University of South Carolina Libraries
4 r7--0 THE PEPLE'SJOU NAL V0'S. C., .HRSDAY, OCTOBER , REATEST STOR' Thrift, Truth and Square Dealing BUILT IT. What's the use of being a merchant if you can'1 buy and sell cheaper than others. Your six cents cotton will do the duty here of eight cents cottor elsewhere; so you are out nothing if you buy youi stuff at the new store. We are sending out living advertisements daily to that fact. This strong .chal from a re: ponsible firm. Look Sharp and . BUY liGIL 20 yards of Cotton Flannel, $1; 25 yards Checks, $1; 2t yard of Heaviest Checks sold, $1; 20 yards Outing, $1; 2( yards Bleaching, $1; 18 yards Heavy Red Twill all wool Flannel, $1; 7 yards heavy Jeans, $1; 4 yards heavy 33 1-3c Jeans, $1; 2 prs. of 10-4 Blankets, 98c; I pr. heavv Army Blankets, 98c; the finest all wool 1-4 Blankets only $3.-8 great variety of Woollen Dress goods, 10c to $1; a 46 incl' 50c all wool Surah Serge in black colors only 37 cents Broadcloths, 38c to $1. You can't afford to miss the new store. Let Us Shoe You Ladies' Dongola Button patent tip, $1; Ladies' Glovc Grain Button worth $1.25 for $1; Ladies' Fine Shoes, i,25 1.50, 2.00 and $3. Greatest assortment of men's, women' and children's Heavy Shoes in the city. Pay us a special visit; it will pay you. Very respectfully, . H MORGAN & Bno. 211 NORTH MAIN s1'1ET. HE IS A BORN PIEACHER. for the holiness people up town, but h -- changed his mind, and at the child An Atlanta Prodigy Who is Creating ren's meeting he appearec with hi a Sensation-He is an Anlerson Bible in his hand. County Boy. "I called him inside the chancel an The Atlanta Journal gives the fol he opened his Bible and read a lessor lowing account of a boy preacher, annourcing his text, 'Behold I stan whose .parents went from Anderson, at the door and knock. If any ma S. o. His father is a printer, and will open unto Ie I will enter in an worked on the Anderson Intelligeneer sup with him and he shall sup wit] for several years: me.' Atlanta has produced a prodigy in "The sermon that followed was the person of John Wesley Shields, an masterly effort for one so young, a( eight year old pupil at Fair street would have done credit to a grown-ul school who has developed wonderful preacher. He is i wonderful little fel oratorical powers. lowand is a natural orator and as fer They call him the "Young Sam vent in his delivery us if he had beet Jones" around St. Paul's Methodist trained for the ministry. church, on Hunter street. where he "About a year and a half ago he wai preached Saturday afternoon and yes- in our infant class and he seemed to de terday to -large and attentive congre- velop the idea of preaching from talk: gations. that he had with my wif. ie firs Johnnie sanitlgntlookinig lit- bea )ecigt h hlrni i tle black-eyed boy, and has all the airmohrsyd,adfmtatebea and dignity of bearing of a grown upprahnatcol,ndoweise man. He is still in the second grade vlpn noarglrMtoi at school, but is very fond of Bible pece. study and has learned his favorite Thpaetofhecidrebt chapter, John 14th, almost by heart,. epyrlgosPO)e i ahrb He has a alight impediment in his igalclMtoitpece,a speech, natural in one so young, but Jh elyhsbe ruh pi .when he gets under way his deliverymistraamope. is spendid and he is a very interesting lesest bobsrpua nw talker.edeaneernihbeoehsfte "If there ever was a born preachercoehm,JhnWsysumoe in the world heisone," said his mother, ters ftefml ofml ry who lives near the corner of Moorejutaifhweeamnro. street on Hunter, his father being a Ilsmtesashreinoth barber in the Kimball house block,.lgts eiyinhsmku n h "Hie has been preaching for a year andheiinarstnevyhnghth a half and anybody listening at himdosHesvrybihInvryw might think that he had been taught tn ak ihmc eiuns n what he know,, but this is not so. grvtabuhiclin,ndper "lHe says that whatever he utterstohvmaephimndstoi f God tells him to say, and lie never re- tievcto samnse ft p)eats the same sermon, but talks in agopl different way every time and his de livery is as free as that of a trained minister. iF11)Pt1t N HsSO. "We came from Virginia about a Et-Ltfo h peho in i - year and a half ago. My husband is 'er,o Rev. J. W. Shields, a local preacher Akas: connected with St. Paul's church, and "h,sr hnvr[ha n eight months ago John Wesley became teebnvln-okn tpbia a member of the church. This sum- pitcastligaotgtigbtc mer we went up to Ander-son, S. c., on ae notepckt fwrige a visit, and while there he preache b utn oemoe notepc twice in the Wesleyan church. jj fteanftuertheb mk "Saturday afternoon he preached at i~ i h r4cfrtelbrr the children's meeting at St. 1'aiul's,itfrenddowhtokl)aob and again Sunday aft'irnoon. [Hoeente0( a-e n i i 0 preached In nearly every grade of the Jh.lecle lh nadSilt school an'I seems to be a born oratorhi:'ysn haemdmywl and preacher."'n'sI a ehasmk o e Rev. Mr. Dimond, pastor of St. r otokwthgodlatIhy Paul's,has been conducting a children'sdoeb yo,Iwltllyui meeting on Saturday and Sunday after-lrviOn. Ihve gen y noons, and on Saturday afternoon hemy )rpry fevy ln a called on John Wesley Shieldls. The a)ono orUce,lnt i little fellow responded and preached a i pfryu't hc h o ClM very strong sermon of fifteen minutes Yu netos a,aegol u length, from the text "Be Sur e Your hv ydut fUce.in nlI Sin Will Lind You Out."''altesaet o,I ihyuwu "lie told the children," said Mr. Di-jstcagththigron-l mend, in speaking of the nermon,thlrorytoUceJmad1,))1 "that they might sow their wild oats Icteeeuo own tu o im aupi do evil deeds while they were young, but that they might rest as --Te atioeSuisutoi sured that their sins would find the or h ttmn ta rbbyt out. ods tto gn ntecut "He cited the cases of Tom Delk, Atr- pito evc sJmsA a thur Haney and young Spinks. 'See,' psmse eea fteUi said he, 'what a drink of free whisky Sae.H 'a pone gn cost Arthur H-anoy. It cost him hisAhetnHoadcuy,d.ont life, Bie sure your sin will find you out. Blioea( hi alod en It found those boys out and they wereo er tO n,acrigt h made to suffer. It will find you outjona,Ji;amstlaperont likewise if you continue in your sinful pyrl:o h onay foritheeroonnesaspoplerpritown,obutl who eardhim.Sunayaternon ha-Tre goomid,and isatk the ghld calle on aain, n'] t fist"h worn-it shimnesid otwhen chnees ai tol in tat e ad romse toprachtse oft heand arc shaon supwit BILL AlPS TALK TO BOYS. A Knowledge of l:verything is Esse tial-What Trees are Best. for V rious Purposes. -lore is a letter for the boys. I believe that even an imperfe knowledge of many callings renders man happier than perfection In at one and comparative ignorance of ii the rest. Great scientists, discovere and inventors seem to be necessary fi the world's progress and thn- r;ood mankind, but their work is general at the expense of their health at happiness. Sir Isaac Newton in h last days exclaimed with a sigh, have made a slave of myself." H great mind was always on a strain one direction. It is said of him thi he had a hole cut, in the lower part ( the door for his favorite cat to ent( and exit, and when she had a pair kittens he had two smaller holes cut ft them. The mind is like the body. must have a variety of food. It is lik the muscles in the arms or legs. only one set are used the others becom weak and will gradually perish awai I was talking not long ago to a leari ed judge, a man of fine judicial min and literary attainments, but who ai knowledged his very limited knov ledge of nature and nature's laws. hardly know one tree from another, said he, "excepting, of course, th chestnut, hickory nut and walnu Yes, of course, I know the pine and th oak. Indeed I have never had any o< casion to know more for I was raise it. town and books have absorbed me. I was ruminating about this bccaus our little girl's mother is teaching lie to draw and to paint, and I asked he to draw me a chestnut tree, an oak tre and a maple tree. She is working o thit i now and has to go out,and loo at them and examine the bark on th trunk, and the shape of the limbs an the leaves. I wonder how many boy and girls can draw a hickoey leaf witi: out looking at one. I should like t see their specimena. Thousands < boys, especially country boys, know a the common trees of their neighboa hood, but it rt (uires close and careft observation to describe them and poit out the di f rence. Now there are te different kin Is of oaksi in this countr3 but very few town raised people ca name half of them. Then there at different kinds of hickories and pint. and ash and elm trees, besides th hackberry, box elder, poplar, beech locust and cottonwood. IEugene L 11ardy was a very learned and scient lie I'rench man, but thoug ht that Amer can cotton grew on the cottonwoc trees and that. we gathered it by usin ladders. It is said that a Mr. Jackso of Atlanta, is trying to introduce tI ladder kind now and has got the tre up to fourteen feet high. The study of the trees and shrubs thisS)utIttn country isadeligtitlfI instructive recreation for young pC ple, and I wish they would pny mo attention to it. Of course this stu( requires Some knowledge of botan but that is casily acquired. This kit of knowledge is more useful and mo comforting than a college smatterir of calculus and conic sections at rhetoric and logic. I do not beliei there are ten men in Bartow couni who would know ginseng it they wei to see it. Not many more know whi is fath,or greybeard or white ash, tli medicinal shrub from which old A. ( Simmons first made the original Sin mons liver medicine in Gwinnel county. I know about that, for who I was a young merchant I sold the firi he ever made and continued to sell for hit for several years and he tol me what it was made of. I thinl though, that the father graybear gave out about the time the old ma died. I wish that our young peopl1e woul acquire habits of observing thing morie closely as they journey alon through 11fe. Some people see ever' thing and sonic see nothing hardi When should trees be cut down thi are wanted for wood? What kind < wood is the strongest and will bear tlk greatest burden ? What kind is tt most elastic? What kind the hardet to sllt? WV hat kind will last the lone .est in the ground? What kind mnoi suitable for pianos, chairs, furniture c wainscoting. What kind for mauls< wedIges or canes? Dr. Oliver Hlolmi must have studied all about these whc when lhe wrote the "One Hoss Shiay." "Soi the dneacont inquired of the villar folk IW here lhe could tIind thle st ronigest oak, iTat couint hie spilht nor lient no b11.rok4 TIhat was for slinkes and flor and sills; lIe sent for lanicewo od to make te thliihI rTe cro,ssba,rs were ash fromt the stratighte: trees; The panels were whtite wood thta t us lii cihiese, And 'the hubi s of logs from thle sefttlet elm." But pierhaps D)r. Holmes got it a from some old honest wagon miake for they know. I'll bet Mr. 13radhe of our town, can answer evemry q uest,io The boys ought to find out that blac locust and chestnut and osage orang make the best p)oets, and black gul the best hubs, and persimmon the bei wedges or' gluts, and sassafras the bet bows,and a hiteoak the best baskets. ] l'ongland it, Is claimed that a yew tr< pnst will last longer than an iron on T1heo boys ought to know that the bari of all trees are nonconduictors of het and cold1 and keep them cool in sue mer and warm in winter, and the gret leaves are the I ings that Inhale ti carbo;n from the air and not only mail lwood for the tree, but purlify the a Smosphere t hat we breathe. Ar hence every habitation ought to ha' tu trees abiout It. The boys ough ii to know about those beaut,iful islanm " in the sea that are of coral formatli ,t, and1( kept growinog until they got abo' the water, and then some cocoanu camne floatinog along andI hlodged thci 111and sprouted and grew anti the leav' e of the trees fell dlow n and roitted at n made a soil for more cocoanuts, and ~, course of time the islandl became di paradise. Th'iat is the test,imony of tI it rooks. Tihte boys should wat,ch ti e little gassomer ball that Iloats away b.1 the air from the sweet little dandelb ~t pla.> 9o lIght and feathery that e would s..~ a thousanid of thetm weigh an ounce 'nd yet the seed a there for more plants and they a wrapped, as it were, in a blanket -protect thetm from the winter's eol tSo it is with the seed of the Scott thistle thati lon abou by a b,.oa of air like it was nothiag, b ut it ha the germ, the embryo of life In it, an will find a lodging place somewhere an< sloep until spring, and then make n mistake. It will not come up a dande lion, but will surely make a thistle In the horticultural gardens at Londoi are raspberry plants that came fron a seed found in a man's stomach who ha< been buried 1,'100 years. 11 Study nature a little as you gt .a along, bays, and it will make you wisei >r and butter and happier men. Find ou ) why it is that a dead bird weighs mort Y than a live one and by what f'rce 01 'd power a buzzard can sail round ant is round in the air above you and nevei q bat a wing nor wave a feather. s it i'nt every boy who can be a I3g> n I!ranklin, but every buy ,an learr something every diay, and oven ot ) fact a day will in course of time muak( it him a wise man. What a boy wa: )Franklin! What a man! The young r est of seventeen shildren, apprenticed a to a candle maker, next to u printer ? ran away from J3o,ton to Philadelphiu f when seventeen years old and hired tc a Mr. Read, and fell in love with Debo rah, his daughter; was never idle; read and studied in every leisure moment; l mastered French, Italian, Spanish and Latin; became postmaster of l'hiladt.1 phia, then postmaster general of the I colonies; established the l'hiladephin a library, the Philosophical Society e and the University of Pennsylvania, and not long after he drew lightning e cIown from heaven with a kite and it string and a key. What a man he was! What a boy! 1I31LL At'. r ''ALK ABOUT' COUN'1'itJi"tI'IiS. e The Chief o' t lie Unitel States Secret t Service Talks About thle Makers o k Spurious Money. U Washington Star. A counterfeit of the $5 United Statcs s silver certilicate, series of IS96, has been forwarded to the secret service bureau at the treasury department I from Chicago. It is the first that has been received since last .anuary, and experts declare it a clever piece of work which would not be detected as a counterfeit _xccpt under clcse scru tiny. It has a number of points about it which stamp it as being spurious, but which would not be noticed by the laity. " I had been expecting this note to e turn up for a long time," said Chief Elazen of the secret service bureau te a Star reporter today, as he shoved the counterfeit note across the table tc ibe examined by the reporter. "I air rather surprised that we have not se g cured it before. "1 It comes from Chicago, and fron e certain earmarks which I can detec eabout It, it It the work of a note< counterfeiter by the name of John Al o f.redJ' oog. L'Koog is a ;wed bw,u .35 years of age, and rather clover as i note maker. He escaped from Joile e prison, Illinois, last March, where ht hy had been sent from Chicago for cout i terfeiting, with two other men. The3 were coin makers, named Jacob John I son and James Poley. They were re i captured and returned to the prison but so far L'Kuog has eluded watchful ness of the olicers. " Ever since his escape we have beeq looking out for some of his work, and it just turned up. When a man has started in the business he ruver quits it, uniess by force of circumstances. " It is only reasonable to suppose that L'Koog would return to his old haunts and occupation in Chicago, and the tsupposition proved cor:-ect. " Tbc last counterfeit, note we re ceived was from Chicago also. It was a $20 Manning head certificate, and turned up Jan 11. The Windy City is a cee.ter for counterfeiters, as the d workers have often been capitured there.' T 1he chief sat in his p)rivate ollice in Sthe treasury building, about which clings an air of mystery connected with everything pertaining to the sc, cret service. Oin the walls were pie C ures of famous makers and shoverm eof " the queer." More were held in cabinets and recordls, which if re vealed would cause sensations through out the United States, were hidden in boxes and carefully filed away. r " onefies ih etre the n orally q1uiet, not often immor'al or con vivial, and are naturally very reserved, It is to their Interest to he reticent. It c Is a paradox, but there areO never t,hieves among them. What I mean is, w hile they follow counterfeiting, which 'is one of the worst erimnes imaginable, .they would not rob or buirglarize. n Many of them have been known to be exceedIingly charitable though it mnay :e lie said if they are successful they can ,easily3 afford to be so. They are r smilder class than that of any ot,ber criminals. They never cause trouWi ii In any community wherever they miu,y r, happen to be outside of the counter ~, felting. '.' There is not so many women in the k business as formerly ; why, cannot just e be explained. There are few female? n in it now, and those who are engagedi it In the business co-opierate) with their It husbands. T1he nian generally mamke n the money and t,he woman passes it, e as she dloes not find so much trouble in L'. doIng so. :s "' T1here is more coining of the <pteer bt In the West and South west sections ol i- the country than In t,he others. it n probably started there and has con. tC tinued. It is iransmit,t,ed from father :e to son, just like any other trade, and t- Ilourishes in much the same manner at d does illicit distilling. 'o "It Is a mistaken idea to supIpost it that counterfeiters, as has been stat,ed, ls buy silver and mak,o it into coin, thre mn by gaining the profit which the st,amt ro is supposed to add to it. Not by an) ts means. A counterfeiter will not pa) .c 60 or 62 cents an ounce for silver wher as lie can get the same results dlilferently (d lHe bunys antimony, tin, plaster of parli n and other materials, the whole outfil a lcosting about $1.50, andl wit,h these he ocan get (out coin to the face value o ue $200 or $300 Tlhey wish to make at In much as possible out of as litt.le as pos mC posi ble. It " We recognize the wvork of individ t,o ual coin counterfeiters by the manei re in which the coins are finished, as t< t,he milling on the edges, andI othei to Idetails. It is very seldom that, we arn d. mistaken In this respect. l'vory oni sh has his own mark. .h I "The bigest capture we ever mad 3 was that of the Brock way-Brad fords I gang In IlIoboken, N. J., in 1895. There I were six members of the gang, In eluding the notorious Mrs. Abbie - Smith, who is ; ow serving a four year 0sentence in the New Jersey poniton tiary at Snake [ll. The woman made i the notes. She was cousin to )r. I Bradford, one of th9 prime movers of the gang. " We swooped down upon thetn in r iiohoken before they had a chance to -put any of their bills in circulation. 3 We captured notes of all denomina tions on United States and Canadian banks, figuring up to the value of $750, 000. Many of the bills were In alpartly finished state, but the work was ox p" "eedingly clever, and would have passed 'T.bution almost anywhere. iblast case '*itad was a man and woman arrested recently for coun terfeiting dlimes in Brooklyn." The chief opened one of the cabinets fixed so that leaves in which photo graphs were fixed of noted counterfeit ers easily swung outward. Thero were more than 1,100 photos in this cabinet alone of the queer people. They were of all ages, colors, classes and appear auces. Some of them were women well dressed, with in many cases re lined faces. The countonances'of a number of the men were handsome, the expression pleasing and intelli gent. Chief Hazen pointed to the picture of a young mian, with an open, smiling face. "That fellow Is a college student," he said, re llectively. " He came of an excellent family. lHe is now serving a several years sentence in Indiana for raising notes. - When his term expires he will probably return to it." So he went through a large list, toll ing of the crimes and deeds of the originals of the photos. It is an album of faces which is a notable one, and the chief frequently inspects them so that they will not fado from his memory. TPY 11011) FEVER AND 1)ROPSY. Iaw Onions a Curative Agent in Both 1)lseases. Mr. John it. Cox, a citizen of 13alti iore, publishes the following comunu nication in the Baltimore American : "' Sometime since a gentleman in formed me that he knew of several persotns who had been enred of typhoid fever, by the application of mnashed raw onions to the feet. Two patients were so ill that they were not, expected to live over a few hours. Six large onions were pounded to pulp and ap plied to the feet of the first patient. Ie was relieved in a short time and got well. The second ease was at few weeks later and the result was equally - satisfactory. The first opportudi$i.) had I tried it upoti a colored boy it ' i ing one of my visits to the house of reformation for colored children. l Ie was very ill with typhoid fevor. I - named the matter to General Horn, who immediately ordered the applica tioun. In a few hours he got to sleep; rested well and recovered. The next opportunIty was that of a son of a frlend of mine in our city. I called to seo h in on business when he informed mo his son was very ill with typhoid pneu monia. He had been delirious for a week or more, and required constant watching for fear he might do himself harm. I advised him to try the onions. lie d id so and thus speaks of it : " im mediately on its application he began to improve and continued until he Ii nai ly recovered." Perhaps they might be ellicaciou's in other forms. The rem< dy is simple and safe, and a trial in any case can do no harm. They have cured dropsy. Mr. Ralph Brunt, a very respectable, reliable gentleman, informed mc that his wife had suIfor ed for a long time wit,h dropsy. She was swelled from her head to her feet. Shec was attended by dilferent, physi cians. who finally said :' MIr. Brunt, we can do no more ; your wife cannot live. We catn give temporary relief by Lap ping her.' Ils wife deLclineCd the opera tion, as It would but prolong her su f ferings. At this time his attention was called to a p)aragraplh In a newsp)aper in which a gentleman made the stat,ement that he had been cured of dropsy by catting onions. iUls physicians had told him that he could not live. One day he wanted to eat some raw onions and did so. A fter eating them he felt better and tried some more. lie then made it at rule to eat six a (lay, and in a few weeks he wats well, iIe felt it his duty to publish it for the benefit of others. Thus NIMr. Brunt knew of It,. le called the attention of his wife to it. She was willing to try it ; did( so, and at the end of one week discharged her nu rse, attended to) her household dluties, and was so reduced in size.' that her' frien3rds could scarcely recogniz.e her at first sight. She lived for more than :30 years afterward, and died somo1 years ago oveor 80 years of ago. If the foregoing pr~oves the means of benefiting anyone, the only regret, I will feel will be that I did not at.tend to the promptings of duty sooner." Tru-: GAMi-: I.\ws.-The following sect,ions from the revised statutes and the statutes at large, w ill prove of in terest to a great many p)eople in this se'ction just at this time' Section -132. it shall net be lawful for any person in this State,'hotween the first dlay of April and the first day of November, in any year hereafter, to catch, kill or injure, or to pursue with such intent, or' to soil or OXposo0 for sale any wilId turmkey, p)artridge,qjuall, wood cock or pheasatnt.s, or between the first (lay of March and the first day of Au gust any dove, or at any time during the year to catch, kill or lnju"e, or to pursue with such Intent, by firelight, any of the birds named in this section. And atny person so doing shall be doomed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be fined not more than $20 or he imprisoned not more than 30 days. Sec. I, (act 1893.) That it shall not be law ful after the passage of this a('t to sell or expose for salecany partrIdge, qiuail, woodcock or pheasant, deer~ or wild turkey, within the State, for the space of fi ve (5) years. A ny person so doing shall be doomed guilty of a misdemeanor, and 'upon conviction thereof shall be0 finnd not more than ,ten ($10) dollars, or uc imprisoned not more than ten (10) days for each of , fenan. We Expect o Try Ourselves THIS FALL If you do not get to E!asley before Fall, you must not fail to come to see us. We give to one and all a cordial invitation, and will take great pleasure in showing you as nice and as cheap line of' goods as it has ever been your good fortune to see in these parts. We are preparing for a big fall trade, and shall'e'deavor to make it to your in terest, one and all, to- give us your patronage. We are now oliering Some Rare Bargains - - - In unseasonable goods. We certainly can interest you ! We have one lot of Men's i"ur lats, ranging in price from $1.2.5 to $1.75, all to go at 98c. each. We are beginning to receive our 14ALI. GOODS, and say right here that it will pay you to hold to your dollars until you can got to the tacket, and know for yourself how much you can buy at the RACK 1I' STOtl for on0 dollar. We are aware that our competitors are not stuck on us much, 1. o., not in love with us. But be sure you do not stop until you are safe in the Store where you can buy what you want and as cheap as you can buy any where. Wishing for you, one and all, good succes, and William Jennings Bryan's l'roo Silver, with Uncle Sam's seal, . Pluribus Unum, we are your servants to please, NEW YORK RACKET STORE Enislby, 8. C. CLYl)E & NA l,LY, Proprietors. -1835. - Carriages - Buggies - Harness. WAGONS! WAGONS! BUY W AGONS! . THE AGONS BEST [VA GONS! WI G OiVS! THEY ARE MADE AT GREENVJLLE COACH. FACTORY. W. G. SIRRINE, Supt. - - - H. C. MARKLEY, Prop. TI'] A ILittI:IRS' COLLiEGE. lual ification; Athletics should nov trench upon the serious and sober Inaugural Address or'Oleumson't New work of the college. President-Thie Duties and Rtepon. "I favor everything that tenda to Ubil%ties or I(s olR;c, promote the spiritual interest of the college. Character is the ultimate ob The new >resident of Clemson Col- ject of education. Christ is the 'con lcge, Rev. H nIry S. Hlartz.og, has en- descension of divinity and the exulta tered upon the dutics of his ollico, and tion of humanity.' Character based on in accordance with his own request, that Christ Is lasting. In derision, an the inaugural ceremonies wore in- inscription in Latin, Greek and He formal. At the chapel o.xorcises on brew was placed over the crucified Re the morning after hid arrival, Col. M. door. TIhat inscription read: 'This lH Hardin in his usual pleasant style, is the King of the Jews.' The Romans introduced the newly elected p)resident were the highest exp)onents of brute ~nd welcomed him on behalf of the force; the Greeks of mental fore the 'acuity and students of -Clemson Col- Hebrews of spiritual force; and Seu ego. Christ is the perfect exuonent of all l'resident llartzog replied substan- K(ing of body, mind and'soul. ~ialy as follows: "Young gentlemen, there is my "I realizo. the grave resnonsibility ideal. When these magic words, ,hat rests upon me, and 1 feel the need 'Clemson Graduate,' are stamped uponI )f the hearty co-op)eration of the stu- the brain, I would have him stand be lents. D)own in the secret infoldings fore the world a king of body, king of >f your hearts is burning a decsir'e to mind, and king of soul. riake Clemson the foremost college in Permit me to acknowledge the debt Ghoc south. You have it in your p)ower due my dIstinguished p)redecossor, Mr. so gratify t.hat amhition with an on- Craighoad, who guided this institutioni shusiastic. faculty, selected from the through the perilous priod of organi nost talent in the United States, with -zation, and to Prof. Iardi n, who has ')ildings and ((iuip)ments to satisfy shown a master hand for the past few aver'y demand, supplortedl by a gen- months. I come not as a revolutionist, ar'ous legislature, guided by faithful but an a co-worker, to carry on the brustees, idolizod by a confident pat- work. I come to consecrate hand and eanage, the responsibility for the fu- heart to Clemson." (A pplause.) lure rests largely with the student riody at Clemson. _ "The world will judge Clemson, not ---''Whrsoat he annual? msedn Dr. )y its promises, not by its catalogues, Ite Amrican ca hienlcecingofa "ut by its fruits. Young gentle men, tio he or Sol fornc ssoughta-o you will go forth as living opistles, ion.Sh l for soulhen, for rhomanc, for road of all men. if you go as scientif tle tyv, for boimen t,frrmneo rarmore,s, to convert bleak hills~ into beuy o e. She is for this world blooming fields; as skilled mechanies to amnd for other' worlds. She is for all barnest the laughing waters and turn time and after time. She is for mom Ghe wheels of industry; as soldiers, ory and for hope. She is for dreams shpeet,aould itbcm eesb,beauteous. She is for poetry and art. L,o lead our p)eop)le into 'reluctant but Sei o h uflieto h ua rightful war;' as scholars to guidoe the Imagination. She is for the-household curn fmdr huh-h i-and her mate. She is for everything sion of Clemson will be justified. thae is forh aythn. She is rlhe.n "I have an abiding faith in the young leiserft. She is for mmer ando men of South Carolina. I am firmly heavnt h sfrsme n o persuaded that the Clemson cadets oitr. She is for the glory of the realIze their noll opportunity. I world, which would be intlerable would have you feel a proprietary in- without her. She is for all delicacy terost in th Iefar of Clemson. I andd dantiness. She is for youth, for would have you feol that the successmdleg,foodae. h fr of Clemson means your success in life, the merry hearted and for the weary and he ailro f Gemsn mansyoufooted. She is for light. She is the adefailure o f Ce so.ensy u crown of creation, the consummate "in my educational platform are -mastric ofnature. three main lanks. - -- "in the fIrst place, I favor everything -Ex-President Grover Cleveland that conduces to accurate, cotr prolien. had declined an invitation to lecture sive scholarship. Learning is the next winter in the young m'.n's course chief business horc. Lord Birougham at Jamestown. "You may be sure," has said: 'An educated man is one he writes, "that if I could bring myself who knows something of everything to the conclusion to lecture anywhere, andl everything of something.' At I would choose .Jamestown as the place Clemson a broad fomindation of general in which to begin the new departure. knowledge is laid, and on that is Inasmuch, however, as I have deter erected a superstructure of special mined not to enter the lecture field, knowledge. I feel constrained to deline your "I favor everything that promotes gratifying invitation." bodily development. I heartily sym pathize with the miuitary feature, be- -Naturd has given to men one oause it is a meana to an end. I stand tongtie t two ears, that we may hear' (or college athletics, but with this ftomnotiora twice as much as iesa nna