The Darlington herald. (Darlington, S.C.) 1890-1895, May 04, 1892, Image 2
Estulilisli'Ml July Kith. IS'.I0.
Destroyed liv Eire Detemlier 15th, IH'.IO
Ke-Kstahlished February lltb, ISill.
W. D. WOODS,
T. J. DREW.
KDlTOltS
AND
PKOrillKTOKM.
One Dollar a Year.
DARLINGTON, S. ('.
Wednesday, May 4, 1892.
Tillman would not stop speaking
though his time was out and Gray
(pronounced Tillmanite, after urging
him to discontinue had to adjourn,
in decency, the meeting and leave
him'still speaking. This in reply
too, to those who had complied strict
ly with the ruhsofthe debate. We
call this a disgraceful jierformanee
on the pait of the Governor of South
Carolina.— Sumter Freeman.
The Times and Democrat is in
favor of the free and unlimited coin
age of silver, and it hopes that enough
free silver men will get in the House
of Representatives at the Fall elec
tions to pass the bill.
Which means that you are advo
eating a measure for the benefit of
the silver mine owners. If free
coinage will help the Southern peo
pie in the remotest degree, why don’t
some of its advocates show us the
benefit of it.
The admission is wrung from even
the enemies of Governor Tillman that
he is truthful and honest.—Coinin'
bia Register.
So far as we know there is not a
single paper in the State that has
ever made any reflections on Gov
Tillman’s honesty, hut for the Reg
ister to say that his enemies acknowl
edge him to he truthful is simply
absurd, fornoone knows better than
the editor of the Register that Mr
Tillman, from the very outset of his
political career, has made a great
many charges that he knew to be false
at the time he made them,and that he
has never, in the slighest degree, de
viated from his course of slander and
misrepresentation. < fur contemporary
is pushing the Governor very close in
the matteref misstatements and un
less he scares up a few more false
charges, to repeat in his speeches, the
Register will leave him behind.
THAT “INTERVIEW.”
The Florence Messenger publishes
an improbable story about a “young
gentleman from Darlington calling
on Governor Tillman” and then ex
posing the conversation held. A
spy who will worm himself into the
confidence of a gentleman, and then
repeat a private conversation to the
injury of his host, is unworthy of
trust or belief from any brave or
honorable man. It is striking below
the belt to use such campaign ma
terial.—Columbia Register.
The gentleman referred to in the
above article is Mr. T. J. Drew, the
junior editor and publisher of The
Heuald, and as the Registei makes
a wrong impression on its readers,
we will give the facts of the case and
hope that our contemporary will be
fair enough to publish them. Mr.
Drew called at the Governor’s office,
on a matter of business, and not
linding him there called at his resi
dence. lie was received with the
utmost respect and was very pleasantly
impressed with Governor Tillman’s
courtesy. In the presence of several
friends, when he returned home, he,
without the least intention of its be
ing made live subject of a newspaper
article, repeated some of the Gov
ernor’s remarks, calling special at
tention to the polite treatment that
he received. Among those who
heard him was the editor of the
Florence Messenger, and on his re
marking that he intended publishing
the matter, Mr. Drew told him that
he very much preferred that no men
tion should be made of it. Of course
he regrets that the Messenger should
have made use of it, but acquits the
editor of any intentional injustice,
presuming that he merely followed
the usual practice to publish every
thing that comes to hand. Had Mr.
Drew entertained the least intention
of publishing the conversation, or of
attempting to make political capital
out of it, the columns of Tn k 11 Kit a i.i»
would have been used for that pur
pose, as it is not. to say the least,
customary for one paper to furnish
another with news. No one connect
ed with The Hekaui ever attempts
to play the role of a spy or to worm ,
himself into the confidence of a man ! ’
with a view of injuring him. I'nfor-: . •
tunately The Hekai.., is not as well I. ‘ <H ' g t0 ‘T"" a< t l,x ’ k -
posted in the phraseologv of the '"'' to * K llC ‘ tl(m 0 ,l IR "
,, „ , , from some of the unoccupied and in
prize ring as the Register, but sup-
. . . • the West, where it shall be deemed.a
poses the expression, “striking benw
.. , .■ ! capital offense to organize a bank,
the belt, must have some connection 1 , , e .,,
, , - c erect a factory or build a rai road,
with a prize fight, and if it means ., ... , , ’
: and from which capitalis s shal be
unfairness, then I HE Heuai.Ii never .... , , . *
; ,i , , . . rigidly excluded. If a good manv
lights in that w av; and wishes most , ‘ , 7. . .
i ,• I. , i . of the editors and politicians in
emphatically to sav that if it could, .. , .
, ‘ ‘ r . Non th (. a roll na express their irue
bv the resort to anv unfair means,
, , ,, ‘ ,, | sentiments, this new state would be
defeat Gov. Tillman, it would scorn . . .
. . ,, , | regarded as a veritable paradise, and
to compass Ins iiolitieal downfall bv = * ’
. • would sotui have a very large popula-
Senator Irby is more interested in
the political tight in South Carolina
than in his duties in the Senate, and
deserves the severest condemnation
for such inexcusable neglect. It is
very probably true that he has no iu-
tluence in this body, but he ought all
the same, to stay at his post or re
sign. There would be very little
danger of his successor being a
poorer representative than Mr. Irby
has shown himself to be. If Senator
Rntler had neglected his duty in this
fashion, what a terrible and long
continued howl of denunciation
would be heard from the administra
tion papers; but of course it is all
right if Mr. Irby sees fit to be remiss
in his duty. If one of these papers
has criticized Mr. Irby it has escaped
our noth:**. And this is the man
that occupies the seat of Wade
Hani))ton, the unsellish patriot, with
whom duty was always the supreme
GRANT AS A SOLDIER.
Mr. Chauncey M. Depew, of New
York, one of the foremost orators of
the country, and a man of brilliant
attainments, made the address at the
laying of the corner stone of tlie im
posing monument to la- erected to
perpetuate the military renown of the
man, whom the people of the North
regard as their greatest soldier in the
recent war; and while we would not
for a moment detract from the fame
of Grant, we must take exception to
his being placed aliovc his great an
tagonist in the art of war. With
Grant’s political history, we have, in
this connection, nothing to do, and
will confine ourselves to his record as
a commander. That he possessed
many of the iieculinr elements of
character that go to make a great gen
eral, no one will deny, and in honor
ing his memory the people of the
North honor themselves, for this
magnificent memorial is erected sim
ply to the successful general,and has
no connection with his political re
cord. Had he been aught but nman
of iron nerve, unflinching courage
and indomitable will, he could not
have planned and carried toa success
ful conclusion the jmculiar, and in
some res|iects merciless tactics that
he adopted to crush t he great leader
that had crushed and humiliated his
predecessors in command of the Fed
eral Army. It is probably but natural
that a majority of the Northern people
should regard him as Lee’s superior,
but that a man of Mr. Depew's intel
ligence should make such a state
ment, is to say the least, surprising,
especially when it is taken into con
sideration that the facts are all
against such a claim. The mere
fact that Grant adopted the peculiar
method that he did, to wear out the
army (f Lee, was a tacit acknowl
edgement on hispart that he could not
hope to compete with him in strategy,
and that his only hope for success
was to wear out an army that he
knew could not be recruited. Any
other supposition than this would
make Grant's methods utterly inex
cusable and at variance with all the
principles of scientific warfare. He
was well aware that for every man
he lost he could put, if he simply
asked for them, ten in his place,
whereas when Lee lost a man there
THE SILVER Ql ESTION.
‘The joh of taking up Mr. Draw-
ley’s speech and meeting his argu-
theyare based on false promises, and Rally’round your organ, (toys. The
prophecies of evil which never come. I Register is going to stand by the peo-
_ Wc most emphatically join issue I'lci'itheir light, and liic. broadsidis
of truth, reason and Democracy into
meats,” would be an easy and grate- with the Enterprise in its statement th( . r . lMk ’. of ' t i )e l(f the J f ilrlll
fill ono to the Enterprise if It had
time and space to devote to arguments
that are based on the bald assump
tion that gold is the measure of all
values, and that silver is not a pre
cious metal at all, but simply a com
modity like wheat, corn, tobacco, cot
ton, etc. This begging of the ques
tion (pclitioprincipii,as the logicians
cull it), is the basis of the whole
anti-silver argument. The remain
der of the so-called argument consist
in vague prophecies of the disastrous
liuaiicial results that would follow
the restoration of silver to its proper
function as a money metal; all of
which have proven by experience, as
far as wc have gone towards the free
coinage of silver, as false as the
premises ui>oii which the entire argu
ment is based. Even ex President
Cleveland, the demigod of tariff re
form, and at one time the high priest
of the anti-silver sanctuary, has
candidly acknowledged that none of
the evils which he anticipated as the
result of the various silver bills that
have been passed by Congress, from
the original “Bland Bill” to the
‘Sherman Dill,’ which is now in force
have come to pass; and he is even re
ported as now saying that if the
Democratic party should put a free
silver plank into its platform, he
would stand upon it rather than
antagonize the party.
Six years ago, when the migt stub
born silver tight ever
gross, was in progress, every argu
ment on both sides was exhausted
Since then pro-silver men have had
their position strengthened by expe
rience to a certain extent; but the
gold bugs have developed nothing
better than a repetition of stale ar-
that the demonetization of silver m t . 18> Columbia Register.
1873 was a stupendous fraud. On Well yon have been tiring a good
the contrary we contend that the j many broadsides, but unfortunately
they were false, illogical and in the
measure was rendered necessary by
the extreme difficulty experienced in
having a double standard; silver be
ing subject to fluctuations which do
not affect gold to any appreceable ex
tent. Our contemporary will hardly
deny the statement, that the origina
tors of the agitation, to allow free
coinage, and its most persistent ad
vocates are the owners of the silver
mines and those who have, for sjiecu-
lative purpose, invested in silverlftil-
lion; and the mere mention of this
should make us extremely careful in
regard to adopting measures that will
benefit no one except the above men
tioned classes. To use the very words
of the Enterprise, “that no class or
interest can reap extravagant profit
except at the expense of others,” is
one of the strongest arguments that
can be used against the Dland Dill,
for the attempts, so persistently made,
to show that it would benefit the peo
ple, have b< en, to say the least, la
mentable failures. If, for thesakeof
argument, we admit that the present
silverdollar, the one proposed by Mr.
Dland to be a duplicate, contains 80
cents, wortli of metal, then the silver
mine owner, who carried $800,000
worth of silver to the Mint, would,
without any cost, receive one million
silver dollars, or what purported to
hi'diest degree undemocratic.
ft. L. llaiTell
&
? . . - -i
Company
Will have an advertisement in The
Hekaui next week. Look for it.
THE DAHLINGTON
-SHOE STORE-
Has just received a very large and well' selected stock for the Spring and Summer
trade.
O ft F O It l> T I F S
For Inulits and Misses in endless variety, from the very cheapest to the celebrated
hand-sewed ipmds of E. (’. Dents & Co’s make.
l N.
This Lino is Complete in Etery Respect.
MENS’ SHOES.
• ' . x ' * i '
Our stock cannot lie excelled anywhere. We have them.in-.fair, Cordovan,
Kangaroo. French Calf in haud-.ewed, hand-welt and good-year welt.
Will call Special Attention to our $3 SHOES, Genuine
Calf and good year welt, as good as hand sewed. •
A Full Line !
LIS, \ i
D m tf
giiments based upon false premises he this amount, which he would be I
and continued prophecies, of evil enabled to put into circulation and a
which they themselves arc endeavor
ing to force upon the country in their
own interest, and which the present
forced coinage of silver has assisted
very materially in preventing. There
is absolutely nothing new iu the
anti-silver argument. Wc might add
as to its ultimate purposes, inordh ate
greed of gain, superlative presump
tion and entire disregard of any in
terests except their own.
We would have it distinetlv
the same time clear two hundred i
thousand dollars by the operation.
Now the Government can’t giveaway
this much money without making
somebody bear the loss, and of course I
it w ill fall on the taxpayers.
One of the favorite arguments of
the free coinage is that the ..Dland I
Dill will increase the circulation, eu-j
. hance prices, and iu this way inaugu-
PERFECTED
CRYSTAL LENSES
TRADE MARK.
Ciallty First and AIw'ji.
1111
derstood that we do not refer to that rate an era of great prosperity, es-1
large class «f our people, especially necialiv for the farmer. The un
in the nouth, w ho entertain honest 11 i •
• . ,. ,! answerable objection to this lies in
convictions upon this question, and . . , . , , .
whom we believed to he decieved by, thc fact tllat a " ,,,llate d currency m-
the specious arguments of thc men variably brings about financial!
who demonetized silver by fraud in panics, and these often are thc prc- |
18,3, and who ba\o and are still, cursorsof repudiation. An inflation
”“ 1 ' 1 «i- Book - Dealer - and - Optician
1» "g "lit"'- "f t* H.mld Ihul l’™"' 1 ' 1 '-' **«* f**! n,„ ,|,« ™li, s ivu ,*• of lh«-
the demonetization of silver in 1873 cotton and the cotton planter, m the brated'mods in Darliin'ton S.G.
was stupendous fraud, for us to do event of this inflation, would be
more than mention the fact. It is wor , e off tliau lie is to-dav. There KELLAM & 11 0 0 11E '
It. O. It It I STOW.
was not the remotest hope that ho | hlunlliati tQ acknowl( , ^ it
could be replaced; yet despite all nevertheless true, that immediately! ls il 1* ‘‘"t-V ° f money in the country
this, with his vastly superior force, after the payment of the French in-^ 01 ’ blithe legitimate needs of the
better armed, better equipped and demnity to Germany in 1871-2, and; people, and the fact of its scarcity i Peddlers
better fed, it took Grant many long; " ^ len " * K ‘ n Gci'many followed the here is due almost solely to our lack : these famous
weary months and many bloody >'at-j ^'and^ and few this condition of
tics, in which he lost more men than emissary (Mr. Ernest Scyd) came to “
The only manufacturing Opticians iu
the South, Atlanta, Ga.
arc not supplied with
f lasses.
the whole ijumher of Lee’s army, be
fore he finally succeeded iu its prac
tical annihilation.
Had any other plan appeared the
such means.
lion,
very large populu
drawn from the ranks of the
The Times and Democrat would | down trodden and oppressed people
get dow n off thc fence long enough | 0 f the other states. The ear would
to remark that from the two cum-| m . ver k . tortliml bv „ K . .hnekofthe
puign meetings so far held the nidi-1. r
cations arc that Tillman will sweep! ^omotivc, or thc hum of machinery,
worked by the slaves of capital, and
no hanks would exist for the oppres
sion of the people. Of course, being
rid of these curses of modern civili
zation. peace and plenty would
abound and every man have plenty of
money without the trouble of work
ing for it.
sweep!
the State like a whirlwind.
If you are so sure of that why don’t
you leave you imposition on the fence?
Says the Abbeville Medium, the
power of truth, as told by Tillman, is
t jo much for the malcontents.
We would like inquire how the Me
dium can tell anything about the
effect of the truth, as it never inten-j
tiomilly tells it. A few experiments !
of this character would he a novelty |
to the Medium.
affairs we arc indebted to the vision-
tins country with a bribery fund of ar . v and revolutionary utterances of
$500,000, to corrupt our legislature our self constituted reform leaders,
and procure the demonetization of whose utter ignorance on all finau-j
silver in this country. The monome- du , ( llMtions U onlv , xcmled bv tl J
* 1 11 uulists oi the eaisteri) cities, jfttw their ,
least fcasihle, it is more than jiroli-1 o}>}K>rttinity cliipjH.*d in with the Kn- (;un ‘ ,t * cllce uhieh the) present;
able that («rant would have acted glish capitalists and literally bought their views.
ujion it, for otherwise the appalling* the American Congress. The simple If the Bland Bill, as some have
sacrifice of life,that attended his cam-j fat ' t tll! . lt UK,n ,0 , . 8 l'p lu * suggested, projioscd to put one hun-
paigns, would he in the highest i ' iTo'nicIf" a ’cUi'.'chi.l'g' ami te,,t " ' vwrth of silverhl em 7
give inexcttsahle, and would detract conclusive argument that it was in dollai', wlnle still open to objection, u
very largely from the reputation he their own interest and therefore de- would not he so had, for the simple
left behind him. In addition to his I structive of the interests of thecoun- reason that, with this requirement,
immense armies and his inexhaustii
hie resources (irant had the advant- [ bd no BU class IO 'ii)r ^ inhuvsl 110 ' lu * ,lt ‘ e,,,c, d ^ have it coined, lin
age of acting on the offensive and this
is of itself a very great help in pre
serving the morale-of soldiers. The
great wonder is that he did not ac
complish his purpose sooner, hut
then it must lie taken intoeonsidei'a-
tion that his opponent wasoneofthe
most consummate generals of either
ancient or modern times, who, with
4he numerical stivnjrlh and resources
“Let the dead bury its dead.” The
living J. L. 0it is as valuable a can
didate as our opjKJUcnts could have
found to nominate, and f.iom the
manner in which Governor Tillman
is rippling his political record there j
"HI I*' 110 Heces-itv to "desecrate tlu i ( - 0| .|>onition, with power to lieggar
We would not cheek the influx of
capital and its wonderful develop
ment, hut it is well to remember that
in the train of manufactories, and
we might say of capital, comes its
complement of poverty, which eviN
in a great measure a purely agricul
tural country escape. — Florence
Times.
Well said. A man who is de
pendent for his daily bread upon a
SOUNDS k WILKINS,
Contractors
and
Builders,
Darlington, S. C.
Wc are prepared to furnisli Designs,
Plans and Specifications of any
work in the architectural line.
The new Oentrnl Motel and the Court
House are specimens of our work in
Florence. The residences of Messrs.
• r...„ i *1. ....i, ... <• . “■ • : McFall and Willis, (now under wav of
time has pioted the tinth of this: for the Nub-Treasury Dill, hut a fair and i construction,.) are specimens of our work
try in general: for it follows a* the owners'of the silver would have
thu night follows the day, [
that no class nor interest can j.
reap extravagant profit except at the C8 ‘ s * - wt ‘ ri ‘ 'wchted thereby,
expense of others. The finaacial D hat thc South needs is not free
history of this country since that coinage, not an inflated currency or
V rcnrli Polish and Illaekin^. Nlioe Findings of every description. •
A ftobhy Line of Hats for itlen.
i o.
r
1
ijui iVb,
Proprietor.-. Darlinirto-n Shoe Store.
Important to Kveryliody!
\\ hen iu heeil of Anything in the
STATIONERY
Line, don’t fail to call at the
while money has been constantly iu- . . r ,i
creasing in‘value by icious legisla-' ; a, J"«""‘'nt of the present
tiou, the value if agricultural and all nnqiiitous I unff, and inthercslora-
other products of labor, as well as of tion of confidence, on thc part of
real estate, has been as constantly de- capitalists, iu our ability and willing-
creasing. We by no means claim that „ MS , 0 nlce t c . ver y honest obligation,
thc demonetization of silver is ros- 7
, jKjnsible for all of the financial evils J ,u ‘ a88 "»>l'f'«>** the farmer
of his adversary, would have planted that afflict us, hut that it is one of a "wds relief any more than the other
his banners on the capitol at 'Wash■ | series of measures which bear un- classes of the people, in the South, is
ingtoii and have marched his vietori- J 11 ' 1all, t opjiressivejy upon the false, for no measure cgu Ijc devised ]
ous legions through the streets ,,f: l,ll,fSW •hx 1 people, and are rajiidly that will benefit the farmer that will
.. ,7 , , Coneentiatiug the wealth of thecoun-
New 5 ork and (Imago. try into a few hands.
It is very prohahle that, during. Even in this brief outline of the
the last two yeais of the War, Lee history of anti-silver legislation we
secured more personal glory than any | have said far more than we at first !
in Darlington.
(tall on us if you contemplate building.
£'*/"(Hlice bet-ween Herfing's barber Sliop
and The Darlington Herald olliee.
PETER BOWLES
DOES FIRST GLASS
The Lm-gest Jane of SPOKTIftfi! LOOMS,
sucli as Base Balls, Bats, Bits, Foot-balls,
Cloquet Sets, Hammocks, Stretchers,
Hooks, &c., ever brought to the city. Also
full line of small musical instruments.
Large Stock. Prices to suit the times.
FERTILIZEIS
F 0 It
COTTON!
not he shared in by all our people
and any burden put upon the one is
home as well by the other.
In conclusion wc
in fan
Paper Hanging.
isiimost cm- Kalsomine Work a Specialty.,
He solicits the patronage of
Darlington.
grave” to show that the ring nominee
for Lieutenant Governor is not such
a man as South Carolina Democrats
can afford to honor.
Yes everybody is vulnerable pro
vided truth is not considered essen
tial iiunaking charges against him.
With all the Registers wilful mis
representations and inexcusable per-
to injure such a man as J. L. Orr.
It is the opinion of a great many
that the joint discussions are doing
statements were accepted as being
true, the conclusion would he inev
itable that they are the most depen-
no good and may do considerable : , b .nt ,i n( i (|o\vn-trodd*u people iu the
harm. The fact is already demon-
himself and family, has his lips
sealed by the iron hand of capital.
The most independent man on earth
is a farmer out of debt. We want
to see our agricultural population
prosper and the burthen of debt
lifted from their shoulders before
anything else is done.—Columbia
Register.
From the wav the Register has
versions of the truth it is powerless ^ talkillg llboutthe fa,.^ if its
other man ever did in the same length mtemied. I n conclusion W" would phatically to say that we make no
of time, lighting all the time with the I lis1 '. **! 1 s attention io the| ( ,|aj n , to having sidd anything new on j
consciousness that H was only a mat-; bk . argnments of Senators Morgan 1 l '" t 1,au ' l'^”"'-!
ter of time when his devote'! and un- and Woleott, during the recent silver; son,,> "f •lb’ arguments agninstj_
lliuching army, the liravest that ever dehate in the Senate. Arguments! this measure: but while freely ad-
waved its hauliers iu the slorm of "^eiialor Sherman, the great niitling that they are not new we in-1
battle, would lie crushed. Seiiiiode- .| in A t ^‘ 11 ll101 " ) '‘l 10 ' 1 ) | sist that they have never been met, —
‘'it'*<»•«•«• *»»*»': jwras&y tzssi.
everything else iiad been eijual tuj The editor ofTtllc IIkkai.b, who the argument of Major' Company will he hell at the olliee of the
The Darlington Phosphate Works
ARE.OFFERING TO EXCHANGE
. ALL GRADES OF FERTILIZERS
FOR COTTON ON LIRERAL
TERMS. FOR FFI.THER 1‘ARTl-
CL'LARS, CALL (tN
C. S. McCt’LkOUdH,
DARLINGTON, S. C.
con nt rv.
strated that Tillman is the choice of. „„ ,
the people for Governor and the J he Horenee I lines has Ikvu
joint discussions may as well he| working hard, foi a number of years,
abandoned.—Times and Democrat, j to induce capitalists to locate in the
Yes they are, but it is Got. Till- South, and it is pretty late, to say
man that is suffering from them, j tho least, in finding out that want,
and of course, from the standpoint j crime and a crowded population
of his adherents, they ought to l>e always come in thc train of capital.
stopped immediately. The Governor
is on the defensive, and this style of
lighting is very galling' to him;
cs|>ocuilly when the fact forces itself
nijon his attention that he is making
a pretty poor business of replying to
the exposure of his shortcomings by
Sheppard and Orr.
The trouble with both of our con
temporaries is that they are driven,
by an imaginary isilitical exigency,
to fight hanks ami cni')>nmtums with
one hand while with the other- they
extend a warm welcome to all the
capitalists that can he induced to
locate here.
Hiiunibarsskill and courage his army
would have been cut to pieces. No
military historian would dream of
claiming that Scipio was superior
to the great Carthaginian simply be
cause circumstances, Iteyond Hanni
bal's control, gave him the victory.
The Iron Duke, Wellington,practical
ly annihilated the army of Napoleon,
at Waterloo, hut his strongest cham
pions would hardly claim that he was
a greater master in the art of war,
than the great Corsican that made
the whole of Eiii'o]K‘ trembleliencath
his warlike tread. The name of
Ijce/ will live as long as
time endures, will go down in
history with that of thegreat captains
of ancient and modern times, ever oc
cupy one of the highest places iu the
Temple of Fame and his moral
grandiur and thc simplicitr and
purity of his private life will he un
wields one of the most trenchant
pells in the State, we know to he fair
minded and just, and that he is thor
oughly honest and earnest in his op
position to the free coinage of silver;
hut we as honestly believe that he is
mistaken, and trust ‘hat he, and those
who oppose silver from conscientious) as yet done, how this nieuriiire
conviction, will some day see “the wil , i,,,' (lu . ,, , ami when thev
error of their wav and reform their ... *
views on this subject. If lie was only ' lw lts "1'1'«" R '"‘* " ' ll "I*
as sound on the silver quesMon as he •' i l MJ "g t ‘ 1111,1 ‘‘“■i'd ''"dvr the banner
Conipnnv
M.
Rruwlcy, wc will very cheerfully
undertake the task of exjiosing the! April Iff-tt.'
fallacies of Senators Morgan and!
Wolhott. The hiirdenof the proof
is with the free coinage advocates,
and they must show, which they have!
rtiursibiv, Mav •I, tWli,%al 1'.’
W. C. COKKIt,
President.
E. C. ROTHOLZ.
Scientific American
Agency for
is on the subject of woman’s rights
we could reason together very
harmoniously.—York Enterprise.
If, as the Enterprise suggests, it is
of the silver kings
Hood of dishonest
and welcome
dollars.
We think that Mr. Waddel’s arti-
such an easy task to demolish thear-) ele will show as plainly as we could
hope to dothe fallacies of his state
ments in regard to the legal tender
notes. They will have to he met
sometime in the future, unless the
Government repudiates its
obligations. The hack pension
giiments of Mr. Drawley, which it
pronounces as state, why does it not
do so, and show how fallacious his
position is? The mere admission,
that time and space are lacking, in
CAVEATS.
TR.-.CE MARKS,
OCV PATENTS
ter I. VKTS, etc.
For Information am! fi- r IfniHihnok wrifo to
MUNN & CO.. .‘VH Hm> sdwav. Nr\v Vohk.
Oldest Imrenn for rccui'iujj patonts it* Amoriea.
Frery patent twkrn < of l»r us Is bro»u;ht tiefora
the public by a notice pl>cii ficc of charge in the
^cirutific American
Largest clrculntion of n r sclentl n c paper in tho
world. SplciiHidlv’ rittcd. No jtitc'liicpur.
tnnn should be without it. V»ecklr. r«;{.oo a
rear; fl.itl nix inontbs. Au.lf .s MtJNN S (’()»
l I'UI.lBiiKIts,ot'd llrojula?•*. . v yorl\
NOTICE TO TRESPASSERS.
Ilruelelle plidds and iiiixtnies, will, plain eond to maleli.
(’omelsrtle, a new faluie in Slreelsliade. . made fur cuinliination in various nove l
devices. . ... .. •:
Knilled worsled floods for children, at. o cape.-, lui lad lev. and mis.-t.i.
Kud'roideries.
Fosters Kid (tloves in leadin'.: shades and price .
Knit less variety of l.udies, Misses and Children. Hose; socks for infants and
infants c loaks.
Klhlions to suit the people.
Intported Kohes, somelhiiifr to he admired.
Fancy Hoods of all deseriplions.
Dress Makers Findings, will) prices away down. 1 must jn. i l upon von l<> runic
and see for yourself.
Mdme. Thompson Heallli llodiee for l.adies lhal c annot wear corsets Some
thinir entirely new.
Alma Corscl, in hlaek and while, heals 'em all, only £1.0(1.
order to demolish Mr. Drawley, is, to
our mind, a tacit admission that the "ill prove just nlcout as delusive for
task, to say the least, would be ox-j thu Federal soldier as the payment
inspiration and incentive to all future J tremci v difficult We do not deem iC f<"' the slaves will be for the South,
generations of'the human race; like I necessary, in order to demonstrate the for one is iinprolialilc'of
some lofty mountain peak that lifts j injustice and injurious effect of the
its snowcapped summit above the Rhine! Rill, to enter into any detailed
surrounding objects of Earth, sub-j argument, but will,as briefly as possi-
lime in its lofty height and lump-; hie, state Borne of the objections, to it
jcroachablc in its matchless purity. 1 even if, as thc Enterprises suggests,
honest
! We hereby warn all persons not to]
l’ a } 1 limit or fish cm cmr lands wiihonl per-•
mission. J. ('. IH.ACK WEI.L,
J. N. Sl'tiCiS. !
A. C. COtitiKItSHAU,,
M. T. 1.1 DE.
March 2:1, Ml'.’.-lf
Millinery!
faltillment ns the othe r.
Glrr ns a trial order if you nrril
anything in (hr way of Joh I’rinl-
iog.
HENHV M. SMITH,
Dealer in all kinds eef
COUNTY : CLAIMS. : &r.
Florence St., Darlington, S.C.
Mis.. Mafpric .limes, el lame (! Jolm.on A < i>„ of New York, the lemiest
milliners iu the me:mpolis, will he :l:cd to s"i ve you with the
laic i Hut cau la piodi i •
O'jr Place is Strictly First-Class, Call. aaJ See,
Respectfully, ... ■
E. C ROTHOLZ.
MAIL OKDljiRS promptly at leaded to.