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ALLIANCE DEPARTMENT. /*'. MSIihT Julitor. We have I lie bill for our ties and think we are sureot them t his week. A Letter From Primus. Mr K liter : News is very searee ; 1 lie farmer- : re busy u;:ithcriti? their eroj they cannot e:el much news. l/rimus Allianee i- >t i'I alive and on a boom. W e had thirteen npplicali >!<-> :il our lasi ineel.ia; Vor membership. and o e\p*- I ing ;i? : ore t oi:r : :.t ni 'ol in?;. Brother W'iil urn stirred up the Alliance l?h"? 1 in some ol the brethren, and they have gone i*i_h 1 down to hard work to build up our noble order. \ fithk m>vi:htisi:mi:nt. W e have ordered our bagging and ties through the xehange and got them 1'or mueh less than we would have to pay the iner chants. We have an Alliance Kxehange and we buy through it and every Alliance ought to. even if he could get it Irom the merchants at the same price. Bretli reti, patronize the Alliance Fx change. Make your own meat at home ami let alone .so much ot this .six-cent cotton. Make your edibles at home and you don't need ?, make cotton. The dptf hot weather was broken up last Friday evening. About 4 o'clock a small cloud gathered over-head, came from the east and began to thunder slowly and in a short time there was a terrific storm which did much damage, unroofed my kite -mi and partly unroofed two crib and a stable. In fact there was not a building on the place but what it partly unroofed l?ut the shop. Pasture fences were also blown down. Corn is badly blown down and broken oil. It was accompanied with hail the size of peas which did no damage as far as I have learned. \n i joen on \ uoom. Dear pvide rs. I will fjive you some news about Antioch. We have the hull ot our lar^o church complete. It i- 10 bv <' '? feet and will seat about six-hundred peo pie. We have preaching twice a month l?v Kev. .1. S. Croxlon, our pastor. We organized with tbirteoi members and now mini 1 t-r thirty four?eleven wet" b.m I (./.el last S iturday :iu*l one re coived bv letter. 'lie o< the greale>t sermons wa<> |>r jK'lietl Siturlay tii_r!11 by our pastor that has ever lieen preached at Antioch?tiding as his text, the eighth verse of the third chapter ol lirsl John, i He that commit t et h sin is of the de\il for the devil sinneth from the beginning.) There was a large crowd present ami I never saw better attention gi\en in my life ?good is hound to he the result ot that sermon. We also have a flourishing Sabbath school with eighty scholars with our worthy and noble voiine hnatn.r W i? JStogner as superintendent. We have a prayer meeting in connee lion with r?ur Sabbath school also. Much good is bespoken for Antioch in the near future. R F. Adams. Transplanting Trees. Generally I should transplant deciduous trees in autumn or i spring as most convenient, with a little preference tor the spriug. i 1 have transplanted evergrees < only in spring. I should fear that 1 transpiration from the leaves dur- i ing the winter would so exhaust the moisture from evergreens as to kill them, writes a eorrespon | dent to t.ho Cultivator. The white ' ; pines (I*, strobus) set by a neigh- j : ijor last fall wore nearly all dead i this spring. So far as 1 have oh- . i served, a white frost upon the | i exposed roots of any tree, oven ; the hardiest, will kill it. Sunshine is also very injurious. I doubt if ; any hemlock can lit) innde to liv j after thirty miuutes of i right.) | sunshine on its completely ex posed roots, and 1 think it i- pret. tv much the same with the pine. I If deciduous trees ar,' trausplanted in autumn before all their leaves have fallen, oi in [spring alter the leaver, havoi started, the leaves should he mostly removed, in order to prevent tin* leaves from exhausting tlio 'moisture in the trees before the roots have made sufficient connection with the ground to sup- j ply the required moisture. 1 set a valued tree in a dry place in the spring. It started finely, and j then its leaves withered, and the 1 tree apparently died. 1 removed j most of its limbs and all of its leaves, well wet the ground about : it, and wrapped wet. rags about its body, and keeping the rags J and ground wot, the tree soon put i forth new leaves and grew finely. ' Trees transplanted from shade! into open sunshine should have! their hodi.es protected from the sunshine. Kvetl tho scattering' oaks I left when felling a forest ! were stunted for years. Transplanted trees generally (no noi irom iacK or rood, but from want of moisture. Trees] taken up with a good supply of I roots ami set in wide generous holes, with the well-pulverized soil cart fully closely packed i around their roots and sufficiently j moistened, will almost invariably , i live. They may or may not re-, 1 quire several waterings. This depends upon the soil and the sea-{ | son. 1 have seen a person when ( setting a treo dash a bucketful of | t water upon the earth on the roots,, so as to wash out the soil from among tlio roots and leave vacant places. This, of course, is all : wrong. It h well to set the tree i as it grew with regards to the points of tho compass. When the ; ground is well wet it is well to | | mulch the tree with straw, sawdust, stones or any similar substance which will keep in tho moisture and keep down the grass or weeds. As many roots are broken otr in taking up the tree, limbs should be clipped or taken nit' t r\ (inrrn r\1 Uat * l>- ... - ? - |w?? bu v-iii > v pt/iiUf Ji ni ill*."' Illitll^ leaves may require more moisture than the roots can furnish. Small, thrifty trees crown in the sun-i shine are generally preferable f<>r transplanting. The whole process is so simple that 1 am not aware that anv onehas written a hook on the subject. Mirth is left upon the roots when the tree is dug up helps to make it start readily and grow, l.ou< Ion n mentions the subject of transplonting in the "Kncyclopedia of Agriculture'' and Downing in "I.andseapo Hardening and IJiira) Architecture,1" note I.pagi to:,. 1 think lirown mentions the subject in his forester, and many treat the subject more or less at length. Downing in the work mentioned writes beau t lfullv of tho tulip tree on patre C?7 of edition of Istl. With all duo reupeor to tho city of Albany and admiration for its beauties, I ran bot think that Rome of tho trees in the compart park of tho beautiful ohl capital have been very cruelly amputated and deformed. i Wo are triad to have a commu-! nication from Bro. B. F. Adams thih issue, hope some of the re-1 porters for other subs will send us reports. Wo are very busy now and need your help. We weie triad indeed to see the Hopewell picnic so fully and admirably written up by Bro. W. f\ 0. | Come a^ain brother. WHY IS IT? Why did all thegoldbug slai masters of l.ngland and tl United States advocate ihe arti t ration treaty ? Because they lea ed if Amorica remained free tl title to their property in tl masses would be impaired. What title have they in tl masses? They have a mortgaj on the masses in the shape of va indebtedness, and by contractu the money of the world to go alone they make it impossible f< the masses to pay the niortuug and leave them no aitematn but to submit to inviduntarv re vitude. llow would the arhritratii treatv help the slave masters ( the I ailed States would cotlihii with I.:.gl \n ! again t the wor! why con id not Hug kind roa?onab expect to hold in permanent se vitude t!i > four hundred millioi of slaves whose unrequited toil a enriching the gold gamblers London. l)o you pretend to say th England has four hundred m lions of slaves? That is about tl number. There are about thr hundreil millions in India. The are ten or fifteen millions Northern Africa, and in Irelai and Liiclaml she has at le:i twenty millions of semi-slavi They are not \*-t reduced to tl same level of misery ami want the people of India and of Kgyj What do yon mean by slaver We mean the power to exact, ai the actual exaction, of the lain of one man by another wit ho just, compensation. Do the people of India hi Egypt labor without just compe sation? Yes, without any coi pensation whatever, except t miserable pittanee, necessary sustain human life under favc able conditions. I'nder favorah conditions they starve by tlie m lions. Do the people whom Englai enslaves starve liv the million Oh,yes. Eight or nine millio have already died during t current year in India, and it is i timated that ten millions mo must die from the same cause b fore they can supply themselv with food. How can slavery be aholishe The lirst step before theabolitb of slavery is the independence the I'nited States. The Unit' must cease to be an appendage Great Britain. Great Brita must not control our financi ( rent Britain must not be alio ed to hind us by contract to a her suppressing liberty in i parts oi' world. Independence,' the part of the United States,\v he a moral example that will tei to liberate the slaves of the ii perial power of (ireat Britai The fact that the United Stat would not enter into an alhan with (ireat Britain has envoi aged Uussia,Franco,and < Jerman to sot set up for themselves, ai fn??? to obey th?? mandates the imperial money power l-endon, 1;11?i:?, Franco and t ' nited State? can liberate t l our hand red millions of hum boincs which Fngland has ma slaves. What is wanted is imi pendenee of nations, not a cot lunation of nat ions to assist (ire Britain in extending her barbs ous rule in every part of the earl It the people of t he I' nited Stat couId regain control of their go eminent and take as proud position as the young republic d in its infancy a hundred yea ago, much would he accomplish towards the liberation of the h man race. But if Fngland ci control the ( nited States ai make seventy millions of peop subservient t<? her purpose of e slaving mankind, liberty on ear is lost. Will it Fool Tliem. Tho terrible distress of t country, which it has endured fi several years on account of t high price of *goM and the 1< price of property has aroused spirit of rebellion against t goldites before which they trei ble. Tho violent defense whi they are now making for the crimes they have committed v against the people under tho " sham pretense that gold contrac(1 tion has established confidence r and raised prices shows the ex|e tremities to which they are driven ie to cloak their rascality and shield themselves from an outraged people. They go so far as ie to claim that tho net of Provide dence which made short crops or st famine in every country but this, and raised prices hero, was the !*: benevolent worK of tho goldites, 1 and that Providence had nothing 1 to do with it. Such a false and sham defense for tho crime of re-I jducing the standard money of j ' the world to the single gold stand , ' red an I confiscating the property m i of the masses will open the eyes It | of the people to tlie hypocrisy am! ,,, { wickedness of depriving them of { ,},! an adequate ^upnly of circulating 1 v ' medium, t?> the end that prices i r j may ho stable and that justice u s may be done, p J OI The Time For Pruning. ! From Tho Huston Transcript. '1 ' "* | All the newly planted trees j 10 ' and scrubs should be cnrefiuly j <M> watcheil through the tirst year, | mil the irrotiiid rihniit tlu-ni L- i > ? ? t in . ; , (> [ open Willi n Moo or rake to pro-! isl mole their growth. They shouhl jH, j not he drowned by too much wane tor1 but, on the contrary, a dry as layer ol eatlh kept about them ?t. an inch or so in depth, through v y which the aircau got to the soil j and roots; water should ho applied only to keep the drought ut from going deeper. Many of'the ! dowering shrubs, as the .lapan ii(j! ese (juinco. the forsythia, etc., M whose tlowers are produced upon m. tlie last season's growth, should he 1>? trimmed now or not at all tin to til after their blooming. The sin >r- | of putting the knife t?> them in do the tall or early spring is one 1-! which shouhl he made an indictaI hie offense, as it naturally trus nd trates nature's arrangements and s? robs the community of the enjoyns men! of much beauty. Summer he blooming plants, like the syringia '8- ( l'hiladelphus), hydrangea, etc., re may be pruned in the fall or l0" spring, but all early flowering vaOfl I rieties require summer pruning. The pruning knife shouhl not be d? allowed in hands not guided by '" some intelligent idea of the na ture and requirements of the e,j! plants to be treated and the end to be accotnpliseed bv the onera 1 ion. Take the matter into your w[ own hands is the best advice ; a j(] little study will show what is ill needed, and then either do it on yourself or see it done as you ill know it ought to be. There is no ad mystery about the use of the !n" pruning (looks; it is simply a mat In- tor of common sense, es ce ~ * ** ir- It Saves the Croiipy Children, ?y.. , ,,, . I1(j M:\vti w, \ a.. ? We have a ( j' splendid sale on Chamberlain's ()j- Cough Kemedy, and our eustoi liuiru rtltiimr I nun l'ir uti.l ri * - ' l)p speak ?i it in tlio highest terms. ,ln Many have said that their rhil,j(, (irni well Id have died ol < roup if i(, ( hamherlaiu's Cough Uemedv n had not been given.? Ki:i.i.\m A ' m kiikn. I he and "?') rent sizes ir tor sale t?v ,1. ! '. Mackey A Co. I, and II. (Hough (Jo., Lancaster, es s- <' iV- 1 ' " " a I'lfo Storm \rtir the / 'art or ft. Messers. Fairchild Ilros. have lfj moved their stork of merchandise 0<' into the now store house recently u" i built by Mr. M. II. Johnson near 4n the factory, and Messrs. J. It. rj" i Walters A- Hro. are to open up a stock of heavy and fancy grocer " j ioB it) the Manns store house jufit j vacated by the above named brm. Mr. If. /. Norton ('upturn! In Tejra*. he Sheriff L. M. (Myburii left on r>r the afternoon train Monday for bo Marlin. Tex., to bring back one )W W. .1. Morton, of the Heath S{ ring ' a section, charged with breach of trust. lie will return about .Satnr "h day, possibly not before Monday. THE DHEAI)t:i) C?SI8|IMI*TI?JI^ iAX HE CUICEI*. T. A. Nlconm. n. (h? Client Ut >mi?I Scientist, Will Sfinl. I'ri'l', Til IM C ItottlCN ?! IIIn i>'?-wly DKciivrri'il ItoiiH'* Uit'N lo Niiffcrx. Editor Kntkhi'Hisk:?I have dis-^ covered a reliable cure for Constimp-C (ion and all bronchial, Throat and Lung Diseases, (Jeneral Decline, Loss of Flesh and all Conditions of Wasting Away, by its timely use thousands ot apparently hopeless cases have been cured. So prool-positi vo am I of its power to cure, that to make its merits known, I will send, free, to any alllicted reader of your paper,'three * hrittlcs of my Newly Discovered Itenie-^ dies upon receipt of Express and Fostoillce address. T. A SLtXTM, M. ('., Iks Fine St. New York. When wrilln tho Doctor, plt'.t-n me ithnn this paper. /?,r\ LADIES --" OR. FEUX LE EHUD'S vf 7 Steels Pennyroyal Fills 1 are the original and oniy J i Ht '-NrH, n"/j ii'nl n l tab!" euro S I?" 'lie market, l'rice, #t.<?i; neat ?by mail, (iinitino : old only bv erf ,in cte o fer k Itieiliiriuv |ivs|>it| tin. 1 il'tI k' "!tien, ' '' t li <' le' !> it h i. I .n it t ' mi; < nf nt. T> 'rale ''' " - I '>< i>. nii'l ill i'.i u-gunn-nt* of lie' tell in I'll, i.ivi r-t i|.| dm ,1. | r.l Tlit, MtM, t'romill. ' rv lipilirf. la l'uttli.1, litly Hini'sS..,'. built by uii eruKtfU!.., 3 S' rp)"F ' t SFOit EITHER SEX. ; - Uaw J Ct T1 In rcoie-ly being tn ' ".""ji-cit'il directly *?? tht> vti neat of thomo dlmcnsrs {w j1 ' tjh ?r the Crnitn-Vrtnary "i | orgnns, reouIrcM no , . 1 v . * " "Imnitr of diet. Cure - J ? ? ? - 4. ::nraiitecil in 1 to 8 : ir- rr d itys. Mmall plain i?nck, "a ,-ei <yc ino". !?y mall, V LOO w* 'ij' '-.s .ij holtl only by I .1. l'\ Maoltev & Co. and II. C. iloiigh & Co k ' i Examination of Teachers. | milE NKX I EXAMINATION OF i L applicants lor teachers* county certificates will beheld at Lancaster court house on Friday the 21th itist., commencing at 9 o'clock, a. in. > W. |i. llurcK, -T Co. Supt. Ed. Sept. 11th 1897. FKESg T BEEF ! ^ Having a Refrigerator in which I can keep meat almost icecold, I am prepared to furnish nice fresh BEEF every day. If you will leave your orders, beef will he sent to your home at any hour of the day, and in time for breakfast. W. F. YOUNG. July 28, lS97(3ui) l+r>h An Ui m an bVM V/l I I IUM1UM) Mange on Horse*. Dogs and all I stock. cured in HO minute* by I Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. This | never fail*. Sold by .J. F. Mackey tfc Co., Drimgist, Lancaster, S. C. * CASTORIA For Infants and Children. y II WAN'TKll Till" S'I'U'I UITIIV AMI ACTivo nonllomru or IiuIIi-m to travel for rtI h|m?ii<I till-, nxtulitlxlmil house III i ,ntlC isler Cniinii. Moiitiiiv "i'mii ami rx|>oine-< I'osllion hIi U'In Ui-f- retii i.ticloxe self-nililrossetl - *.1 in| .' i iiv. .iii*'. liir Iioininioii I oil.puny, i i/i j'-. * iiiv 'y . GlasseiV Specialty is Low Prices Hnrir! Groceries and UUUU <ON KKCTIONN. I Will <4?*lI pound* jjood tfrren (JoUce jfurfl. I poll ml of K. .1. K. Tobacco for 11 rents. .lust received, a nice line of Fancy Candies cheap. For Slates, Slate Peuciln, Pens and Ink, call on A. CLASSER. | one door north of L. Payneur'a. ^ I Strom l.oomh'if. I 1IF. ... u e art- now prepared to do al kinds of Laundry work, such as Ladies' silk waists, skirts, collar ! and cull's. Also men's shirts, collars and culls, al very reasonable prices. We will appreciate all orders entrusted to us, and guarantce satisfaction. ClIKSTKK StKAM JjACNDRY, Chester, 8. C.