mere child's play for it, nd set the vast network of shaft. ng, covering miles of space, whirl. ng without jar or friction. It is 6 groat achievoment forithe Niag ra Falls Paper company. Thero remains now only the )poxing of the general power house. wlhoro 5,000 horse-power turbines w ill operate 5,000 horse-power elec ric generators for tho transmis ion of power by electricity. This' >poning will take place June 1 md the event is to be celebrated )y Savants,.engineers.aud state of. icials. "When I started the plans for hoso wheels," said Professor E. Jo1yolin, "I was confronted with 1olditions that had never bee not hefore. The siue, the massive naclhinery necessary, and the tre. 1onIdous head of water made the kesign of these wheels a matter which threw meiwith a plunge in to uncertainty and untried prob. lome. 1 drow nly on the laws of c iiiee, iechan ics and hydraulics. Ti.ese wheels are scheduled at 260 revolutions to the minuto, which mioans the greatest spood ever at Lained by nassive machinery .in to world. At the test the speed reached was equal to 4,500 feet ,or minuto, measuring the circum erence of the wheels. This was >vor 40 revolutions ise xcess of the schodulo, and this was obtained kvithout opening the gates to the full extent. Of course, such a condition is due nmainlyjto the fact that gearing of the muun mill had not boon attached, and this will materially affect the revolutions." A Coloered Preaolser a a Peasion Freud. U 1A'P"A NOOG A, TENN., Jan. '80,. Tho Rox. ('. W. Lewis, colored, with nmany alianz. was committed to jilio to<ly by Special Pension~ hnnrFitpv-' .k, and the most gigantic 1..nsions frauds ev or known in the South have been unearthed, which will load to the arrest of probab~ly a hundred no groes implllicated with Lewis in swindlling tho government. Lewis himelf drew a fat pension and on evidence of his own manu facturo secured pensions for others. lie appleared as a witness in num blelss cases and stolo a notary's seals and forgod the names of no. taris to false affidavits. He has opeorato bo hre, in Kansas City, Now Orleans and other points. Thoiiro are twenty-asven charges against him up to this tii', and more are commig. lPAcoJAr, S. 0., Jan.- 31.---Ian relnce Tolleson, about 20 years of ago, committed suicide by shoot in g hi im self at Gowdysville, iyesten day about 5 o'clock. .:No known cuse f or the rash act e~xcept -the$ e' dlspondency and exessive ci. gariotto smoking. Mr. Tolleso~n had friends in Pacolet.. ,His un cle Gill Blarnott, lives here, and he spent some time visiting his fami. ly this winter,.--or. of Greenville News. The new form of postoffice mo. noy orders, to be supplied to offices throughout $he"country as fast as the old styles are used up, will have the name of the payee intro duced into the order, thus making the money order negotiable the same as a bank check. The Piedmont Headlight has ad. 4od to its tothree ladypin4ge