The Newberry herald and news. (Newberry, S.C.) 1884-1903, December 14, 1897, Image 1
E03ABLISHED 1865. NEWBERRY, S. C. TUESDAY, DEC EMBER Id
~~,7 ~~~~I.EK *',84 50." . .. . .
IHSAW AT FL1LDE1IICSURLt.
'From an Uop,ublished lintory
opt. -. A. Dieurt.
[Coicaided]
Burinside bogan pressing Jackson
on the right, s.Ll massing groat bod
io in front and below the city. A
heavy siogo pieoe, called "Long
Tom," mounted on an eminence to
the right, of the - road, played havoc
with the onemy as they crossed the
railroad- cut, or displayed in the
plain below. The "Washington Artil
lery," posted on the hill to the right
of the Mayroo house, raked the plain
with grapo and c-inister. Leo's bat
tories wore directed mostly to the
moving columns, while those of the
enemy were ondeavoring to silence
his guns to givo cover to the attack
-ing party. By 10 o'clock the battle
was on in earnost along the whole
line. Biurnsido with a portion of
his troops was prossing Stuart and
Jackson hard, and from the start
was slowly driving these troops back,
doubling them oi the contro and
rear. Jackson is struggling hard to
hold his position, but tho mad rushes
of the onomy drovo hinm from the
field. The artillery of both sidos all
along the line raged in all its fury,
and from the moul hs of several hun
dred guns roso a donso smoko like
a setting clod, whilo the denoning
thunder shook the vory oarth. The
gallant Polham, the youthful com
mandor of Stuart'.; artillory, with
his mounted howitzers was aiding
Jackson with all. the power and on
orgy of his daring naturo, and .the
sound of his small guns could be
heard far down the Rappaliannock,
telling plainly that ho, too, was in
tho tiroes of dosperalo and doubt
ful conflict.
The forces in front of iongstreet
woro massing for an assault. Ran
som, on the extremo left wias'already
hotly engaged. In tie general ad
Vance Glo eneny had first to strike
Cobb and hero, it wias soon seen,
was to be the death struggle of the
day. Largo bodies of troops lay in
front of Cobb under cover, awaiting
the result of the first chargo.
Tle advancing column. approach
od the stone wall without wavoring
and on nearing it poured a deadly
volley into those who had rison
at vo the wall to fire. The Goor
glans met thom with coolness and
precision. Soon tlho enigagemerint
was general, but the mest. dotormin
od wiis in front of Cobb. Col.
Nanco was ordered to occupy the
top of Mayroo's Hill to support the
(Glorgians below. Rushing out of
the enItrchmen1t0!t the 3hrd was car
d@Wn-d dit road at a run and
-nteface of (the most. terrific cani
nonadoe of shot and1( shell t.he regri
muont had ever been called upon01 to
endure. Roaching a ravine several
'7 hundred yardsH dowvn the road, this
distance,.in plain view (of the ene
my's batteries, and who had gotten
exact range the day bofore, it sIomU
ed as if rushing into (lhe very jawvs
of death, so accurate and rapid did
the shells strike the column. We
turned to the left, up a broad by
road to the broad plateau of May
reo'n Haiights. Under a withering
fire Col. iNanco formed line of bat
tie from coliumns of fours and( ad1
~ vanced at a double-quick to a dull
'road running att right angles witht
th(le Mayree house. F,ven under thtis
telling lire of shot and shell and a
hail of minnie balls the regiment
moved rap)id ly, bu lt as deliberately
as on drill or$ess& paradck. Hcarce
ly had thmofI1uo halted before Col.
~yNanceod.t idleal prince of soldiers,
fell desperately wounded, then inci
truant-Colonel Rutherford. Major
Mall'ott took commiand, but before he
could issue an ordler he, too, fell and
had to be carried from the liold. T1he
command then fell upon that gallant
young captain of the Statoe Guard,
Willie HLanco, and mi gomng up and
down the line to get the regiment in
order ho received hii (death wound
So with1 Capt. Foster of Company K.
The housoH taps and uppo11r stories of
lie buildings in oui- front and left
wvere lined wvith sharp shooters, arms
ed. with globe sighted rifles, who so
locot . the oficors as targets. 'T e
regiment lay in this road ani 2
rnctod t.heir tire to thm nadvanc.inga nd
retreating columns in the plain be
low. Scarcely would one column
advanco, fire, and fly from the field;
than another. near the river could be
soon advancing to meet, the fato of
their comrades. Capt. John C.
Sutimmer was now in command, but,
before the third as-sault 1i, too, was
laid low, shot through the brain, and
so on until sovou different regimen
tal commanders were either killed or
disabled-the command at last rest.
ing with the junior captain of the
regnentn , Capt. J. K. Nance. As
the assaulting column wocild be ad
vancing through the plain, our oil
cors had groat difliculty in restrain
ing the mOUn's fire until sufliciently
near that every shot should count.
Column after column would rusb
with unequalled courage and daring
upon the stone fonco and Mayroe's
Hill, to bo swopt away, like a sum
ior cloud, by the Georgians below
and the South Carolinians abovo.
The 7th S. C: (under Col. Bland I
tlhlink) were hotly contesting the
field on oir right, but the other por
tions of the 'Brigade were compara
tively idle. While such scenos of
carnago were being onacted on this
part of the field, another of equal
importance was going on to our
right. Th battlo was raging In all
its fury Arom left to right. Jackson
had begun to gain ground. We could
bear the thinder of his guns above
the wild shoots of his victorious
troops, as they passed over the
ground they had lost in the morning.
Stuart and POelham 1il w 8O ing
upon the river, and closing up the
flank with sword and mountain
howitzers. To our left wo could see
Ransom in a land tf- hind uncoun
tor above and arouid tio grave of
Martlha Washington. Behind the
unfinished stones that, havo long
been neglected and which had been
intended to cover the tomb of the
mother of the Father of his Coun
try, lay groups of the blue and the
gray fighting with all tle ferocity of
their nature, consecrating the sacred
soil with the blood of those to whoim
Washington had left this country as
a common heritago not a century bo
fore.
But the day is farl from being
won. W hilo tihe robol voll in the
far distance told us that Stuart. and
Jackson were closing in, that A. P.
and ). IH. Hill, with Ewoll and Jack
son's old division had met the dos
porato onslaught of the nemy with
a courage seldom equalled and wero
now driving all before them. 1hIie
enemy wvere marshalling for thle last
desperate st rugglewithn Longstreet
and( his corps of invincibles.
A charge has been made, thle tide of
battle rolls back, and t he sun is
s'.owly sinking in the WVest. The
mighty volume of smnoko settles in
the plain and height s beyond like a
pall. Oflicors dash to and fro urg
ng the imen to stand firm and( meet
with courage ihe last grand1 chargo
of the now desperat aeniemy. All
felt, with a kind of silent int.uition,
that this last assault was to be the
death struggle of the two giant glad
iators. Burnsido is forming thie fa
muous "'Moagher's I rish Brigade,"' t.o
make a final attem pt to capt urn the
coveted M[ayree's luill, the key to
Lonigst.reet's posit ion. A moment's
lull, and then they come. No rush,
lie shout, but wvith aii cool deter-mined1
step camle these brave seons of Erin,
thrnoughi tho storm of shells and bul
lets, over the wvounded and dead
they tre'rd wit.h cahmeness and indif
forance, t heir banners waving, their
br'ighit bhnidos flashing dlefiance in
our faces. Tholm hatteries on the
right and left, as wvell as thme Wash
inlgton Artillery in thle front, cut
great gaps in theirt ranks, but as if
by some secret attraction, t hey close
upn, elbow to (olhow, stop. to step, as
onward they press. With bated
breath and anxious eye, the tmtn on
the hiill and behind t he wvall below
watch these brave imien approaching
their dealth withI reckless inudiffor
once. 'Like the sol idc wall in t,hoir
front, this phalanx moves in a line
scarcely .over wit.nesaed. Even the
men int their frQnt sented ready to
shout in admniration of their un
daunted couIrago. No a shout, a
mand rush, to h tat by a volle tha
somed to cause the earth to tremble
and quake, then all is hiddon in sul
phuric smoke, a halt., a wavor, then
in wild confusion they fly from the
field of havoc and death to sook cov
er under the brow of the hill near
the water's edge, leaving i wierd
row of dead and dying where thoy
first met our fire. Jackson had
prossed his opponetts to the river
and was waiting orders to mtuh
thom entirely or drive them into the
surging Rappahannock. It is said
this order had been given, but for
some unaccountablo reasou it was
countermanded. The enomy re
mained for two days ou the south
sido of tile river, b;ut on tho third
day nothing remained of that, once
grand army on out sido but 12,-321
killed and wounded, 0,000 of Which
fell in front of Mayreo's 1Hill. Con
federat oss, -1,361.
D). A. Dwiilrr
Ca!lIpt-. t3d S. C. Regt.
Mrs. Itaent-mws Fav.,ri.
Th witfe of tle President, has
given special pmlllis-ionl to John
Philip Sou',a, "'le Maich King," to
dc-dicato to er his iiew composition,
jUst liishVd, and w%hich will ho
called "Tho LIi IY of tho Whito
louse.'' AMrs. McKinvy, forwarded
hier per isiiion litst. w%evk to lio editor
of The Ludie-N' 11hiw Jonrial, which
will p-iblish the Sousa compoition
comploto in its next issue. This
maglizinO hIas also 1ecTived for tile
same number a now and largo por
trait of Mrs. McKinley, takon a few
days ago in tile Whito Houso con
servatory. This is the second pho
tograph whichi the President's wife
has allowed to be taken within ton
years, the first portrait taken of hor
since 1887 having also gono to The
Ladiesm' lomo Journal, which pub
lished it, ink its last October number,
cautsing Ct Oentiro vdit.ionl of Chat
iskilo to be exhaustod.
AN ACTRESS AS AN AUTHOR.
(larIa Morris, the eiotional ac
tres's, is writ.ing a series of short
stories based upon incidents in her
own life. The first. of those, called
"John Hickey, Coachman," is to bn
published in the January Ladios'
Homo Jour1*tnl, and show,s all the
marks of aln x porienlcod story- writor.
Yet it is the actross' ti-st story.
'MARR TNAIN's8 NiW STORY.
Mark IwTaii's new1111 humiiorous story,
whichI ho is now writinig ill Vienna,
is to go to The Lldies' Rome Jour
na11l whieIb Magalzinle 1111 also secured
F. Marn0 (rawfolrd's now story,
wilich is tal11 of t hi1 u0real, With the
strikinlg itine'titly title of "ThI'n DoNad
Smile."
Theo Newherry3 C?oIege~ OIgian.
Washington, D)eembaer 8. --lep)
r'eseniLttive Lamti mer' arrivedl here to
Newvber-ry College bill hazs been
plac~ed at t he head of the privato
caloedar in thle House. Th~ie bill has
already passed tile Senate, has the
untamious repiort of the commhlittee en
claimus'in the H-ouso, and t-bore is no
reason whly it should not be passod
beyond thle fact that Speaker Reed
refused to open t he door t.o tile pay.
m#nt of warl climis d1uring thli extra
Johnson's
Chilfl and
Fever
Tonic.
Cures Fever
In One Day4
MI(%. Mli lN1IY IN Di"C1A ui
I.InIgCrn-tg Uncoe' o nsoi, for Neveraliii t)ayn.
He son' by1 ie) 1r sitle.
Canton, O., Dec. 12-Mrs. Nancy
Allison McK iley, mo01lthe of the
President, died at 2:30) this (Sun
(day) mornin1 g, after I l'irng in an~
unlconscious cond(1it ion, as the result
of a stroke of paralysis, for 10 daOys.
The Pre'(sidet left his miother a
few days ago to be i n Washington at
the opening of cong ress, but imme
diately returne ' and1 hats booni con
stantly by h'e-.ednidal
PUBLIC ADVERTISING
A 'APEit IHtA t) 1i .i1FR IILE 'iiSS
A -S00IATION.
Oit tihe subject by (ite Editor of tihe Man
1il1ig 1ies,1pa Wil slhowig file injuistico
Dome the 1'romlby Ile Legi latstiro.
Tho following paper read bofore
the Stato Press Association at New
borry by the Editor of the Manning
Times shows tho injustico done the
Press of tho State by the Logislaturo
in reducing 1,ho prico of all official
advertising:
Mr. President. and Members of the
South Carolina State Press Asso
ciation:
I am honored groatly and above
merit in having boon charged with
the duty of setting before you the
relativo obligations of thoso entrust
ed with t'io int rost of the individ
ual, and the public welfare, ats
c.f.'cted by tho piblishor of a nows
paper.
It may b well considered that the
publisher of t Iewspapor. Wbother a
daily, somi weekly, or weehly, (lters
upon such iii enterpriso with high
purposoe to subsorve the hest interests
of tle State, the people at large, and
the coimiunity's iiterost affected by
its columns. The newspaper failing
to moet the favor of the public must
fail. Any newspaper failing to give
information of matters aiffecting the
interest, of the community where it is
published should fail. The publish
or under the conditions aind demands
now prevailing, miust provide for the
patrons of his paper the current. news
of the (lay select, with care from ox
clianges, sectiro correspondents and
contiibutors, look carofully after lo
cals of interest, an1d have well (iigest
od editorials upon subjects intterest
ing and onuciiating. Thle publisher's
w'ork does not stop with those ardiuous
duties, blut he must, with great care,
look after all advertisements, that
each may appear to the best advaii
tage, lie can present., and display
samo to catch and please, tho eye of
tho reader. It is not tho quantity of
matter ill an advortisement which so
cures bosi, results, but rather the caro
and judgment exorcised i the style
and method.
Groat strides have been made
within the past fow years by news
papor publishers in sending out
papers of such merit as to becomo
household necessities. It is manifest
that assiduous toil, careful thought,
exacting labor, is the lot of the pub
lisher, and to all of this add a grave
resp)onsibmil ity,greator than that of a-my
other of the community, that ho so
puIblish as to uphold and1( build up the
tonot and chairactor or the ple(0ll, and
instill healt hy action in all th ings
pert.aining to the material welfare of
the commuinity. This glimpse at the
position of the dhuties, the labors of
tihe su1ccessful pulblisher of a news
paor places him with more infilenco
than any other citizen, in closer con
tact w''i the pophle thtan anty dozenAi
citizens combined- is teacingil( is
soon anid felt. everywhere, andl his
paiper becomes a household neOcess ity;
it is through his paper that infornma
tion of publ)1icatioiis will reach a
larger number of the peoll t han aiiy
othier method or mlediumil of ad(vertis
ing will afford.
This soenis to have boonl recog
nized over a century ago. The law
makers of lthis conmonwealt h, by
Acet of t he General Assembly of 1 79 I,
p)rotvided for the fullest advertisement
which could be seculredl in the coun
ty, (district, or State ini all matters of
putblic interests, or which affected in
dIividlual rights in p)ropetrty. The
tax collector, the sihorifIf, arid all
oflicers of the courts, b)y. maniidattory
acts, were required to 1publ1ish or ad -
vertise in what was thlen donated
''gazetts," nowv kiiownr as newsp)a
pe(rs, all matters affectinig pulic or
private initerests, such as t imo0 andt
pilace for l)aymIen)t of taxos, aissess
monts, j udicial sailes, elect ion notices,
citations, and all legal not ices. The
purposo5 of the Act of 1 7 ) wa~'s evi
dent ; the law makers of t hat day
wisely saw the necessity of advortis
ing, sought to seenio the wu idecst pub
licity to miatters of legal notices and
p)ublic aftniiris, consideration he>oig
had for these interests withou.t oven
an expro.ssion as to the cost. 'nh
Act of 179)1 continued in% force until
aiendod or repoaled by the Act of
1875, privato rights being protected
for auost the entiro period and pub
lio intorest advanced.
The war btwoon tho States brought
groat changes fo this old Stato. The
venal, the unscrupulous, the vicious,
and the ignorant dosecrated her sac
rod altars, and for the first timo in
the history of journalism in this Stato
came crooked practices and dishonest
management in matters of public
printing. The Stato was not repro
sented by her loyal sons, nor did the
sons of other States who came to
South Carolina with honorablo pur
poso have a voico, nor was the press
in chargo of those who respected
themselves and took dlight in hon
ora)le action. Such was the evil
which had com to the public, that
nll offort was made to correct. it by
an Act of the General Assombly, on
titled: "An act to limit the charge
for advertising certain notices," ap
proved Decomber 22, 1875. This
Act provided as follows:
"That the chargo for advertising
the notices of Sheriffs, .1udges of
Probate, or other county ol.c'ors, or
of otlicers of court, or of executors,
administrators, or other porsons aet
ing in a fiduciary capacity, in any
newspaper, as now required by law,
shall not exceed one dollar for overy
hundred words for the first insort ion,
and fifty conts for mach insortion
aft-erwirds."
This was not well considorod log
islation. It is obvious that the Act
afforded to the venal publisher and
the corrupt oflicer opportunity for
collusion and fraud. Multiplicity of
words, unnecessary; small t.ype atid
inadequato display Conld havo
afforded largo excess over fair work,
such as an honorable milan would do.
The Act wias a violation of the prin
ter's rulo of ineasuiremnt, and on
couraged a coitinince in tho very
dishonest practices it was intended
to correct. Probably such consid
erations brought about the chango
made by Chapter XCVII, Section
2124, of the (onoral Statutos, which
provided as follows:
"The charging for advertising the
notices of Sheriffs, Judges of J.ro
bate, or other county oflicers, or of
officeors of Courts, or of executors,
administrators, or other porsons act
ing in a fiduciary capcity, in any
newspapor, as now required by law,
shall not exceed one dollar per square
for the first insOrtion and fifty cents
for each subsequent insertion; Pro
vided , Thaiut in case the usual charge
for pub)lish ing for privato inldivid
uanls advertisements occupyi ng the
same)1 spaZco and for like time, be less
than the ratos aforesaid, it shall not
be lawful to charge higher rates than
so charged to private ind(ividunals."'
I have qjuotedi to much of Section
2-124 as bears upon thie rate and
terms for adlvertising legal notices.
The port.ion of the Act (quoted is the
ex pression of careful consideration,
fair, just, and( wholesome in its pro
visions, shoewinig thie hanidiwork of
ani intelligent idea and the app~recia
tion of t.h printing business, and1( 1
dare say the authior of' that Act. was
actuate b( iy a hiighi business sense
and1( a comi-cien1tious discharge of
duty---compenisation wans to be al
lowed the publisher for public
notices at. a fair p)rice, or on t,bo)
samo basis andii termrs lie was willing
to contract for n~ ith privaito individu
als. Thiis Act placed the publisher
in a firi relation to those cha rged
with thle duty of publishing legal
not icos, anid wit hi a 50onso of justice
to himuself and to thne public, anid ini
all self respect lhe could (10 such
weork.
Every oniterpirising publisber of a
newspaper piropierly desires to afford
to hiis lpatrons all iniformat ion to be
derived from (lie publication of legal
not ices. J'Cvery self- respetinig pub.
lisher wvill st rouously adhere to
such conidit ions of publish inrg adver
isemuenit.s as will uphold high char
acor for his work, both as to its ox
ocuitioni and its fairness. 'The Act
last above qoited is wvell suited to
securo the best. results anid properly
p)rot)ct, all interests involved in such
pl)hlicationis. Th is, however, (lees
niot seemi to have beoon so regarded
by our presefnt law makers. The
Gaenral Assombly of 189.4 re-enacted
the provisions for compensation for
advertisemonts of public notices
which tbe Act of .1875 contained,
adding the provision "Tbat the cap
tion to noticos shall b at the rato
of fivo cents por word." The last
act was not approved by the Gov
urnor, and becamio law without his
approval under the provisions of
Soction 22 of Artielo Ilt of the Con
st3fution of 18(8, and Section 23 of
Ai,icle IV of tho Constitution of
189U5.
This last Act is open to objection,
as roasonablo as that had against the
Act of 1875, and is ovenl more objec
tionablo, in that the last clauso pro
sonts to the weak a tomptation
to m11ako Imloney at (.10 oxplnso
of integrity and fair deling.
Tho dishonest are all'orded an op.
portunity to make a caption, so that
at live cents a word ioney could be
realized thatf an honest man would
n1ot have, whilo the honest publisher
must do fair work, for which he cnil
not obtain just componsation.
Ljogislation tending towards ei
couraging or Opening the wiay for
unscrupulous conduet is wrong in)
prmillcipl, Vicious, an1d destrucive to
the itorests most to bo gialrdoId and
fostored. It may bo argied by suie
ill support of this last Act that it is
not obligaTory uponl the publisher of
a newspaper to advertiso public no
tices. Such, however, would be the
muorist sophistry. It is iot from a
legal sonso obligatary, but from a
business and a professioial smnse it.
is obligatory uponl tho puiblisher of a
niowspaper to all'ord h is plit rols all
tho advantiges anld bolefils of aill
matters colcerniiig the pmblic; bult 1
conltenid 11liat, right and justice malm
it a hundred fold more obligatory
upon the representatives of the gov
ornimont, tho perrmis llooloed afind
chargod with properly gumrding all
public interests to furnish to the
people, throulgh the hest at,taillabl
channel or medium, notieos of ill
such matters as como within the
Act. I do not admit that ithe
law making power hts a right to fix
the prico of a printor's charges, un
less the rule of "Might makes right,"
for- it is mily honlost opinion Uit f i
test woro made, the Courts voild
say it is a violation of thl rights in
tended to be given citizens by the
framers of our const; tiut ion. Thev
public interests shoulId riot e silb.
served at the uxpolnse 1111d chargo of
the nIeIspaper p)ub1B l ihors, or aly
other resp)ectab)le pri vatei (ent erp)rise.
Where the publ)ic inte(rests req1uirme
thalt tho inidividullahs property should1(
lbe surronidered for- public use18, pro)vi
5s0on was made to s'c1ure to ihe cit izoni
j ust anid SIirl(Ol copensat ion for his
propelrty. On like sourid, ('(juitablle
basis should the newspap~er publ)1ishier
roeivo compen)isationI for tie 11se (of
his prepartiy; far romunieratioin unidei
regulations that thle hlonoloi pub11.
lishler can bo0 prot.oct ed by, and1( that
tile v'einal can not make available forI
corrupt practcc~s. The venail ! thanllks
to the1( worthy, cou ragoonis, and1(
hionorabIlo hlmIsmenCi of the pes
the dark (lays ar&e past; t he unr1el ia
blo and1( corrupl t have boo driven1.1yo
from our raniks, and1( t.oday the nelws
paper01 fraterniity of till Stato are
worthy the respecnt, the conibdenico,
the esteoom, and kinldly regard of atll
tihe cit.izonis of thiis granid obl1 Comi
muoiwealth, anid ill all matter-s of
pubIlic niot ices, 11ho ne0wspalpers Shlolild
roemvo y fair comp1entl!sat,ionx oni sich
terms a1s thie same4 class o1 work
wvould bel per1formedO( by honiorable
It is wrong; it. is niot iniie i'itUr
est of the public good for- so) impor.
tant an1 inistituition as5 tIhe Pre.ss to Ibe
haimnpored and1( crippled by the law~
mnakeirs, wvho, to iin a little niokorio
ty, ps before tile publ ic as (econo(
mllists, to jumpii po t111 h|enoewspaper)sl~
anld cuit into thel componsation101 th1ey
receivYe for very impor10tant 1 work.
venituro to say thait, thle h'gislators,
wVho wvore 5o aious 4)1 to revolutionizr4
(lie prinlt er's tradol by dloing away
with the "'for all time'' custom of
m)onsnlremoent, and ir. lion thoerol~
put (lie printers to thle t rouble ofl
counitinrg oachi word, had unot 11h4
slightest idoni the cost of set ting tyjpo
or ile ordinlarv expenses of a news
roduco tho piy of tho prinitr, antid
whell Ihoy g ) beforo tho people they
With great show of sincerity, tell how
faithfully they labored for tho peo
plo'm initorsts, and cite i reductit. n
of possibly ono hundred dollars a
year inl the incomo of Editor
who was too poor to y a suit. of
clothes to n1u1iko a presentablo ap
pearainco ait th lileting whoro tho
shltesiiluk (Y) was haIranguing the
"dtiiar peoplo." Tho peoplo not bc
ilg conlverIOlsiit. With the facts, Itild
always realy to have their taxes re
dticed, ipplatid tile lit i the Odi
tor's iicolm'. The,) statOMaIn-C3au
didilato-for-ireolectioln, whillo iimakinlg
ii slio.v Iid boas of cilt ting d 4.1wli
till poor vditor's ilncolim of ia few
palbr)y dollars, nil-illy avtided
.Siowilgf tho lwoplo tiluit to eut, tlt)
oditor out of tli(Stl few tollars, t.to
timeit, conlsuim'd to (o thlis gnri>it, piCo
of stiltesiillship wa-ii t'n lileis illoro
cost to ti t xiayors. Thm odito.r
lost sIly oll hundred dollars, and
i he t ax piayr4s los it aho tllmmd inl
wasto of 1w i. 'Th is sonolo stat iiufil
nover ineit ji mi nw 11illober ofp ,la
Ie wis olt of his st-at, while he
Idmar poptv" wvro paying ait, lm
rilte of four do0lars 1wr day. HeIo
failed to) toll th oplli t hat he( voted
to u1ilie tho tditor's illemlo onl lw
tolult, of SomI P0Ier ;mIdI grievanie,t
and ho neover al-lompts tosho>w Whore,
t(' stoppved u1) tho spigot, ) lot
tho lo.lk llow out of 1-he4 hul.
I IIun coniscious- thait I havo nolt
benil I bleo i rtl) ilth'llis subjoilct, withll
Ht, vlro 1 l libility novessary to its
full prvSvent-11[ionl. I Itml dvvply Svensi
blo of i(ho ilor vol vo vornfei't
upon lto, mllpalrlItive N infant, in
i IuI4lism, 1 1 Iist)ui r4ea1111o dy to
Wok withll yto ill the plirposo of
this A,;sociiation it) gmird, to protect,
Id l-mll vl thie( it)tort-sts ndIilt rih
inII n of1 to he' new SlW1prH forl-41h0
phuretl, the vomifori, antd hil bonl
lit of i1hl poplo.
usu l. elolit'tiLilt 'r11111 ittl 1I tg,
[clovoland lwader.]
A (iorin ditor says; "Tim s
airo lloot imp'oVing vry lI. \o\'
10r0 j1"in aItong inl thw unel old
way." llo probablY wrtAv it "jm"
ging," hil p-lIrmith"d itt to fill inllo
t1h 111 141S Of I W<hnhOir WI s
determiil to toll thlo 4rth-veni if
ho 1wst h1is job.
I don't, car) how big and how rich
11114 howm widdylv m knw a1 tC(nCCern it4,
atlli l beade',cael i, \'y
son dalr J akOiJ/VtON'aSsg
TigNn . whni -tpsas n
usual.4You 'rnn 1semi n'4th4c4 a.
p)4 leas, huIE oless he a i h414' 8 your st
Wiii d. iiiiin the paper hedon' 44nut ylou
abini the frnI rn. obui
out'ofte iaper thatli reach,44)(Il f his s
omers .:
A i''ays l a-sayin':1 '4' . balls ii best
W ith t he 81)n In Lb (e ('as. 1or) low down1 I
In the west.
A n'tve n. ni ghwn t nothu-k1(41, forI his44 0