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f ◄ rn DARLINGTON HERALD. -J “IF FOR THE LIBERTY OF THE WORLD WE CAN DO ANYTHING. VOL. II. DARLINGTON, SOUTH CAliOLINA, WEDNESDAY, MAY U, IS‘)2. NO. 3(5. LESS COTTON FOR DARLINGTON. Thf Rrdurlion Will Ranse From Tweily-Five to Thirty-Five Per Cent. Daki.imitox, April 30.—The cot ton crop here is planted and there is no doubt that for the (irst time a re duction of some consequence has been made in the acreage planted. A great many obstacles are in the way of reducing the area planted in cotton, obstacles that are hard to overcome because of the considera tions involved. The fanners have always regarded cotton as the staple crop and are perfectly familiar with all of the necessary details of its cul tivation, gathering and marketing. Then the system of renting land to tenants, who plant very small crops, necessitates, almost, the planting of this staple crop. In addition to these considerations is the further fact that the average farmer is not addicted to experiment ing on new crops requiring new and perhaps more difficult cultivation. This season, however, all obstacles have to a certain extent been laid aside and the cotton acreage in Dar lington County, comparatively speak ing, is very much reduced. It is very hard to ascertain posi tively, however, what the total aver age reduction is, owing t«, tlie fact |^afdj j s Rj the anil'll m\ T!it*p cnnsiui|iu ;i largo number, and what they piaiit will make some aggregate figures of importance. A considera tion of some importance on this sub ject is the the fact that 40 per cent, less of fertilizer tags have been sold in the State this year than were sold last season. Fullv this difference list contains all the names of plant ers interviewed. The reduction of acreage among the tenantry is con siderable. A greater decrease in the coining crop may be expected from the reduction in the use of fertilizers rather than reduced acreage, al- thiit will probably he 20 or 25 per cent for the county.—News and Courier. Tillman's Indecent Language. THE BOOK OF JOB. Quite a number of uHti-Tillnimi newspapers in this State are pro pounding questions to Christians who are reckoned among the sup porters of the present Governor for re-election. The burden of these in terrogatories relate to the profanity and vulgarity of the Governor as shown by his recent speeches at Greenevillu and Edgefield, and great surprise is expressed that the Chris tians among his followers can still pledge their support to such a man. We do not share in this surprise at all, for there is nothing new or strange in the expressions quoted by our contemporaries as falling from the lips of the Governor. Two years ago he used an anecdote of the most indecent character in opening the campaign at Greenville, s and there were hundred of church h ! a %? aml W't- memjiers vylpi ^eaytt ' ^e' anjedote viuS l,Mi 111 srm,Mle,,p uf lim - Edinund Clarence Stedmau Says It is (he Subliniest Poem of Antiquity. The subliniest poem of antiquity is impersonal, yet written in the Hebrew tongue. The book of .Job, the life-drama <f (he man uf I'z, towers with no peaks above it; its authorship lost, but its fable asso ciated in mind with the post-Noach- ian age, the time time when God dis coursed with men and the stars hung low in the empyrean. It is both epic and dramatic, yet embodies the whole wisdom of the patriarchal race. Who composed it ? Who carved the Sphinx, or set the angles of the pyramids f The shadow of his name was taken, lest he should fall by pride, like Eblis. The narra tive prelude to dob has the direct epic simplicity—a Cyclopean porch to the temple, hut within are Heaven, the Angels, the plumed Lord of Evil, befoie the throne of a judicial God. The personages of the dialogue be yond are firmly distinguished: Eliphaz, Bildad, Zophar, Elihn—to whom the inspiration of the Al mighty gave understanding—and the smitten protagonist himself, majestic Common Thieves. aqd yjien cqn tin tied tq fqllqw Mr Tjljman \v4H thy iiuunsl wn) until the qampuign ended. The indecency did not offend them, if we can judge by their actions. Every man who is at all familiar with the Governor knows that he is a profane swearer, and that he is not at all particular as to the use of oaths in almost any company, especially when his anger is aroused. He was in a verv bad exists in the actual sales of fertilizers hun|01 . ilt t^e otVe? ilttV; I ,u l in this county, and tlijs ambut.'t'is $ tjik’pnhl^'y W-Wii & is ** h .||slriV«dc4 ovtir tjiVersiJied crops of qf'dhjngp.ivaleiy, when ^ve.-D rur.ij.' iqbHccq a||(j ^nal) grain ciqps |!l aitdjtion in wliat js used oil the cotton crop. This is not the right course, how ever, as the intensive system, under the present circuinstances, would be more economical and yield better re sults. Time seems tube a practical unanimity among well posted, re liable men in the various farming sections «>t our fljc £xicin qf the reduction jij Ups sea- buh’s crop, Out of about fifty repre. sentative famiers Interviewed every man, except one, said the average re duction would bo from 25 to 35 per cent, less than the crop of last year. These opinions were expressed by men who are careful and conserva tive and who were in a position to b n(pv. dhc>e psimiaM* nldbpor- tpborated by the average amounts gained by your correspendent from the interviews, where the difference between the crops of the two seasons was raiefullv written down. Fur vies the qthev in grandeur of lan guage, hungiuetiuu, worship. Can there he a height above these lofty ulterauces? Yes; only in this poem lias God answered out of the whirl wind, his voice made audible, as if an added range of hearing for a space enabled us to comprehend the rever berations of a superhuman tone. 1 speak not now of t! e motive, the in spiration of the symphonic master piece: it is stiff u imir.taf ey.e.utiqiq h luaiu tain tie,- ,«n (inpev-son,- unlirni our V'tilnvy. There are other things of which people can be roblied which are of fully us much value as those that attract street thieves or burglars; and there is one kind of robber whose thefts are never ceasing, and yet do not tiring him before a judge. This is the one who steals people’s comfort and satisfaction and pleas ure at every turn by giving free play to his sarcastic, grumbling or slight ing spirit on all occasions. To he sure he is his own worst enemy, hut so are all thieves for that matter. ‘What a good concert that was!’ says some enthusiastic music lover who had just had a, to her, rare treat. ‘Did you think so?’ asks the thief, scornfully. ‘Why, there was hardly a difficult piece on the programme, and all those things have been played by line pianists as mere bagatelles I wonder that the audience sat so pa tiently.’ Then the enthusiast feels her ar dor dampened, and is perhaps even a little ashamed of it. ‘isn’t this a pretty gingham ?' says another girl. ‘..\ qd 4 was such a baygajn 1 You know 1 have to be economical, and 1 got this for only twenty cents a yard.’ ‘They are selling them for fifteen cents a yard now,’ remarked the thief, drily. ‘I presume they’ll be reduced to ten cents by next week, and they’ll be dreadfully common this summer.’ The pretty gingham goes hack into the drawer, while its purchaser tries Not Attending tv his Business. When Fenator Hampton, during hi* holiday time, came to this State to take part in the State campaign by making a sjieecli in which betook no sides and which he concluded with '*Ood save the old State!” there was a great outcry. That was an awful-assault against the liberties of the people, we were told. Now when Senator Irby—assistant dictator— deserts his seat—in which he has been but six .days of the session—mid codacs back to force joint discussion, even if they lead to riots and war, wo sujipose that will be declared to be all right. Of course Senator Irby’s . bluster amounts to nothing. He cannot force anybody to do anything. Hois not yet the master of the free people of South Carolina. He cannot have us all hauled up and cowhided by negroes as he is said to have once done with a white man who offended him. The conservatives will do ex- actji as they may think fit about joint discussions. If they secure a majority uf the members of the Demo cratic State Convention Senator Irby will have u good time ruling them out on account of refusal to obey bis orders. He is a nice man to be our United States Senator and chairman of the executive committee—determined to force matters in what he supposes to be the interest of one Democratic candidate against another even if it. causes riots and war! He cannot bulldoi*.'anybody, how ever. The best thing he can do is to The Bi-Chloride of Gold Cure. | From The Broad Axe.] An article attacking the efficacy of tlie Keeley cure republished in the last issue of the Broad Axe, is thus introduced :—The following recent clipping from a Sun Francisco Source shows that all the cures are not thorough, I’rohihition is the on ly unfailing preventive”. That prohibition is the one great aim before temperance workers and that all short of that must fail inthe full accomplishment of the purpose of such work, ! as fully believe as i )a ]f 0 f (q R . does any one. This is, or should he, the aim of to work to encourage those who may desire the treatment, with practical help if necessary. E. O. Watson. Rock Hill, S. C., April 20, 1802. We publish in this issue acoiumu- nication from a brother who does nut endorse the article published in a re cent Broad Axe concerning the bi- chloridt of gold curefor drunkenness. ’I'lie article regarding the cure was a dipping from an associated press dispatch, excepting the introduction, which expressed the opinion of one- dynamo. It ing in anyone Broad Axe editorial would be uiibccom- to fail to give full any agency tending k to feel as pleased with i,t as sj\y. \yas jgo buck to Washington "and try to by. violated the thifd commandmeut of his Maker. The surprising thing to our mind is that a man of his ex perience has not learned that vulgar anecdotes and reckless use of God’s name are an offence against .Iciiovuh. When a man swears or tells an in decent story he does not necessarily offend his fellow-inan, but he does ''iolence |.o tj|\ .Judgg pV- fqic whom we m‘us] answer id the last day. The Governor confesses that he Is rough and ill-mannered, but that is no excuse for bis tlagraut defiance of Almighty Gpd. In lieu of making appeals to Christians, urging them not to support such a candidate for high office, we think the newspaper- ought io in; in *tu vat-Mt** create a refor mation in the candidate, whose reck less course put not oulya stigma up on Christians who favor his election, but subjects him to the direful con- A War liiridnit. It was at the terrible battle of Franklin, Tcnn. During the latter part of the battle Gen. Hood walked backward and forth in front of his tent and looked at the camion In leij- . • , i j .‘ 11 • • t.; t 1: d •»»» • v, 11 1 • • mg torib lilhj tanas from (i,e ; Mi to Lueusi Gyuve, Calling his aide to him, he said: “Goto General Cleburne and present my respects and say to him that I wish him to give me the fort in tlie Locust Grove.” Thcuidc went mid turned and said: “1 cannot find Gen. Cle burne. lie is missing and it is f ar , |ed that he : s kithd." . • > •» « ' ,r * ; -Ipyvi. u iHtfli Gytt- flood palled Ills aide and said: "Go with my respects to Gen. Cheatham and say to him that I wish he would give me tlie fort before. ‘.'I'hivv!' says tlie small boy of the family, his cheeks Hushed with tri umph. 'I’ve guessed the llrst five pmedcs iu my new book, and its only taken me about an hour!’ ‘I should tliiuk that was long enough, in all conscience,’ says the thief, in a biting tone. ‘They’re as simple as A B C. I guessed them in leu minute.-.’ earn part of his SayKlO a year salary. —Greenville News, Who Arc The Best ITople! The newspapers have much to say about "our liest people,” which leads one to ask, “who among the tens of thousands are of the bo-q |„jqde?" In this Deiuoei;;4 : y v-Winri v <4 owm we ayy, geqeniHy. agreed ^ L'^h'Wun \vho (hanked God that one So thellusliof tn.uniiib in ttmhtlle! . . , , ui.'iiAl"'' •’ • i ian vvasas lommI asuiiotlierin Amen- puzzle^i jav.,, ^vvt t>.*aye n glow of moytitk-afioii, every temperance worker. But why ( . rL .,|j| („ discourage the useof means which ii.; ^i, a ] W(h() | of - it victims. But the the interval lief ore such a thing can gold cure is yet an experiment, and he attained, tend to the salvation of the poor drunkard from his terrible habit? And why attack the Keeley treatment upon the ground that all the cures are not periiianent”?We do not attack the church—though our enemies may—because every one who enters its doors is not a thorough Christian. Nor do we think it a justifiable attack upon the work of our lodge when made upon the ground that every one who lakes our pledge does not keep it. Nor do we consider it a valid objection to the practical working of I’rohibilioii to 'I'here are n great many of these thieves in the world, and the strang est thing about them is that they do not want what (lie steal; Hie good nature and pleasure and satisfaction that they take from other people they have no wav of i,so.i. Wt tin ) go ni\ \hy drier day /■uvd .vvht fitter year. Some Leading Questions. , , , duty, tlie piyst ami upright Editor Monitoi: If the following L i^ijZyjj,, w4ho,Ut regard to the doth luestions are sat'ufuub.y.jty. apMVvrvR <WI bis back or the circle lie moves in, belongs to the best aristocracy that say that even where thercis Prohibi tion, some folks get drunk. Who with comon sense would refuse the standard remedy in cases of typhoid fever upon the ground that the rem edy had failed in a few cases? Who would refuse the treatment and die waiting for the completion of some new remedy that he was sure if he could ever get if, would cure? Then why discourage tlie use of the Keeley treatment if no stronger ground can lie taken against it. than that all tlie cures are not thorough?’’ Why pass over the thousands of permanent cures to-day alive, well and honored as sober men, and single out for pub lication a few instances where the strong remedy necessary to reach a deep seated disease may, in a con stitution already ruined by whiskey have resulted unsuccessfully,or even disastrously? Nobody over made the claim for the Keeley treatment that it was an infallible cure in every instance, and nobody but a braggart or a fool ever made such a claim for the most cf- lyilti the ■ fb'ient remedies of common medical practice. Dr. Keeley plainly says liiat they do not guarantee cures in every ease and that 5 per cent, of the cases treated have not resulted in perman ent cure. But think of 115 per cent of the poor enslaved d run kiwis of our country having tb“ possibility of a cure frq^i, ityeir depraved ap- peti.'A. mat shall send them out into Tlie b'^aa- iltlic world with new hope and energy! Uj. And is not the means of such :y hies-' sed possibility to be hailed with de light by every true lwii|>* innce work er? Even 4 Uw- possibility were far hohyiv ytiys gnat percent, it should grave charges have been preferred it, notably those made by several New York phyucians in a petition asking that the health de partment of that State make an offi cial investigation of I lie'treatment. On the other hand, the gold cure, Thompson's system, however, in stead of Keeley’s, has the endorse ment of such temperance workers as \\ alter Thomas Mills, Miss Willard. Bishop Fallows and L. I,. Miller, ail of whom endorse the National Bi- Chloride of (told Co., of Chicago. But with ull due deference to these good people, who know more in a minute than this scribe does in a month, we cannot begin to compre hend bow even (be magic touch of gold ran drive out in a four weeks w hut has heel) entrenching itself in the system for forty years. If this lie possible, then verily gold can not only prevent prohibitory legislation, but can also repeal the laws of phy siology. We believe that within live yeabs time the gold cure will stand, cov ered with dust, on the top sliolt, in line with Koch’:' Lymph and Browu- Kcquurd’s Elixir. This is our honest opinion. We hope it is an erroneous one. would not express it. if we thought it would have a tendency to cause any unfortunate brother to slacken his confiding clutch on this rope in expectation of being drawn out of the mire. There i; room enough for us all. Millions of sites for bi-ehlo- rido institutes, but not one for sa- tbe store of ammunition. Father Matthew’s movement, spreading out from the Cork organization, spread like a prairie fire all over the Emerald Isle. Within four years,five-eighths of the entire population of Ireland, in- eluding men, women, and children had solemnly promised to abstain forever from drink, and the total con sumption of liquors is island had fall en irom 12,000,000 gallons, annual ly, to 5,000,000. Runiscliers found their occupation gone; courts were comparatively idle. The faithful 1 nest thought hin country had been saved from its besetting curse; his heart overflowed with gratitude to God. and the delighted mail went forth to conquer other lands for so briety, meeting with grand succeed both in Scotland and America. The wave of enthusiasm that beat on our possibly helped to bring into being the Washingtonians, and suc ceeding these came the Sons of Tem perance, both buttling along the same line. Volumes were written about conquests won, and the eloquent voice ol the moral suasion rung out all over the land. But the end crowns the work, and the results uf the whole abstinence crusade can be summed up to-day in the one word Icliabod. The cause, did great good, just as the piles un derneath the Charleston Custom House did good, but piles are only fit for a foundation, the superstructure must be ol more solid stuff. Good intention w ill do for pavements and mudsills, but it takes iron-clad statutes to rear the upper walls. Now compare with this record, the story of modern prohibition. While hat her Matthew was pledging warm hearted Irishmen, sometimes at the rate of 40,00(1 a day, a few earnest men up in Maine were, in the lan guage of Neal Dow, "sowing that. IState knee-deep in temperance lit erature. Out of this education, grew the Maine prohibition law, which has stood the test of nearly Me half a century, notwithstanding the fact that rieli brewers from all over the nation have trained their guns on the New England cranks. Father Matthew s house was a noble struc ture, but it was built on the sand; Ireland and Scotland were thorough ly backslidden a generation ago. figuics kindly given your oorrespou dent by Mr. C. S. McCullough, who kept a similar list very carefully. In both instances the average' reduc tion was 35 per cent. These figures will n<.t hold good hi reference to yljfi ffihy' W larger planters were interviewed. The force of their example amounts, to a great deal, and a safe estimate of the reduction would probably be 25 per cent. The list of names given below e lidw§ Ujc tepruseiipiti'^flinpyirs jyltQ lihxo iMhdo the groaKut reduction, and their example is worth a great tlyal. Under the present tmflffijk thp crop planted another season will be largely reduced: J. J. Ward, E. R. Melver, demualtou o] an oft'undpd ^Jo^i" •pfiy’/y.WVf Leu. C'heathapi. Ho is tus .w.tr limn mu of missing and they fear he is dead.” n the Dicust Grove.’ I h« aid<;! Iqr Y&UAMW' W W* bench rent and tutffv — 1 V ,s I u‘. iiuT^Tthan m.Uf missing and they fear he is dead {Ijel ^qbqratwn ft pml by 0* for the Christians who trust him us a political leader, we would fain hope that the Governor of South Carolina will not again retail dirty Still Gen. Hood looked at the can nons of the fort, belching forth and tearing gaps through the ranks of liis men. He called his aide to Irni anecdotes, use indecent or profane' ,l o a * 11 jG’^ ;V,V‘.v. ll ;' ; V. c ke.('in language, or v.itluL j^e i'l.ctPHttp’s»iBBi'gIVL hhii ]ny Iqyy, ami say 1 wish of fjfi' Tfi f>! s public utterances, at 10 LI ' M ' nictho fort in the W. J. Rogers, Rogers, Lucas McIntosh, I*. II. Rogers, J. T. Rogers, G. M. McCown, Bright Williamson, J. C. Blackwell, O. H. and T. 1 ,. .Edwards, w. e. Mrtfgmi, * kuiwhjppte' C, 11, Rhodes, W, h Kiufi, 0, R, Edwards, The Rrdtctlon at Society Hill, SociktyIIill, Darlington County, April 26.—A considerable reduction in the cotton a: re age has Iwen made iu this vicinity by planters, as the following table will sIk w : •J- :!• \'M 1891. 1892. 500 49 200 80 m or; qd thU 48 140 93 200 150 100 50 100 70 137 50 300 106 GO 10 • 2 m U 1(10 itio 24(1 'so Ml 38 ti5 80 25 — least, and every Christian would re joioo to know that he had amended his ways so surely as to place him self above criticism in this respect.— Enterprise and Mountainer. H !i> Shc ^i^jtcii ute fraiH, he would give tne the fort in the Lxmst Grove.” The aide went and rode up to Gen. Cockerill, that brave Missourian, w ho is now in the Uni ted States Senate, and delivc' d \L _ me^ii" . Gaw iitOti,' 1 '*'Mhn of - the First Missouri Regiment,” said he, ea and letter, too. The best people do not. belong to any one class -they are found everywhere and every con dition. Tlie best people are they who know the most and do the best in their own spheres vants, the bc-o, d^ijuv, the best law .\i '„ bt'St piviicher, t he best busi ness limn, and, in short, the best man in every line of action, is really of “our only best people.” Thor)\)\gb-]be-CdUSe of universal rejoicing, that ness, a conscientious yk^c^avgc of . Ibcre is such an agency at work " ' among us. it does seem to me that we as Good Templars should he glad that a brunch institution for thee tire of tlie drunkard has I icon ojiened within reach of sec many who could not Otherwise have the opportunity of Lying tho treatment. And I for mie am and will he, glad wc have it until some stronger ground for op-1 position is offered than “thata.U the cures are not thorough”. “I’rohihition is the w,fy sure pre ventive.” I agree tv the truth of the statement. U»r. what, I ask are we joins Hello iinMl we get I'rohiliitiou Maine to-day rejoices in the soberest toons, provided that a farther trial j population in the civilized world, ex- of the remedy sliows that the New eepting jio.ssihly leelaiul, while Iowa, York phvsieians above mentioned Kansas, the two Dakotas, Vermont, were mistaken iu the. catalogue of'land iiiindreds of prohibition towns ills which they declared to follow in I all over the land, rise up and call her the w ake of Hie Keeley cure. example blessed. There is another singular phase of this "abstinence vs prohibition" issue, w hich shows, in a painful light, the narrowness of our old fogy friends who say prohibitionists are fa latieal, and that "we can’t tight evil with the arm of tlesh.” We refer to tlie sense less, unreasoning cry of "hypnerisv” I'aised whenever a tippler or a drunk- With the lights now before us, should our best friend declare to us that he was absolutely in the power of the liquor habit, and ask advice, we would say, pray fervently to Heel veil, move to the center county a prohibition State, and steer clear of the bi-chloride of gold cure. We want more light, however, and would like to have a statement in Tilk Bhoah Axe from someone w ho the world lias produced. Jjet no man fancy that because his father is rich, or that he has descended {ytM « dis tinguished anyyjVQc that he is en- ti^.yh vw i>e regarded us the foremost nigiq he \\iH get a great many more voles among the poor laboring class than lie otherwise will: 1. Did not Governor Tillman lose the taxpayers one hundred thousand dollars in the (\swuw ^cYgiivvii?. jiu bis law'll and city. I’nt your YUislicit Giiyvevvtuy.Tillman paid i shoulder to tlie vvheel and do some- atpifiiey fees to tho amount of about i thing, make the world better for toil thousand dollars for work done having lived in it, and then, and iu>t i, which will not he to-day or even for by them that should, according to his I until then, will you D' to several years igc a national result? own words two years ago, been done high ''“"Lhy^cem. Waiting for cveu whim vve do get it, what, , ... ... 1 . -mym’T'i t t ■ ° wiH we' dev to save the old toners who by the Attorney general? shws.aail banking on the t . (yitimle to tho thousund 3. Did n , xcuvoi'tior Tiiiniun reputation of ancestry, enthha 110 j and <u.ie drugs isissible as Kiibstitutes one to the best plu<^*. a^d) thg best 1,for whiskey? If Dr. Keeley, or Dr. used Monroe is a flag station on tlie Botsford branch of the New Haven ipnl I iprbv foul. Wli<m the engineer of eonductor Beer’s train saw the Hag exposed a day or two ago he stopped bis train. Duly one person, uu old lady, was to lie seen, and the conduc tor stejijieij friifli iyiipi to nytji'hey inboard, ,Tho old Iwly did not stir, and the couductorsaid: “Step on board, lady, so we can go on.” Then her mouth ojiened, and she said: “Laws, I don’t want to get aboard; I stopped to send word to my folks that “charge that fort with me.” And the fort was charged and tho North* PHI gnus wore spiked, and after the victory Gen. Cockerill culled his aide to him and said, “Go to Gen. Hood and give him my love, and tell him I give him the fort.” •••■■ ’ .... im- A Lawyer's Scruples. y,..v.)rtior TiJJjnan caaikp' ‘ihcijitoit rit'tiinuess in the Slath govii nin/'iit, anil has l)e found estimate c\^ yyqjj. o')n cppimunity, where the State bad lost one cent by , ‘VUuqqij* at, it,”- is what tells in the snehV ' Hong run iu this great country of The late Robert Toombs, of Geor gia, had a large practice at the bar, but he always showed that lie was more concerned for the honor of L N. Crosswell, J. T. Rogers, J. W. Stogner, W. J. Howie, Total, 1891. 1892. Hij UIMl m Lo i, 130 48 117 H7 100 70 85 10 70 40 778 482 8 Her"cent. 1 was coming up to-morrow, and U , 11 " WMwtAk-. "iliV'tq Hie A( '^V; m VV ' ".-tv ' *L uiwi iiHtl mLiIdiI lus <*si.m* In linn. j want you’ to ItlDjoFft h'u'ih'ecq Hie the sjujiqii (o care for iny baggagy, 'I'hen she stuppyd, fqr Hie jraju \vijs movjng, the potuluppa'. having glum the signal to start without learning where “Johu” mid “my folks” lived, while the old lady looked as though she thought train officials were not very accommodating when they would not carry a message for her. who hah stiilyd his case to hjpi. ‘Ye*, yqu ci p TOiypr iu tii!<i suit, but \mi ought imt to do so. This is a case iu wliich law and justice are on oji- jiosite sides.’ The client told him he would jiush the case anyhow. ‘Then,’ rcjilied Mr. 'J'ommhs, ‘you must liire some one else to assist you in youy rasc'ilily.’.' ’ ' ” y « •> A^ttrtol'hpi'Ttmp a lawut went to him and asked what he should charge a client in a case to which Mr. the such? 4. And if Utorc had Is'cn robbery and fraud in the inanngcineiil of the government before he went into of fice, is there not much more now ? as our taxes are *36,000. ihaii befv.il) vwvik pljajgv. of affairs. 5? And (hat $3 jioll tax and do ing away with the lieu law, which the Governor once said would enable the land-owuers to control labor and voles more successfully. 6. That if accepting a free pass was a crime for Ids n.v-yj-y-yfiayi,, |s it , iH'lt i V.PAOy. V'Y'“V. *0,y. horn as he clapiis lo be the great reform. Gov. fc'iior? Now, Mr. Editor, these are a few questions we iniist have answered, or it will cost Mr. Tillman thousandsof the jioor laborers votes, who have al- ou rs. Work at Clrt^H ivtlrgr. The executive committee of the board of trustees of ('leinsop, (,'ollege met at Fort Hill,yesterday to look after tl|e progress of the work. The trustees are having as niiicii work done as is jiossible with convict lalniW There are earpentpys ami brick masons l\t\na\ij vvMvtcts and they iHi'v hnajktug the dormitories and jiro- fessors’ houses and working on the main college building. Fair jirogress is being made considering the kind of labor and iiiiiulK'r of workmen. Col. Orr, who retnrueil yesterday from the meeting, said that the farm, which is in charge of 1’rofessor New- my body can cure them by medical treatment. I say as temperance work ird sjieaks or votes for prohibition, > whether the voter he iu public or iu has tried tho remedy at least a year j private life. Does all the biograjihv ago; also an ojiinion from a physician i of the devil reveal another instance of tho possible after effects on the where “good” people cried out against vital organs of a continued use of a weaker brother for striving to re move temptation from his own and his boy’s path? Many citizens, them selves more or less scarred by the enemy, look on prohibition as a strong tower of defense against the destroyer; and yet when they, con scious uf the weakness of their own in dividual, unaided, efforts, attempt to seek refuge in general outlawry of the wholebusiness, then the microscrop- ic brother raises his pious eyes to ward heaven and exclaims in horror. “Lord, 1 thank thee that lain not as these hypocrites are.” Such theolo- atropia, which is said to be liberally in tlie prescri|itions. In the meantime let us load both barrels for prohibition. Atostinenrr vs. Prohibition. [From The Broad Axe.) The temjierance army of the world marches under two banners; the watchword of the one corps is “Abstinence and abstinence only,” the other, and the lighting corps,— standson a two jilauk platform, “Ab stinence for the'individual, proliihi- gy will not begin to compare with tion for the State.” There are two! that of the tipsy westerner who said, ways of doing many things, and if duringa caiii|>aign in Dakota, “Bovs, t he contrasted I’olicies were both real- dnmk or sober I’m going to vote ly effective ways of accomplishing the j for jiroliihition next Tuesday, downfall of the liquor evil, then we Of course, all great moral niove- would say God-speed to each and incuts arc dependent for success on every soldier of the cause, whether ers we should bid them God sik^L. ^ Syrian or Trojan. But imfor- and strivo io get every poor inebriate innately, many of tlie idiampions of to take the medicine. * j the “abstinence only” Plan, in fact, To say nothing of the favorable re a large majority of them, are obstruc- jiorts of the Keeley treatiiteutlasgiven ' lionists in that they bitterly opjiose in some of the leading magu/Jiiets and pajiers of the country,—to say nothing of thefavoratile aokioii of the government in the matter in provid ing Hie treatment for it s soldiers, and only to speak of the cases that have coi\\o under my own personal observa- all progressive work on the part of the out-and-out, jirogressive, iiiicom- prmising, jirohibitionists. II is this do nothing policy that is t he bane of tiiis great, reform nnivcineiit. to-day. if there was any hope that moral suasion would ever accomjilish, un- tiiui We have in our town half a i aided by severe prohibitory nieasmvs dozen who can from cxjierience testi- mun, is iu sjilendid condition aiult|»e ways, and arc still, earning an honest | , llelnk>r8 of thc ,v Vy .a„. v co,„ni)ttee ar<! nuieu pkasial, by Pixifessor New- lam es and qimn's nianUgeiueut of it. never earneil a i * ‘ ' : 1 V I'v.iU A farmer posted ou a fi ij^ folhqvmtj* ■ ''NqitjA . 'Htl'ioV kuws is aloud iu these medders, uuy iiutit or women lutteu thaiv kow»' run thejToombs has just listened iu rode wot gits into my medders afore-1 court house. red shall have his tail cut off by me,: ‘Well,’ said Toombs, ‘| ‘■J/e.lhh Ohadiah Rogers.” I charge a htdkha, tmt you ••• — hhghT Ht have live thousund, for you A jUjU-.litMal Hide is Kutliful to did a givut many things Hint 1 would the lust. not have done.’ living by hard labor, between (lie plow liiird IVol* LAnuilKK, iu Edgefield Monitor. Doctor: Your Inisbund appears to be run down, anxious and overworked^ Of course, the trustees have no idea when the college will be ojiened. Ilhvpyuds altogether on when yjMi-icy will he forthcomi (fyeeuviRe News. fy to the efficacy of the treatment. Among these there are those who as men of intelligeiiceaud truthfulness, say that they have no more desire for whiskey than they have for kerosene or castor oil, and coulddrink thoone ivilh alioutiis milch relish the oth er—and the Keeley Uxoniient by the way has uot u\iviW'them love these oils any beHcr than you and 1 dn. Tl.V^ny. men show no signs of bodily injury, and as to nervousuoos,—the change iu some instances is from the Imrdcrs of delirium *vi going to the institute, to Uvtl of ordinary health and styvegth.. Upon the evidence of the work wrought iu these men, our lodge has gone enthusiastically to work to raise a fund to he used for the purpose of a loan to inable any jioor' inebriate .... . whom we may find unable to avail A t\'Aus gent leiimn applied 1° u himself of tlie treatment, to attend but I see no signs of hyiPVhQ-. Alwy friend for information in regard to a j Hie institution. Wo feel iu doing Vim IIivoys^q lsave. he-V in d'.uigcrj certain man whom he wished to em- this that we aw but working one of N). tusnnitv I'Uns ill his family, jiloy on his ranch. “Is he honest and | ike niaiyy ways of practical tem- vnu know. “Does it?” “Yes. indeed, reliable” “1 should sav so. He is, w ® rk ' A,ul f ! ir fl ' oni d's- Tivoof bis sisters bad chances to tried ami trusty. He has been tHwl ^n*«**>« any fix,,„ trying the treut- unirry rich men, and then married four times for stealing huracs and lie jioor ones.” got clear every time,” was the reply. ou Hie part of the State, the desired end, oreven advance jjereeptibly in that direction our bibulous limuani- ty, then there would be some excuse for relying on this remedy. Unfor tunately, however, the history of the moral suasionjiolicy shows conclu sively that moral suasion is as in effectual to destroy the entrenched liquor jvower as a bombardment of snowballs would be iuou attack on Gibraltar. This is an extreme state ment; ajqieal to the record and see if all experience does not. more t ban sub stantiate the cluiui. Any man who says otherwise is far behind his age; ... ,, , r he has never read the primer of the wouUl 1 CilH a ,,o y of ml,lc ^ ,aS i ,f movement. 1 had a liiuulred to name. Men by But to thc record. The grandest that name is alius cutting ujieapers. chamjiiou of total abstinence as a Here’s Alias Tliomjisoii, Alias Wil- |.aiiaeeafor liquor’s ills, was Theobald liu|1 Alias t]lc ^jght Hawk, all Matthew, the heroic Irish JViest, who. . , led such a campaign against alcohol j bwu look l T for ^ a1 '"'’ as the world never saw before, and | will never see'again, for the world is the guidance and blessing of the Great Governor of all nations. Those of us who believe in intensely jirac- lical and radical methods, do not overlook the fact that thc victory is, iu the end, from God. But the Lord works through human agencies; it is an insult to heaven for the bene ficiaries of high-license to bide in their cowardice and pray for relief from whiskey’s dominion. If Aclmn, hugging his stolen sjioil in his tent before Ai, bad prayed that success might crown the efforts of the fight ing men, would his prayers have been heard? How many Achanstire there among us? A mail got tipsy and indulged in a night's sleeji in a country graveyard. On opening his eyes in the morning he noticed the motto on a gravestone: “He is not dead, but slcepeth.” “When I am dead,” he remarked, with great deliberation, “I’ll own up and have no.such statement asthatabove my carcass.” Said an Alabama mother: ‘Never incut, I hope that every lodge will thoroughly investigate the subject and convinced of the good, will set not to be relieved in that way. Tho story of Father Matthew’s life work reads like a romance. In 1838, he, with a few others, organized a- small temperance society at Cork, Ireland, A slnijile pledge, not unlike the Good Templar plodguof to-day,constituted Aunt Sally: ‘Goodness me! How can the I’resident he so extravagant with the people’s money?’ Uncle I’eastraw: ‘What's the matter, mother?’ Aunt Sally: ‘Only think of keeping those jiesky Indians ou Government preserves.’ THIS PAGE CONTAINS FLAWS AND OTHER HEFrnft yVHTCH MAY APPEAR ON THE FILM.