University of South Carolina Libraries
————-— — ——«—~ — : — izt' ^r.":..... ’ > S." , '■ l> » > •‘IF* FOR THE LIBEih’Y 'oP- T’tfE WORLD WE CAN DO ANYTHING.” VOL. i. I f n. \ PAIR OF PKSSniISTS. The Speeches of Installs and Mrs. Lease in Leorftia—Onl)' a ‘‘Tale of Hoe.” Creating llissal- isfartihn Rut Offering no Remedy. E\-Senator John J. 1 fluffs, who-) has long been notorious as a stalwaD party of Georgia may he broken to piwes and a new one pat in its stead, •]>reiiclios distress ami $tarvalion. This peenliar pair on^ht to lie frowned on. Is/t them carry T11K1U I’KHXK'IOt'S IKK‘TKIXES aiid^™nl teachings U^Rker s*jc: tioi.B^We want nonej[<r (•‘in. Them^sertions fliat mifllwPof pO<l- X)AKLlN(iT()X, SOUTHi (\UK)],IN,V, WEDXE8DAY, SEPTEMJiEl? li, ls‘H Mr'.3 i'Vivn ^ IRE SILVER OlESTIOiV. Dispassionate Discussion by an Es teemed Republican fo- lciu|.urary. AEWS XOl’ES. M Pile silver question is the most that there ever was in t*he * | Of course the polite merchant will — j not be so unkind or unpatriotic as to ^ CH,S Interest Lathered from 'say “I won’t take that dollar for Our Exchanges. : more than eighty efiVts.'’ rte wilh have to take it * lluu iiiiuiui] i: Influence Wlrr Death. Win Hill Girls isr Siamr! take it. j, * ■ . , It is estimated that between tiftv . C!lf 01# ''MV mu l „ Still* lllr ea^ ti-dHslbr Rio seventy-live tons of grapes will taut one before the American , ‘ shipi>ed from vim-yards in and c to-day. I he taiilf is settled, i (.(m^ , uu { sll dle and smile, and hold ! I tavul l homas broiiglil a load of ° I ; corn to town last. week. Not linding home. The live lalls in tile forest; s j|,.„| Contempt. I lowever, after i . , , muv sub-treasurv ware-house, hesold 1 but in the lapse of ages it is turned iihi.. ....rii iti.... I eouelmle'l it ws not apply to (.tsirgia or tlm . atulllJ th( . R .rity of ) 1111 thecurrency tpicslion. The land- - v 1 . . , . . °h<tle cogitation, I eom imte t it wa Hf, y „ti, li r,.,. 11 1 " 11' , . ., ... , ,, itfor 85 cen s per bus he . e raised into coal, and our tires burn now (lie ,i. 1 .|,.'.e , ... , ,, , the Nauth. IScforc they arccncom-; , . . . . ..i •. lord can notify von I ha I the rent of .. , 1 i, • , , . ..... ,lu - m M """ft# the Nauth, and Mrs. Iicase with ]K)h-j , . . f . . the country by ti mg to unsettle it, • • this corn last vear and lias more to brighter beean e it grew mid felt. . . aged to teach such hnrUul lessons i | vour Hat goes up on the lirst of May.! ,, . I,,,, . , Iciiil-! , , ,, .. i i ,i i • i ; :inu to shut' im tlu* iifoIvctiHl 1:1c-;.. ... . spare,—AhoviIIc Ma'iIiuiii. i I In* mral nisi'ci uus; Iml IIm.* ivlm it 'rite books of snliseriptioiy of the i raised, breaks th>‘ f pie go hungry from the beginning to the McKmler bill us to have p.fair ((|U t, bis hand for the ten dollars with- , ,, ... , rr the Ond of the year m the tinted (rial, and woo betide the party that out making any unpleasant remarks one of t he readiest men in nil one tile . 1 J a . i We die, but we leave an lieliiud us that survives, sets behind the western hills; the trail of light*' lie leaves behind him guides (lie pilgrim. Ho ills distant Tile Iree tails in tiC Last evening a gentleman coolly informed me that he didn I use slang any more; he considered it altogether inllucmc t IH , feminine. I felt my cheeks burn I lie sun . 1)|( j W( ,|,| t | fain have opposed the * in * imgallant in dnuator, Imt k-ing un prepared to defend the lionor ol our sex, I was obliged to trreal liim with u Ei.nnors. Got! Bless Thco. i eaiinot lind a truer word. Nor fonder to caress tins-; Nor song, nor poem I have heard sweeter than—God bless thee. God bless thee! one of the readiest njen in public life , to sav harsh and cruel things abdul tics unknown, except that tie ing tenet of lier political fa-th seems to be oppositioji to Mc.(Ijig*11s, f hir e come to Georgia and spoken their pieces. Both were well paid for tin- work of their respective jaws. Now that they have had their say and have gone, we will inquire as to the character of their work and Tie I object of their-speeches. Mr. Ingalls is a man of great brain i power. He iias been appropriately j called one of the MOST I-U'TI'KKSQI K KHU UKS ill public life. As a member of the United States Senate he never rose to make a set speech without having a crowded gallery and close attentio i from his brother Senators. He al ways spoke with force and nearly al ways with sarcasm,and sharp rebuke, or criticism, of something or some body. His utterances were eagerly watched for by the newspapers and were eagerly printed, lie is a man of line intellectual power, and there fore what he said to our people wa- listened to with great attention. Mrs. 1 .case is a woman of more than ordinary ability. She has a GOOD COMMAND OK I.AXGI AGK, and has “her piece” well learned.She speaks with gieat glibness, and has evidently repeated her harangue many hundreds of times. It therefore fails to make the impression that a speaker can make who has mastered the Sub ject under discussion in all its bear ings, and who has not memorized the lines to be delivered. Dr. Morgan Galloway, of Emory College, who preached yesterday at Chautauqua, very properly spoke of Mrs. Lease's address of the evening before as “tilled with illogical vagar- We call attc-ntiyu to „the-fa'' 1 both of'thcse SpWker.'AaiJi to us, not cheering words of hojie, but “A TALE OK WOE;” they have not called attention to the shining sun, th<‘ growity.; fruits : ;tiid flowers and the pieiitcon * W6|>v Wit to a storm cloud, which is not yet to 1 e seen, but which they askurc us is rising in the sky. They come to take from our faces <d»c smile of c^U: tentment and substitute therefor • haggard features and the apprehen sion of penury and want. They are alarmists of the woiot sort. Mr. Ingalls pointedly stated that he had XO KKMEIIY To SUGGEST, and, while ill was given out that Mrs. Lease would suggest a cure for our alleged ills, yet her speech failed to suggest one. Indeed, if was a speech made up almost entirely of denuncia tions of the rich. While it may be true, and duabtlefes is, that many rich people have in their coffers much ill-gotten gain, what remedy is there for the people now? She did not go quite to the extent of proposing a communistic division of the wealth of the country. Yet it makes those who are doing reasonably well dis satisfied with their condition. Mr. Ingalls and his fair fellow- , pessimist both ring the fire A LA It M IIEJ.I. AT .MIDNIGHT, and yet have no watt* at hand to quench t hedlAllies . m Now, w !iy should they go atiouft the country proclaiming distr-sq where there is n„ distress, and trying to convince people that they are in want when there is plenty around then? In Georgia crops have seldom been better. People who are willing to work are, as a rule, getting along pretty well. It is in this Slate a comparatively easy thing for a work ing man to have a home of his own, and tens of thousands of Georgians have bought lands and erected there- o i their own firesides. The earth re sponds generously to lulnir. \\ e have the host climate in the world. The sun shines, the rain comes, t h - seasons smile, the earth produces and we are not disturbed by internal dis sensions. Yet these jieople who are traveling the country, the one out of spite at the disaffection of a large part of his own party, preaches dis content and want, and the other, woman though she is, in the hope that the old, faithful Democratic lie raised to ten dollars? Will thej lessons j > J ’ j your Hat goes up on the lir.sl of May lot them lirst lind the starving |*eople j‘ l,1< "P * 11 l ,,0 h(tn .u ) i;,,) lv j|] dioidglitdotlar clerk's salary of Georgia. They cannot do it. I lories that are the market houses of /'I’he object/of those spcqehgs ,is. not j ^n^Tican labor and raw material, lo aid the suffering and unfortunate.; and the paymasters on whom many There is a t thousands of retail business and.pro- DEKPEH AND DAKKEU Motive ; fessionul men indifoctlv depend for underlying this business. We are their support. The silver question, confident that our people will not be however, may be pertinently restated disturbetf in the least by such talk, j thus: “What shall if profit 1 1 R> j ||uw Some of Tilt-Ill Have Lost In but will goon as usual, laboring j Anie-ican who gels twenty dollars a j Holding lllfir I'olloil— with their hands ifltd gathering the: week t 0 | K . protected against thej Dm-Hale Sold for $10. fruits of their labor, standing faith-, foreigner wlm gets sixteen dollars a | fully by the party that has been the | week, if twenty of the American’s barrier between them and oppression ; dollar# are worth only sixteen of the and Ik- thankful for the blessing of j European's dollar#?” lliebest tlliugj.1 could po##ildy hav done, for that the majority of our So I liavcgladly wisheil thee (It brighti,o## life jmssesse# : Eor can there any joy at all , ! »e I hi lie unless God blo#.'.e# ; • Gtsl Ido## lboo! ill use killed labojii‘t v MJio wtsS“. to a day ^perily (liimii.g and Miiniifaetnr- j j„. ling Uu, were op mi on Sail be advaneSf ’to commoik kylau'er attjtl.20get sf.Ng.' New York Press. l\Ll(KvT\iniERS, 1 bo past in order ihiit they imiy de serve even greater good in the fu ture.—Atlanta Evening Journal. H iio arc (he Rt-sl Pooplc ! The newspapers have much to say That i# the silver question for wage workers to answer. Ti e Press know# very well that the advocates of the five and unlimited coinage of silver will deny Ibis. It is in receipt of numerous letters from free coinage advocates—more letters than it can about “our best iieoplc, which leads . . , , , . , . .... , J individually acknowledge, let alone one lo ask, “W ho among the tens or, . . , , , , , ... . ! nul rshmg or commenting on everv thousands are the best peorile.' In: , ' , , . ‘ !one—insisting, as slrenuouslv.ustui this Democratic coantrv of ours wc , , ... . • . ,, ,, , • i i iHviiim lunatic insists thiitheisthe are generally agreed with the lush- n i iTesident of the lulled Stales be- mau who thanked God that one man 1 , . . cause hesavs he is. that tree coma ire Muenuh | ... , , .. ' will inak<- SO cents worth ol silver was a# good as another and bettor too. The best people do not belong any one class-—(hey. arc found everywhere and in every condition. The best people are those who know the most and do the best in their own spheres. The best ser vant, the best doctor, the - best law yer, the best preacher, the best busi ness man, and, in short, the best business man in every line of action, is really of “our only best people.’ Thoroughness,, conscientious dis charge of duly, the most honorable and upright citizen, without regard to the doth on his back or the cir cle he moves in, belongs lo the best aristocracy the w gld has produced. Let i o man fuii4^t that beiMiise his faOiJ is rich, or tpt he has ^■end ed from a distinguished ancestry, that he is ent itled to he regarded as. the foremost in this town and city. Put your own shoulder to the wheel and do something; produce soim- Idl biAvr tl#g.; iitykcyjth? wii-lu * having lived in it, and tlleii, and iKj! until then, will you be entitled to high consideration. Waiting for dead men’s shoes, and bunking on the reputation of ancestry, entitles no one fo the best places and the best estimate of your own com munity. “Up and at it,” is what tells in the long run country of ours.—Ex. this great Duly English Should In- Taught. At a recent Union League dinner in Chicago, Rabbi llirsch, speaking to the question of teaching other languages than the English in our public sliodls, surprised his large and intelligent aiulicucc by speaking positively and strongly against such teaching. He urgid that if English was hot the only language taught in such schools, it ought lo be. lie made a strong point when he said that the teaching of German in such schools imparted no additional gen eral knowledge to the pupil, and was a waste of t ime and money which should be far more usefully employ ed. As an educator and q German, the Rabbi was free to declare that only one lu^nagc-eskmll lje taught m the pwblic soliools ottms fcutfutry. Aqd yet we w ill | rob ibly continue bullion advance “•"> per cent, in valm and become a dollar. It is admitted by these genllemeli that J71.“‘) grains of pure-iiver did not ri.'e in valug 'Ai as to be uortha dollar when tlic .government, began, in l87sj r4| coin that quautitv of jmre silver into legal tender dollars, and to pocket the difference itself. You can buy J71.7a grains of ]inre silver now, all the silver there is in a -legal tender dollars, for 78 cents. It is not worth a dollar because Congress says it is a dollar. Yet it is as erted that if a free coinage law were passed enabling anybody lo take J71.5!- r > grains of ver to the Mint and receive in ex- ebangi- fetr it* a dollar, the J71.'J& grains would rise tin faiue-tm »s tp be worth a dollor instead of 78 cents. It is possible (hat this result would attend the free coinage of sil ver if the government had a deep pit under the .Mint, c.\ bind ing into the central tires in the bowels of the earth, and were to throw each silver dollar into thal pit as fast as it were eoiiiiiL ffiftlmt caer the jmiceof sil ver would rise', because the quantity would be reduced, unless the miner# «ifU^i|iVop-4s fast us it was thrown into the pit. But it is not proposed lo throw any silver into any pit. It is proposed to put all the silver dol lars thus coil ed into circulation ; to give the country plenty of cunvncv, and not to care a straw if all the gold in the United States goes to Europe and slays there. This is pro- p >sed for the bciicJit of languishing silver mine# as well as active silver mines. As there is no reason given why there should be any increased demand for silver for use in the arts the increased silver production is all to go into dollars. There wouldn’t b# any i latcrially increased consump tion of silver in the arts unless silver were cheaper, and the free eoinags people say, of course it won’t be r, because it w ill be dearer. Cotton that was held back last November for hotter prices is still coming in. and a-sorry lot it is. The farmers have really lost fortunes in this way, as daily incidents will show. One farmer bmuglit in a bale that weighed 7J0 pounds. Last December lie .was offered !)i cents for it. The bale was so rot bn that he was glad to receive $10 for the whole of it. Another farmer to-day brought in t» bale weighing 005 pounds. It was So badly damaged by exposure to the weather that it hud lo be cat open and piptted.over. The fotietij tiitton was picket out, and, bf tfiet 00, r > pounds there remained J07 poll mis of marketable cotton. For this he got. OJ cents, but his profits were re duced by dockage o f light weight. These arc just two instances. The cotton weigher lias received over500 rotten bah s iu the past two weeks. The best of the lot was docked, only 5 pounds, while the worst was dock ed :!()() pounds. How much dam aged cotton yet remains in the coun ty is not known. But it is certain that 'lie loss sustained by the farmers on (hat already brought in would be more than enough to build a big county warehouse. Two years ago, the News spoke of the impractica bility of farmers lio'ding cotton un less they have proper shelter for it. To leave a bale out in the rain dur ing the winter, spring and summer means its destruction.—Charlotte News. shores of a great formed an isle iu the bosom of tlu ocean, tf* wave w ith harvest# for tin- good of man. We live, and v c die; but the good or evil I bat we do lives after us, and is not “buried with our bones.” Mohammed still lives in his practical and disastrous influence in the East. Napoleon still is Erauee and France is almost Napoleon. Marlin Luther’s accents still ring through tiie churches of Christen dom. Shakespeare, Byron, Milton, all live in their influence for g«od or ievil. The apostle from his .pulpit, the nianyr from his llame .shroud, the statesman from his cabinet, the soldier in tie- field, (he sailor on the deck, all who have passed away to their "raves—still live iu the girls do fact I bat cannot .be king. ■ surges on tli coni incut, or ha# i ( \ )|( | w |, v i.. ; taisV Surely, it i# not • quality that any one admire#:yet no matter what, society you mingle in, you are sure to lind it (ami, 1 am sorry to say, find it most plentifully)' ly and heavenly among (he ladies. Will you pardon wlien earth # light p'U on Saturday, uni a % \\¥r short period of time all of | tlie shares of stock were taken up. j The colored people are displaying j a proper spirit of progress by their effort to have an industrial, agricul tural, and mechanical fair al Ibis place in October. If they succeed in their project, it will have a tendency to elevate their race in numerous ways.—Manning Times. Governor Tillman desire# to get the names and addresses of the fore man of the grand juriesof the State. The object of this is to be able to referniaiiv matter# to the proper authority which are sent to the Governor for consideration. A great many matters have been sent to the ,, ... - ,i tical eteeils tliey diet, in the lives they , <• , • i u- i , Governor which come under the , • , * talk slang in halt a dozen . , lived, and in the powerful lessons r , , , , i srtpeiivuum ot the grand jury for| , ’ , , 1 .. , if she chose, andwIioM lliev left helund thuin. “None of ns presentment. . • • hvetli to lilULSclJ; others are alleelcd js a deplorable ] So I have laid a happy chai'm lionestiv denievi. . llli - 11 ' ."IT 1 ''” 1 ' or m-er e;in sorrow bring thee If ti# God # will to bless thee God bless thee! Mil There are moments when the earth horizon- Ion. li, md heaven's d: , I- - my quoling pait of a eonversati-m i ne##, niakea Iwiliglu. As llie sha.l- aceidqutally overheard :i few d;iys ovvs of the sjinlight clouds dance since? over the Howers and harvest fields of "Great Scott, Dell, I wish you’d get a hustle on! You’ll get left yet, or miss my mark ” Shocking language, isn't it? And what is still more shocking, it pro ceeded from the rosy lips of an ac complished society belle. I 'least don’t look so incredulous. She was ac complished, or at least was consider ed so; that is, she was a fashionable who coni i 0,1- earth, so doe# heaven tli row M -hadowsand relleciion# on liie- level of i verv-dav life.—Seleeteii. I' 1 ’" " boarding-school t-Taduali by that life, or “dieth to himself:" others are interested in that death, i The king’s crown may moulder: but Ip- that wore it will act upon lin age# )et, to come. Dignity, and rank and riches, are all corruptible and worthless: but moral character ha# I NIQI E PL VI’KOini. Mr. John N. Miller says lie tloes no* believe in topping cotton until September. He has. tried it from the 5th of July to the middle of August, and think# he never beiio- litted a crop by it. He believes if one will cut back tall cotton, the 5th to the Ijitb of September lo the blooms Hat it will check growth and let the sun in and hasten the! maturity of the boll.—Spartanburg j Herald.' Mrs. Rhode Brown, wife of Mr. 1 • • ' j _ Furman Brown, died at her husband.-j,, W .| 1(VS (hat will never “ • cease.- -John ('timming. angungo- musie wc- Tlu* only e\- ller is t hat she unconseiously. and that is the excuse given in nine cases out of ten. I often “Scotland's svveetesl bard," win sighed: pronounced “divine, cuse I cai* form for used such expression: 'i'lu • !)ii!o\\*s w ill go ov ut r • linu 1 In v aiv so imtcii jUTt ator ti.oi.i v>v. !»ltt 1»;|: 'S as s nn*l; a.- ti:*-)' cuinr. \V<‘ loo k itari* ; to “(•v* thmi U.-nk lit i-Liii! ; im! di.-ai] i»’)ca r iotvver. vi'ilr Wv 1 .m* imt i ui'. igoratei 1 hv thoi • IliH-Ix and oaj;!! • i'hy bn > * — lilu Y will novel* he il.-.' ■d te > drown *. imma; ii soul. \ ol iise ^ooi 1 ! t iiat v l\* j) avv done. iTllt »od that we ought (o<! o, should liavt* i >ur atienhon and Mile lost. No ouc oi u# has dom .* so we 11 a. im nii^ht "<) wail some jiovver tin’ gillie gh To see on reels ns others see ns. an immortality Unit no sword-point, . m ,| . ul(K ,, (kr per ,-igb: can destroy—that ever walks the vv>rld, and leaves lasting iiillucuccs l.rliind. What we do is transacted on a siage of w hich all the universe are spectators. What we sav is "() vv:vil some |iovver tta- gillie gn To hear oursel - ,i. ollie'i ,- hear a- Ihinl- of! , ' iV '' < k ,n<, t therefore I here is no can.- loi' saiislaclioii in looking.liackward. l.verv one of us has something be lore him that is well worth doing: lienee I In-re is reason for dead earn estness, lest another duty be neglect ed in its season.--S. S. Times. residence in (hi# city last week. She was taken to her family burying ground on the. North Eastern rail road. Her In.obaml and fortr child-! u . 1( voll |,,ve, reu survive her, and her death makes | .\|| ilirough tin nigbl; a break in a large circle of loving j Rest close in his encircled arms friends. The funeral services were l ulil the light, conducted bv the Rev. Mr. Trenliolni Goud-Mglit. Mv heart is vv itli you as 1 kneel to of the I’reshytei'iuii church.—Flor-1 encc Times, 201 b inst. The Comptroller-Geueral has re ceived an enquiry as to what tax is required from sewing machine agents in this State. In reply it is answered that the General Statutes require a license of $100 !;> be paid to the Clerk of the Court in each County bv hawkers and peddler# operating pray; Good-night! God keep you in bis care alvvav. creep ■Thick shadow? ghosts About my head; I lose myself in tender dreams. While overhead The like silent Although I have said the major ity of girls use slang, there are #ome j ; who lake a pride in using pure and j ! perfect language; and oh, vvliala! ple.i.-uiv it i# to converse with llle.-e! ! onee lieatd a gentleman a k: \\ by : is it that Miss T. i: such ;i favorite? She certain I v isn’t vm v aitraeUve-ap-1 .. i i • r • i pi’uv for them ibsolutelv, peal ing. .No. returned In# Incud, • 1 , • “hut, oh, she is a perfect talker.” —A perfect talker." What a Halter ing attribute it is; rn allributi’ that every girl must admire, that every girl must covet. Then why will they use slang?—-.Maureen Dim. Send me th.it which Tliou kiiovvcst i# blessing. Ihougli it uia, not seem blessing tome: and deny in • tliat wliicli Thou knovvest is no bles.siiig, however ready L in mv ignorance, may be to think it so. That i# the spirit i'! praver. When we are pray ing for Messing#, we ought never to Wc ought ilways to pray for them if they be truly good lor us: if not, God, in an swering our prayer, would not be blessing us indeed.—A. K. II. Bovd. Loud Rands moon \ \orlh Carolina Negro I'ronoso Thai ex-Slaves and ex- Slave Owners be r \/ 3 Enid. f- U ' .A . ,. _ j J therein. Tins applies to hawkers and , (llough , f . tr Washington, August 25.—Jolin | peddlers of all giKwls, wares and iner safe and rtroug II. Williamson, a colored politician cliaudisc, except venders of fruit and To trust you Urns, dear of .North Carolina, proposes to run newspapers, magazines, books, vege for Congress next year on a singular j t.tbles, tobacco, jimvisioiisof any kind platform. Hi# proposition is that j or ugrii-ultural product#, or sales of Congriss jirovide for (he ]iiiyn.-eiit, at: sample-; by p-r.-ou# travelling foi the rate of $300 per head, of the ! established commercial houses, or le : I,t)t)t),0(10 slave's ret free by the late j sales of stapl ■ articles maufacllired war, $200 of this amount to he jmid in Ibis Male. That is a good hand w hich is put comes stealing through ! ol,t ^ 1k ' 1 P • S,,I1K ‘ oih'"' 1 " ^ the window bars, A silver sickle gleaming'niid shirs. ivvay, love yet — The night is long. 1 say wilii sobbing bivatb the The National t'ongre will e mveiie at Sedalia, Ro luiliiqpa and lens of millions of silver will be con id into pieces of 371.25 grains of silver and 41.25 gr dus of alloy each, and called “dol- lirs,” and forced op you in paymeii! of what jKoplc have promised to pay von in dollars. lotbc owner of each slave or his heirs, and $100 to each freedman or his heirs. It will take $1,200,(00,- 000 to do this, and Williamson pro poses to supply tlu‘ funds by issuing 2 per cent fifty year bond-; to that amount. Williamson is Jn earnest and believes tin- scheme to be feasi ble. He says it is n-.it as near as v isionary a projiositiou as the sub- j ^ ^ | tfeasurv system of the Farmers’ AI i bai.ee, and that he expects U| get ;l11 j u.e.-e are about of the voles of the ev-slaves, amlj,|, enough of those of the eS-slavi owners to elect bin:. old prave Ginid nigh), sweet dream kee)> you v V 'l'v where. -Selected, Stone walUJarksnu. nv t he wayside. the That is a ginid hand vv liieh knows bow to make pain easier and head aches vanish. i Thatis a good hand which knows bow to give heartily and freely. That is a good hand w hich is put ond,! out to help yon or me as we walk’-” 1 ,loi "K ••V an imperative spirit- along in life; when we feel we need ! u ' < ! !'*"• God so'.ne ope to protect us. That is a good hand which never wrote anything of which it wa# aslunned. ui 'I which never 'put its : To do good we must first lie good. | if the character be good the conduct j will be goo 1. We must-put our main j efforts on being good and our good works will How out as naturally as ! we breathe. I’eter exhorts us to give nil diligence to ^complete our Cliris- ; tian character. If we do this he says, we will not only never fall, but we ! w ill not bo idle or unfruitful. Aiming at perfection iu Christian character, land giving al! diligence to secure ‘that end, will bear much fruit of Spirits of Love ami Braun. oh s oj !• armor# g • baud to fraud and dishonesty. Missouri, on It is safy b’ say that <d ail i!icj Thai is a good hand which help# November loth. It will be composed Southern military eiiieftatns tlicone I a |„ng the weak, the helpless and of two delegate# at hove from each j whose genius, character and achieve-^ {| 10 | KK) |'. State, and one delegate am! alternate j nient# have eoinnianded the highest : ’('hat is a good band wbieli dm’# from each Congressional District. i degree of respect and admiration ot jt, ; vvork well; whatever it may Is, The receipts of cotfuii al New hern | H*'' people of the North wa- “Stone-' wherever it may lie. it doth not from the 1st of September, 18:10, ’to! wall Jackson, arv eves ■ me ap- I he I the 1st of August, I8ii], amount to! veiling of his statue at Lexington recent Levin; ■ halos. 'IHic New berry Cotton j Vii,, was not less an occasion of in- has bought 5,821 hale#, and ; to rest and even pride lo the great 150 hales on hand.; American public residing on this #ide time In * year there was no Mason and Dixons line than il grow weary, and itdoetli its work it is worth its wage. llciTility the ( ause of I'auiMTiMii. I’rof. Ely. of I’eiin.-vlvaiiia, give- several instances of the vvorkin spirits of Love am! draw near Ami lilt from ni\ #a'l. u I'll-' -li.elow . I bat ever bel'-i (war Id darken the vision# thai rise. ttii. come trom your home wliere t lie summer-liglit glow # Erom ili“ In-igltls of .m inliuile clime. Ami hivatlic on mvsjnn' tliccbiinu of repose b rom the foiiutaius of nnlure di vine. t'li. leavi me no long, , insaitui##. I pray, 5e sjiiril# of Beaul v and Love. stock at all at New hern. , wa# Compared with IS.Stl—'till, our re-, H 11 'umrld love# a hero, ami -oiom- (l f |, <H ,] K . r j s „| The ancestress of ilx IVople arc not capable of self-j cciptq.novv'show an inciv.i.-c of 4,374 wall Sacksou was a In ro ol Hie no- ,1,,^,^ f ;l i|,i| V) , V cll known iu criiniu- govcnimcut even in small matters, i bales, with the nionlb ol Augusl vef blest type. Ilerttnfore cheap exciirsioiis from to come in.— Newln-iTV Herald. ' He was a soldier ol consummate ehe u:s ern counties of our state to, ....'.a i ability. Judged bv the criterion «.f Charleston have inti rfered with the: jug in gatluring ol crops. Much loss ha j dead in a hraneh near m uome I e’ll sustained and a strong appeal '1’uesdav morning, lie was subject I has gone uji to the railroads to give to epileptic (its and his custom vva^ t . the people (d’ the South. \\\) ^ , .q.i,,,.-,,,],’. ( ,p heledil v as a eau.-e 1 ''"N' for Hiy pivsem • ... . i each day To thv heaiitifnl card nidi and "Sloiie- to waste schiKil money by teaching, a If there is to be a limit to that smattering of German lo children sort of thing, as Iheru has been, it who forget it, and ought to forget it, may not do any harm. But l ow are before they have been out of school a you going to set any limit to it vvith- yeur. out favoritism under free coinage? . t 1 What right w ill I lie government \ Big Oiler. have to coin Senator Stewart’s 371.2 Mr. R. R. Hudgens, of Forreston, tf'«.ir£W .silyet wu, a dollar for Clarendon County, offers to bet his ^wurt, ‘<» refuse to home and crop that he can and will coin Senator Wolcott’s 371.25 grams make more cotton to the acre than """ fwr ''° r koU ’ a.yother live man in Soutl. Carolina. " Iki “ * :i "* U™ «« He s. ys if there is a man in Marll oro if ^ ls u ‘ r revo,lt who wants to be convinced he will he 11 from ling s780,00.0,0(’<> or glad to hear from him. lie is willing $«»«,0(K.,000 worth of silver into to measure anywhere between 5 aml^'V^ lf '' 50 acres. Now, shall we let l.ifn f l» r0 ‘ lut '« i,ld brought^ the Mint? pass, or convince him tlnd Marlboro And if silver dollars don’t ded.i.e in farmers are nut to be bc*at**u bv unv value hen there are \en man) of farmer west of the Fee Dec? Speak Hiem around they will be di:ier«t out, friends.—Marlboro Democrat. from H'l -reenbacks, Con i; feel rule notes railroad -In ks.euvvrn- Ifa mairrcfuses to talk idumt bis ment bonds, cat#. p, was his huinc no cheap excursions during the cot t„ n n !-n- w. ter and bathe his head ton picking season. The laborers .viim !: ■ •i'e't on'e coming on. II- cannot resist the lcmpliifo:i to mu . ( ,t oat of led at a out 1 o’clock iu 'o.vii tj down and sj end ad.iy or two ; ||i v nuimiug, and it i# supposed there an 1 the!, .• idle two or thro. ; iVeling tli ‘erkins, a colored boy liv- found | SIU '(K'S - on the held, mid especially by bis celebrated Valiev eimpaign, wbieli be alone eondm-ted, and vv liieh gtKid niilitary er'ties have compared vvitli the most brilliant of Napole in’s eanipaign#, no general of the S uthem armies, I e - e d e ;eepl cd, was his superior i i be ■ in tu lie# or Iral'-yisal abililv. W-tli In fali al statistic#, was ealle th- n k it her of criminal#." iti# "• -! I ini.iti'd t hat l.2(Hi memhers of llii-'i I’amiiv cost the eoliimunilv iu seven- 1 tv-live veiir.s, direetlv approirn'i of ii fit,a!te up'.- at Chain eilorsyille, in tin- lurir of lavs lo get e e ihcir'‘iii. The rail-1 ,-d to <;o to the spring, but in doine ; ' j< tory. I he .-ui: ot the roads hav' g.i.r*' . resp.e. t and| so he had to cross I he branch v _\ s p,.,. n.'vvr lost a great l.al- excurs o I# will i con until cotton j w hieh be wa# discoVeTcd lying fac p| t . J;i -k#oii wa# vvitli him, he is g; th Ted — | in i'bin burg Herald. i downward, in about two inches ol never gained one in li!.-> absence. ,, ,. f ,i . water, cold in death. Trial Jitstie. But, with all his genius for war, M*v. icai;;’»Ntil to a f jin vi llut .laoksoa (onibiiu'd a miiom* rharau- • Adams hold iiji iiMiuofa out thu .. t i • 1 , , Inscotioa v\a : !o >K urn very lint* ^iikt 1 . ter f a* no’al heroian and dovolioii the' ruins, "Yes, sir,”' be said l " ,,i - v ’ • he verdict of the jury wa lo w!ial i„, de.m c.l hisdnlv which is “List week it was.higher than my | that the deceased came to Ins .leal I, justly I be. a'lmiral bin of tile bet from ae< ideutul drownmi'.—Rock m.'ii of i very sectio head, but this week it is only shoaid-! er high.” “How eniu that le pussi- Ide?” asked Mr. K. “Well. sir. easy! as falling off a log. It rained so Hill Herald. mn h neighbor, he will also refuse to talk r U#h, bu'idiiig lots, houses, turnips, ubout'you. pat a toes, peiches, or uiything else i .. . t!ie lanii got amt tin cogs, race horses, ,, ( ,t .m full of heavy fruit that ctuallv i-.' ged down about eight jiadies.” Tli nie.'.riest nian on record i# tin me vv in s .id re, e illy t-> a young la dy—No, I’d rather not have you lain my a in. It does no good and wear- out my cout sleeve. i of the Unio.i. We readily agree, therefore, with the impressive observation of a cotempir.iry that the te*.nr demon stration at Lexington “eaiinot he re- iml less than a million and a quarter of dollars. The statistic# of the Childivn’.- Home, Washington conn tv. Gliio, sliovv that in 111" two Vi .i! taken #i\ly-six per cent of tin- m matedf the Home were related b, blood or marriago. But jiovverfiil heredity is a factor in prodm-he- . pauperism, I’rof. Ely think# tln.t eii- v ironnient i# greater. It is in eliang ! ing the enviroiiiueiit and. makim; mind liomo# that our groat hope oi rodiieing pauperism lies. Wheii a m.in think - nobody oa.iv; for bim, ami lie is ah ne in a cold. 1 scllisli world, he would do well to ask himself the question: "\\ Imt liuvcl I done tomnke anybody care for and ’ove me, and to warm the world vvitli 11 is generally ; Marmiivi. ,,i! tune# 1 have si lave; gin of spring. And felt the avee-.-r jiovver Full over mv Ivr soft wing, Willi i he bre llll of ma neh like indiivellv, | angel s -i tlovvi-r. ' a the o - a r -v lo re How - guided a# a • atlempl to fan the fires f j|h am , . m . rositv y ot sectional feeling; il was a spun- , , . T taneous tribul ■ to a great ma... - the ea-e that those w 1m com|.la... the Journal, Lansing, Mich. most have done the least. \ ml tIn- love that was min old gladsome i'Vll over nn sjelrit lib n In the value of :'lt "'tiiin, ers still twine \s sweet ami tmider ami irne*. --Bishop A. Beals, Is lour Soul Ir.suml ! A little bov on bis father’s k “I ajia. is your som insure,I "Why do you ask. mv son ? “Because ! heard Ulieb- #:iy l bat you bad your hmlsr and your lit',- insured, bet le- did not believe von had tli Might of vour soul, ami he wa# afrai ! von would lose it. Can't you get it insured right away ?" It was all too true: and the father wash'd to seek tlie Divin,' guarantee of lii 1 It-orge in.-urod, :! soul’s well being. ,v •" % \ THIS PAGE CONTAINS FLAWS AND OTHER DEFECTS WHICH MAY APPEAR ON-THE FILM.