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3 7 A. C. JONES, Pub. and Proprietor. j Family Paper Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, News, A riculr, Markets 85c. B VOL. XXII. NEWBERRY, S. C., WEDNESDAY, JANTARY 13, 1886. THE HERALD AND NEWS. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY AT Xewberry. S. C. TERMs.-One year, $2; six month $1; three months, 50 cents; two months, 35 cents ; one month, 20 cents ; single copy, 5 cents, payable in advance. Expirations.-Look at the printed label on the paper; the date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Forward the money for renewal at leasi one week in advance. Subscribers desiring the address ol their paper changed must give both the old and the new address. TERMs OF ADVERTISING.-$1.00 pel square the first insertion, and 50 ets. pei square for each subsequent insertion. A square is the spacer of nine lines of solid brevier type. Notices in local column 12jc. per line for each insertion for one month, longei at Inch rates, w.th 25 percent added. A reasonable reduction made for ad vertisements by the three, six, or twelve months. The Source From Which the State Derives Her Revenue. 1,740,281 acres of land and build ings thereon, valued and. returned at $58,449,207. Real estate in cities - and towns, $29,199,935. Personal property, $47,060,875. Railroad property, $15,263,348. Total amount of taxable property, $149,973,365. On - this amount a tax of 51 mills is levied fvr State pur poses, which should yield $787, 360.16j. It is estimated that the Phosphate Royalty will yield $150,000. Total ince returned and estimated, $937,360.16j. Of this amount Newberry County will be called upon to pay $23,178.09, on a taxable property divided as follows: 373,165 acres of land and buildings thereon returned at $2,288,480; real estate in city and town, $556,580; personal property, $1,398,330, and railroad property, $451,254; total $4, 416,779. The total net receipts of the State treasurer, for the year end. ing October 31st, 1885, were $968, 383.63, which after paying the ex penses lor the year left a surplus of $234,191.75.' In addition to the State tax of 5t mills, Newberry will be required to pay the two mill Con stitutional School Tax, and for County purposes as follows :* * Except in the County of New berry, where it shall be three and one-fourth mills; of which the pro. ceeds of two and three fourth mills shall be applied for ordinary County purposes; of which the proceeds of one-half mill shall be'applied to the payment of the funded indebtedness of the County." Making a total of 10) mills for all purposes, a reduc tion of 1} mills on last year's levy. Where the Money Goes. GOVERNOR'S OFFICE. Salary of Governor.......$3,500 Private Secretary .1,500 Messenger........400 Contingent fund........ ... 4,000 Stationery and stamps. 250 LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR. Salary of................ $1,000 - OFFICE sECRETARY OF S>TATE. Salary Secretary of State. . $2,100 Clerk .............. 1,500 Contingent fund............250 Stationery and stamps.. .. ....250 OFFICE COMPTROLLER GENERAL. Salary of Comptroller Gen'l. $2,100 Clerk.. .. .. .. .. . .1,500 Bookkeeper....... 1,500 * Contingent fund .. .. .. .. .. ..300 S Stationery and stamps.. .. ....250 7 Printing blanks, &c. .... .....200 For examining the books of County Auditors and Trea surers.... .... ..........600 OFFICE STATE TREASURER. Salary of State TIreasurer . .. $2,100 Clerk............ 1,500 Bookkeeper....... 1,500 Bookkeeper Loan a:>;,Department . . .. 1,500 Contingent fund............250 Stationery and stamps... .. .. 20 sTATE HIOUSE AND GROUNDs, Salary of keeper. .. .. .. .. ....$500 J.nitor.............160 Two watchmen. 800 Repairs state house. ..... ....200 Improvement State House grounds................. 200 OFFICE ATTORNEY GENERAL. Salary of Attorney General. $2,100 Assistant Attorney .General. .. ......1,500 Contingent fund. ...........200 Stationery and stamps. 60 Expenses of litigation .. .. ....4,000 OFFICE sUPERINTENDENT OF EDU CATION. Saayof Sup.rintendent of Education. ..............$2,100 Cotngn fund............200 Sttoeyand stamps. 150 Books and blanks for pubile schools.*.... .... .. .. ... 80 Expenses State Board Exam -iners.... ................30( 4tonducting Normal Institutes 1,50( ADJUTANTGENERAL'S OFFICE. layof Adjutant General. $1,50( State armorer. . ..0. 50 Ordnance Sergeant 400 Contingent fund ........... 150 Stationery and stamps...... .150 Expenses Adjutant General's Office........ .......... 1,000 Maintaining, militia........ 14,000 Confederate rolls.......... 500 JUDICIARY DEPARTMENT. Salary of Chief Justice..... $ 4,000 2 Associate Justices 7,000 8 Circuit Judges... 28,000 8 Circuit Solicitors. 12,500 Clerk Supreme C'rt 1,000 State Reporter.... 1,000 Librarian Supreme Court.......... 800 Messenger Spm. Ct. 250 Attendant Spm. Ct. 250 Contingent fund Supreme Ct. 500 Books Supreme Court ...... 1,000 STATE LIBRARIAN. Salary of State Librarian .. $625 Contingent fund........... 200 Stationery and stamps...... 200 Purchase Supreme Ct. Rp'ts. 450 REGISTRATION AND ELECTION. Salaries Supervisors Regis tration.... ............. $7,000 Blanks for general election. . 800 Books and certificates super visors registration....... 2,000 Commissioners and managers of election for per diem and mileage ............. 20,000 HEALTH DEPARTMENT. Salary health officer, Charles ton........ ............ $1,800 Health officer, Hilton Head. 800 St. Helena... 800 Georgetown. . 500 Keeper at Lazaretto hospital 400 Buildings at Port Royal. . .. 200 State Board of Health...... 3,000 Maintaining quarantine.. . . 1,600 Repairing keeper's building at quarantine station at Charleston........ ..... 2,575 PENITENTIARY. Salary of Superintendent. . .. $2,100 'Thysician . . . . . . . 1,200 Clerk............ 1,200 Captain of guard. . 1,200 Chaplain......... 600 LUNATIC ASYLUM. Salary of Superintendent. . .. $3,000 Per diem and mileage, regents 2,000 Insur -,ce of buildings...... 3,000 Support of................ 70,000 Purchasing books for patients 50 Centre building............ 41,110 Repairs on new building. .. 700 SOUTH CAROLINA UNIVERSITY. Salary of librarian .......... $ 500 Repairs on buildings.. .. .. ..1,000 Insurance on buildings.. .. ..1,000 Support of schools. . ... . ...15,000 Salary of assistant professor of agriculture........... 1,700 Salary of professor of applied mechanics....-..........-300 Equipping department of ap plied mechanics..........1,200 soUTH CAROLINA MILITARY ACADEMY. Iusurance Citadel buildings. $ 400 Support beneficiaries....... 20,000 DEAF, DUMB AND BLID ASYLUM. Support of............... $10,000 Insurance on buildings. 331 Drainage... . ... .. ..... .. ..200 Purchasing organ... .... ... 1,200 CATAWBA INDIANS. Support of................ $800 LEGISLATIVE DEPARTMENT. Per diem, mileage and sta tionery certificates.. .. .. $30,000 Pay officers and employees.. 5,000 Contingent expenses, Senate 400 Contingent expenses, House of Representatives. .. .. ....600 Engrossing and enrolling de partment........ ....... 2,500 Public printing........... 15,000 MISCELLANEOUS. Civil contingent fund...... $1,500 S. C. Agricultural Society. . 2,500 Columbiai water works. ..... .1,000 Repairs executive mansion 700 Completing consolidation.. 1,000 Harbor master, Charleston..- 1,100 State board o'f equalization 1,000 Muster roll of soldiers of the Revolution............300 Artificial limbs............ 9,000 Interest, consols. .. .. .. .. .352,796 deficiencies... .. .. 27,028 Ag. College scrip. . 11,508 Claims passed............. 3,000 County Auditors' salaries. .. 21,900 Total amount of State taxes $932,144. To this must be added the County taxes and 2 mill school tax. "What is worth doing at all is worth doing well," and this is true in legislation as in other things. There is too much hurry at the capi tal just now, and there is also too much bowling about the people's mo ney. The people are perfectly will. ing to allow reasonable time for the Ibusiness of legislation, and they will have to pay expenses too. The superlative anxiety about their mo Iney is altogether with the politician the man who is afraid that he has Inot merit enough otherwise for re Put the Blame Where It Be longs. If orr respected contemporaries, the Greenville News and Newberry Observer, will point out to Governor Thompson how he is to get the mo ney to have the enumeration made with the Constitution so explicitly commands and the Legislature has so persistently refused to comply which, we have no doubt the Governor will be more than willing to obey the constitutional provision. He ex pressly called the attention of the Assembly at the session before the last to the necessity of providing for the enumeration, and it refused to appropriate a dollar or to make any law for the taking of the enumera tiou, leaving the method provided by the General Statutes in that behalf without a dollar to put it in execu tion. When the time passed for the reg ular discharge of the work, and it be came the duty of the governor under the Constitution, so requiring him, to have an enumeration made, he sx pressly asked such an appropriation at the hands of the legislature rs should enable him to obey the law. In connection with this matter the Governor said: "The Attorney General advised me that 'such enumerations cannot, under existing laws, be made in ad vance of an appropriation by the General Assembly to defray the ex penses.' The Constitution imposes upon the Governor the duty of hav ing this .numeration made, and I I recommend that such suin be appro priatad as may-4be necessary for the purpose." What more could the Governor do ? What more can he do now ? He has no right to draw a dollar from the Treasury without an appropriation granting it. The Constitution says, Article 2, Section 22: "No money shall be drawn from the Treasury but in pursuance of an appropriation made by law." Again, singularly enough, it re peats in Article 9, Section 12: "No money shall be drawn from the Treasury but in pursuance of ap propriations made by law." Section 10, same Article, provides: "No scrip, certificate or other evi dence of State indebtedness, shall be issued, except for the redemption of stocks, bonds or other evidences of indebtedness previously issued, or for such dlebts as are expressly au thorized by this Constitution." Article 16 of the Amendments pro vides: "To the end that the public debt of South Carolina may not here after be increased without the due consideration of the people of the State, the General Assembly is bore by forbidden to create a further debt or obligation, either by the loan of the credit of the State by guarantee, endorsement, or otherwise, except for the ordinary and current business of the State, without first submitting the question as to the creation of anf such new debt, guarantee, endorse ment, loan, or loan of its credit to the people of the State at a general State electinn." In view of all this, what right has the Governor to raise any obligation against the State, or to draw a dollar from the Treasury to de'ray the ex penses of the enumeration? Is it not p)lain that the Legislature's re fusal to appropriate the money need ed has precluded the possibility of the Governor obeying the precept of the Constitution? And who would consent to do this work without a tittle of evidence showing the indebt edness of the State for the service rendered, and to rely for payment on a Legislature which had already re fused to grant a dollar for the work? The Governor may execute a law, he can't make one. And if the people of the State fail to send a Legisla ture here prepared to obey the com mands of the Constitution, the Gov ernor can't make them do it. He may veto an unconstitutional law, but he cannot force the Legislature to enact a law, however needful it may be, to enable him to discharge the functions of his office. This is a grave matter, in which the Governor is in no wise to blame, and the people may as well understand at once where the blame does lie. A greater out rage was never perpetrated on lawful government than the persistent re fusal of the Assembly to comply with the Constitution in this solemn par ticular, going to the very foundation of all rightful government under a popular representative system; and the whole State is called upon to re buke it, and to rebuke it utterly; but let the blame be put where ih proper ly belongs.-Columnbia Register. Newspaper advertisments are.read while the adveartisers aleep.n Avoiding the Issue. Our esteemed cotemporary at Charleston is a splendid and remark ably cool editorial humbug. It has printed an article on the census ques tion in which it meekly remarks that the census should have been ordered. It then proceeds to show that the census should not have been ordered t with this argument: "Reapportion ment of representation could not have been reached so as to affect the elections this winter by any action taken at the legislative session now closed. Under no circumstances the legislature having failed to pro vide for taking the census this year could the reapportionment go into effect at any:election earlier than the general election to be held in No vember 1888. The election next year will be upon Lhe present basis, I and we cannot suppose that it will be desired in the winter of 1886 to un dertake an entirely new census in 1887, two years after the proper time, or to reapportion representa tion for 1888 on the basis of a cen sus which will then be eight years old." When the census would produce its effect is not legitimately part of < the discussion. The only question is whether or not the constitution re- 1 quires it to be taken, and nobody who can read and understand Eng lish can have a doubt on that. The constitution required the legislature to order the census and requires Gov ernor Thompson to order it now. If h6 fails to do it the legislature of 1888 wiil be an unconstitutional body not representative of the peo ple and powerless to perform any legal acts. That condition of affairs will cause endless confusion and dis aster, for which the men who voted against the census in the house and senate and the governor will be re spGnsible. Waiving that, what is the relief from the existing conditions of fraud ulent representation on one side and a defrauded people on the other? No subsequent legislature can con stitutionally order a census to be taken. Nobody has the right to adopt any other census than that re quired by the constitution to be made as a basis for reapportionment. Even in 1895 there will be no remedy for the chain of census years will have been broken. By the News and Courier process of reasoning the present apportionment will be per manent and if Greenville has a hun dred thousand and Charleston has fifty thousand people fifteen years hence, Greenville will have four representatives and one senator and 1 Charleston will have twelve repre- 1 sentatives and two senators. We are not willing to believe that1 Governor Thompson will grive his aid< to defiance of the constitution andi the defrauding of the people who have been his fast friends and put him where he is againsi the will andi ifluence of Charleston and her al lies. He is an honorable and in telligent man, and we can not under stand how an honorable an~d intelli gent man can doubt what the gover nor's duty is.-Gr-eenville News. Well Paid for their Patriotism. If any body of meni on earth were ever paid, as far as money can pay, for defending their country, the ave rage yankee soldier has had value re ceived. Enormous bounties were given to induce him to enlist, he was well p)aid and fed while in ser vice, and since the war closed, the amount ot taffy giv-en him is beyond computation. In addition to all this, a steady stream of gold, some years as much as $75,000,000, has been flowing into Northern soldiers' pock ets from the National Treasury, and still they are not satisfied, but efforts are being made to push a bill through which will give a pension for life to every person who enlisted in the Federal army for as short a time as two weeks. Now when it is remem bered that an overwhelming majori ty of Northern soldiers were foreign ers and bought as verily as any slave in the market was ever bought, and that the question of patriotism or love of country had absolutely noth ing to do with their becoming soldiers, we can understand the wonderful amount of clap trap in this cry of gratitude to our 'Nation's defenders.' Of course the South is the sufferer in all this, as she pays her portion of the tax, ',but receives nothing in re turn. The North had some men to, the marror born in her army who fought from a conviction of duty and for sincere patriotism but the num ber was wofully small in proportion to the number of the other class. Sna-e Watchwan. On Both Sides. The ILegislature, which has just oncluded its session, while a hard vorking body, can scarcely be ac redited with the accomplishment of my great amount of public good. Ul along it has evinced a disposi ion to avoid large undertaking, and o split the difference on smaller con roversies. so as to be as near on both ides as possible. In the very be ;iuning it killed the Bill to provide 'or the assesinent and taxation of )roperty, when no measure could )robably have been passed that was alculated to afford the people reater relief than a properly de ised assessment law. There were lefects in the pending Bill, but with mendments it could have been made most grateful measure to the honest axpayers of the State, by equalizing he burdens ot maintaining the gov rnment. For instance, the people )f Anderson County are now pay ng taxes on real estate valued high r than any other County in the tate outside of Charleston, and yet he market value of our lands are iot as high, probably, as those of ;evCral other Counties. Many ine unalities exist in the assessments of ,he several Counties which ought to e corrected. Some measure looking .o the relicf of our judicial system hould have been adopted, though t must be admitted that it is very )eplexing to ki;ow just what would )e best to be done. The Legislature, e think, made a grave mistake in -epealing ihe law exempting new iianufacturing companies from tax tion for ten years. It is practicaly vithdrawing an inducement for the rection of factories in our midst. rhe inducements extended under the aw were not excessive, and were not merous to the people. Their repeal s a step backwards in the line of rogress and development in South arolina. The action on the Lien aw was the result of halting be ween two opinions. The sentiment )f .the Legislature was in favor of its -epeal, but the Senate was afraid of lireet repeal. It therefore resorted ;o the indirect attack by which the aw is made uncertain and con 'used. The direct repeal of the law vould, we thiuk, have been better ban the amendment which prevailed. -Anderson Intelligencer. Violating the Constitution. It was wholly wrong for the Leg slature to violate the Constitution n not providing for the Census. It ras wrong in the members to have een unmindful of the oaths taken >y them to support that Cgistitution. :t is a wrong to the whole people of .he tate to thus preserve an une ual and unjust representation; and t is an inexcusable wrong to the >ople of certain counties to be sub ected to taxation without represen ation. But does this great wrong ud there ? No ! It will permeate he entire political fabric of the State, md like all legal frauds, will vitiate ~verything it touches. Let us see low ? Next Summer tne State Demo ratic Convention will meet to for nulate a policy for the State for the msuing two years, and1 to nominate i Governor an I numerous State ficers to carry out that policy. 'here are imp)ortant questions di 'iding the p)eople of the State, and it s imporlant, as it is just, that only ~hose should be ,nominated to fill :hose oflices who are in sympathy ith the views of a majority of the arty. The low country will go into ,hat Convention with large dlelega ions based upon the fictitious rep esentation now of foree in the Leg. slature; the up country will go ~here with small delegations, and thus t may happen that the future poli y of the State may be dictated and ill the State officers selected by ,hose who represent an actual mi mority of the people. Charleston will go int.o that Convention with 28 delegates, although really entitled o only about one-half that number. reenville, Spartanburg, Laurens, Edgefield and other, counties must ake back seats. But will the wrong stop there ? No ! This legal fraud will go into he Congressional Conventions and hus pollute our Federal represen ~ation. In the First Congressional District Convention, Charleston will o in with nearly a double represen ~ation and absolutely dictate to )rangurg and Lexington who heir Congressman shall be, whereas hose two .counties would have some voice in -the selection were it not for he fictitious basis upon which tkut onvention will be organizedl. This is likewise true of the Sec nd District Convention. Tn the Fourth District Convention Richiand County goes in with a fictitious dele gation, while Laurens, Spartanburg and Greenville I.,tween them are de nied the votes of six delegates in choosing their representative in Con gress. Thus this great'wrong deepens as it goes, and per forre must remain so until tLa Census of 1895. Is].there no remedy:? Have the people no 'rights which the rulers will respect? The Legislature has willfully violated its duty to them. 'Will the State Democratic Execu tive Committe at least urge the State Convention itself take the bull by the horns, turn out all improper delegations and give seats to dele gations according to the number of people in each county.-Abbeville Med im. Did Not Dare to Cope With th e Question. It is true that there was a demand on the part of some for the repeal of the lien law. Whether or not it would have been wise to repeal that law it does not now need to discuss. The last Legislature did not repeal it. On the contrary they tacked on to it an amendment that we do not hesitate to say savors strongly of a return to feudalism in that it puts the poor renter and laborer in the power of the landlord. There are numbers of men, white men, who do not own land and who are compelled to rent. To such the above amend ment is a cruel blow, It puts them absolutely in the power and control of the landlord. For no merchant is going to advance to them upon the security of a lien, whilst the land lord holds this almost unlimited pow er over them, 'We recall that it was said privately in Columbia during the Session that this Act Was intend ed to make the lien law odious so that its repeal might be the more easily accomplished hereafter. If this be true it was a weakness on the part of the Legislature, which did not dare to cope with the question. That the amendment was not made in the interest of the poor and labor ing man is shown by ihe Act itself. After providing that laborers who as sist in making the crop shall have a lien next in priority to that of the landlord, Section 2, provides "that no writing or recording shall be ne cessary to create the liens of the landlord." It will be observed that it was not said that the lien of the laborer need not be recorded or writ ten. On the contrary it would ap pear that provision was purposely omitted. So that under the guise of protecting the laborer, he really un der this Act stands on no better ground than others whose liens are written or recorded. Above all the Act throws open the door to traud. At the end of the year by collusion and connivance be tween a dishonest laborer and his landlord the whole of the crop may be gathered up and pocketed from honest creditors by claim of a ficti tions verbal lien of the landlord. Upon the whole it seems to us the amendment is unwise and pernicious. If the experience of the country proves that the lien law has ceased to be useful then let it be repealed in full. Amendments in the nature of that above set forth cannot be of any avail.-Abbeville M3essenger. Abundant Cause for Regret. From the tone of the papers in the, upper Counties, there is great dissat isfaction with the recent Legislature because of its failure to pass the cen sus bill. We publish a few extracts from those papers on our first page and if they represent the feelings of the people. those who are responsi ble for the failure will have abundant cause to regret their action. One and by no means least, of the unfortunate results coming from this discreditable affair will probably oc cur at the next State Nominating Convention. There will almost cer tainly be two widely diverging senti ments represented in that body and if a nomination should be made by a narrow majority coming from those Counties whose representation is greater than it should be, it will arouse antagonisms in the Counties which feel they have been debarred their inst rights. A nomination may be equivalent to an election in this State, and then it may not be. It depends entirely how that nomina tion is mnade.-Sumter Watchman. O'Hara, the colored me North Carolina, has offer are to reimburse depo 'p Freedmen's Savings ao to be done by rhe Governor Has Done His Duty. Some of our State exchanges are irging Governor Thompson either to ,ake the census und-r the constitu ional provision, or to call an extra ession of the Legislature to prov;de 1 'or taking it. The Governor canndt, V 3nder th advice of the Attorney t CGeneral, have the census taken, for be is forbidden to contract any debt, under very heavy penalties, that is not provided for in an appropriation by the Legislature. We lad inclined to the opinion that the constitutional mandate to the Governor to have the census taken, where the Legislature fails to comply with the provisions of the Constitution in regard thereto, would be ample authority to the Gov ernor, ari would override any stat- I ate, either direct or implied, and must confess that we have not been convinced by the able and carefully prepared opinion of our accomplished Attorney General; but our friends must recognize the fact that the Gov- 3 ernor is bound under the circumstan ces to be governed by the advice of i the highest law officer of the State. Governor Thompson cannot, with any propriety, proceed to have the census taken now, even though quite a number of lawyers think he hashthe right to do so. Neither would any practical advantage be derived from calling an extra session of the Legis lature. The Senate refused to con sent to a census, at the risk of defeat ing the general appropriation bill, which would have necessitated an extra session of the General Assem bly. It is practically certain that no census bill could be passed at such a sesMon. The Governor could bring the Legislature together. but h could not make them pass a bill. It would, therefore, be useless to incur the ad ditional expense of an extra session that would do absolutely no good. The Governor has fully performed his duty in this matter, and shown a readiness to have the census taken if possible. He has presented the mat ter to the Legislature twice, and has consulted-the legal advissr given him by the people as to his right to take the census, and has been distinctly informed by the Attorney General that he has no authority to'dd W,. It seems to us therefore, that the census cannot, under any circum stances, be taken until after the next election. The people should see to it that the candidates for Senate and House of Representatives are pledged to give their votes for taking the census next time.-Anderson Intelli gencer. Will Sectionalism Never Die Out?t It does seem that it is about time for the spirit ot sectionalism in South Carolina to die out. The low. country is, in many respects, different from the up country, but no sensible reason can be assigned why one sec tion should strive to rule the other.4 During the last session of the Legis lature, this spirit of jealousy, this desire for supremacy on the part of the low country, was plainly mani fested. Charleston is South Carolina in the eyes of a Charlestonian. By what system of reasoning the Legisla tur.a irrived at the conclusion that Charleston County is entitled to re tain two Senators, and every other county one, we do not know. One of the fundamental principles under lying the American government, and one that marks its superiority, is, that in the lower house the represen tation shall be in proportion to the population, but in the other house the little States of Delaware and Rhode island have as much power as the Empire State. This is one of the checks which the framers of our or ganic law have seen wise to make, and the same principle should be recognized in the State. This may appear to be a small matter, and really, we might allow Charleston two, Senators if she would be satis fed, but not content with this, the low country has defeated the census bill because by it our representation would be increased in a greater pro portion. When it comes to cheating us of our rights and allowing greed such sway that the plain provisions of the Constitution are disregarded, then, not even for the sake of harmo ny, and at the risk of stirring up sectional animosity, we must enter a positiv e pro'test. It is gross injustice and an insult to the State. Let the representatives t,e appointed fairly according' to the principle of equity, 6P to have een It has ibeen saldbj'uy iendation that the onservative and passed o ry legislatio6, but May iembers will doubtless they had been a little Ss anary they would have fes pprobatiin at the hands - le. Considering the ur people appropriations a beral and taation is e igh. Free tuition in the an unnecessary, 4sak nwarrantable expese ot be allowed t Dnger. The Citadell. Xpensive luxury. It ras inder the representatholl ropriation made would be D the State out of ZXOS e recovered from the FIWO 2ent, after whIeh it rther approprIatons B gainst the govenm ba Pet been recoveredi-- - ions go on fom yeito f the State could gt get ut the .Citei m Ale ns - imbia Cmmt, Is a hat will dobtealy - noney than thp: it of it. Even:If rofitabe iynveuutidib 1 to right totax the o speculate withi; Tr: kas been carried on wiTa - if the penitenti & - if the penitentit he treasury-to iigbsA if taxation. The ftite:a )erfect farce, and a gi n that line are hese and many,adnar he treasury shod h hecked in order thath night be made as ligh Various prohibition rere before the . here seemed to be-aw erminstion not to dIaa - lug statutem, except &hi.' )conee County where tbie rt was repealed. T R.iii ride. for an electmOn -on if prohibition it AndermsS. as defeated in Uh. ehd.the Seste As uawnsnC y - asconusnned-with f incorporation. 4" 5 or ,he Legislatureto free. his burden,bt a sken on a'fixed line wodla . 7 beck agrowing eviL. Altogether, the late g - night;be considered. gfair - re suppose, snd-pobbi ommendable thingstr1 ourn instead of taking a he approach of Christmas - on Journal. "Just my danged inekV' passenger on a train dowa% Ibelieve I am the rnal n earth, anyway. & this ight with me and. Ja h "What's the intter now?' - "Well, you see, I hav ost-master down at the gh On twelye yearaM named Ulysses Grant econd, Rutherford B. he third James GadfieldS& ast week we took-pny fw shurch and had. him.cg)i Ie re Cleveland. Snyders r p.' editor of oiur country pay% >ut in along article about it i copy or two marked to Washington." "But where does the ;bit :ome in?" "Why, the next day after ~hose papers I got an ofBoJl rrom the department. It . dscharge, and now thefto measily Democrat in my pla Many of those who have f he course of the present of this State will doubtlesa^ of the task with indlgnation. fatigued. The untiring au os efforts that have beemi I ly in behalf of clate In Ij monstrous attempts to atae~~ whole subservient to a part Isa 'Y guite sufficient 'fo Impriess the great truth which becoe clearer as a man grows oldsu patience is a cardial iW~ York~ Herald. Advertising i. the- p stone that turns a man's gold. A few gallons of priteYsJ spread over a newspaper WIll the services of an army ofd