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m DAUlTOli HEBALD Estalilisbed JhIji 16th, 1890. Bestroycd bv Fire Derember 15th. 1890 Ke-Eslablished February 11th, 1891. W. D. WOODS, Editor. One Dollar a Year. DARLINGTON, 3. 0. Wednesday, January 4, 1893. It will not mill to the reputation of South Carolina, for public moral ity, when the tidings go abroad that the state has monopolized the busi ness of selling whiskey. tain and that is that it gets worse and worse, and unless there is come improvement we will have to depend on candles for light. The Columbia Register says that '.f Judge Haskell had not run for Governor in 1890, that the Whiskey and Railroad Rills would not have been passed. The News and Courier it was probhbly done, if the Register is corret, to punfsh Judge Haskell, but how it can hurt him we arc una ble lo divine. In its frenzied efforts to defend the legislature, the Regis ter fery often gives it harder licks than any of the Conservative papers. This insinuation of the Register puls the Legislatuae in the position of a petulant child, that hurts itself Hr. t for the sake of giving troubl to o:h era. 1,0 W. and undertakes to direct and eon-1 for it shows ille Rail- trol the sale of intoxicants. After Charlotte 1 J ,l b tie Slate assn me < the busi- Thu prohibitionists may net as they please about the Whiskey Hill In* Iquity, but we propose to fight it un ceasingly until the measure Is repeal ed. We most emphatically protest rgaiust bqing made to profit by the unfortunate weakness of some of our fellow citizens. The measure is in excusable, viewed from any slund- poiut, tind tho people should show their disapprobation in n way that cannot be mlswketi. 4< it a The Colnuibitt Resin ter say* that every pound Governor Tihrmti is n pound of backbone. Willi the Re* gister tell ns where the sol hi back* bone Was when the Govern si Weakly bowed his head mid swallowed the Sub-Treasury Hill? Possibly in an ticipation of such an emergency, he left the solid backbone at home in order it-might not be damaged by the slap of tho Sub-Treumry plank. RAILROADS MUST GO, The Richmond and l)n road Cfmipuiiy, says tl; Observer, is talking their machine shops fwni Columbia: thirsty ciiizcus, tint on to Charlotte in retail^ion for th;-1 packages of not less a passage oi the Wilso^l-iil The re-i Rroliiijitioinsls will not ' it may not large removing! iluj-uisiiig iutoxi (itor who, through ignorance port may 1 e I rue an We hope the ivpoit/s not true. If the railroad peo]/c expect id get along will) the o/w commissitm on friendly icrin -, i/strikes ns that this is not the proj-i/ numiier in which to begin ciicli Bvlations. Indeed ii is ipi ic likcl/ that Ihv Railroad rtMuinissjon /li have a say so in tlu- removal of tle shops. If so, it is not likelv t/at the shops will he moved. A/, how, they will not. be removed /. way of retaliation.— VoikviHi/Knquirer. The e or preji/lice, would write such stuff as the/ibove is unfit for liis position and ij/eserves the severest condemna- It is the most outspoken and ontjfegwnis suggestion of tyranny on part of the Railroad Commission at we have yet seen. Of course e commissioners are hot responsi- de for this threat, hut, It furnishes i clear indication of ‘he powers that they are ixpected to exercise, for the editor of the Enquirer would scitlve- i ly have written the article unless he was of the opinion that he expressed a good many of his of saving We understand that Seimtoi Hemphill’s fair admirers are send ing him tt great many flowers, in ap preciation of Ills advocacy of fctmle suffrage, ulul it Is easy to imagine how gratifying this is to one who so fond of popular favor. It mu seem cruel to say anything that w detract from his joy, hut It will well for him to boar In mind /bm some of tho fair sex often hofome; the views of very enthusiastic about a very small, readers, mutter, and find the seiiding/’f flow- j We take tho liberty ers a very convenient way of/aipivss- ing their enthiisiusim ly is veiv probable tllat Mr. Corbett/ when h ' Mr> Stillvuti, wa/ the reciji- ient of a great ■muity filial favors, the fair senders not iniyming to en dorse prize lighting, /ul simply ti show their personal /admiration o: the fistic eiianipio/. In opposin'- female suffrage we/xpress the senti- ments of ten tiuuy as many iutelli- THE DISPENSARY Si’STEMi gent Indies us dof’s Mr, Ilentphiil. The voters of the State of South ! hut we are not l/oking for any flow- Carolina at the Into primary election * i ers, us the /di/s we represent are tun donmnded u pi'ohil ilion law, and our If (he Irfgislatitrc Imtl ptwietl ttii : thu tll] (3p u l kind, Of vouisc I" itet reqtliritig the estuhllshtiient of 1 „. e ,i u ,,t, YX tliut all of the advo "' J .„ T i.i^i 1 f ‘ ? I' 10 , i ‘. IK ' . . , wc UOU l «WUI umv an ui im, ao'o lC on!piv with the exprcssde desire ul , , „ Btate gamblln dens, and require a! of ^k- suffrage arc emotinn ! the people us far as lav in their pow- i ‘ irim,Ise ' certain pcfcontagc ns the profits to he! ul| b!|t ^ly rt ,f er w the ones who are! er State Treasury, the jpii to the E,.:|iiitvr tha f if they see fit lo do so, the railroads can remove even one of their workshops from iV State, and that too in utter defiance of anything tile railroad cotimiission csii dm If Ottr run temporary kei.q 8 on he stands a pretty fail chance of rivaling the great communist, Mr. Stanyarne Wilson. relish the idea of t.he State engaging in the a- boiiiiuhle business of liquor selling; and yet the present hill, properly en forced, may !> _• a step towards abso lute prohibition. Only ns such will it he acceptihle to the prohilji'.ionists of Houth Carolina. . One thing me new law settles, and I hat is, that sammi must go. 'J'he gilded Imr room, pitfalls for the feet of so many hoys mid voang men, w ill soon he a thing of the past in .South Carolina. This chief temptation to intemperance among young and old will thus be removed from our bor ders, we trust, nevei to return. The inveterate dniudkard and habitual tippler will continue to drink—as t hey doubtless would under any law—- but the youtl of our State, let us hope, will be saved from the curse of rum. With this hope, the Advocate accepts the Evans Dispensary law, and pray that God may make it a great blessing to our people.—South,- ern Christiau Advocate. At the last session of the South Carolina Conference, that body de clared ilself as unanimously in favor of prohibition, and we believe that the least suggestion looking to the State going lido the business of sell ing whiskey, would have been repu diated not only with indignation but with a feeling akin to horror and dismay; and if this be true then it is, to say the least, surprising to find the editor of the official organ of tills large and influential denomina tion, and who is supposed to repre sent the views of his church, declar ing himself as in favor of u measure ! that simply takes the traffic from the ! individual dealers and gives the State a monopoly of the business. Ques tions outside of the domain of mor- |.ility may be treated entirely from ; the standpoint of expediency or eon* j veiiiviice, but where a iitcrul issue j : is in o wd t • can bj no com*: If the selling of whiikev is immoral and unholy in the indi- how wofully a number of jeojit’o have departed , i from the essential principles of pop- in settled i nliir go'crnmeut. The old idea that half pint, j government wa;- a creature \f the people for the protection of the indi vidual in his life and property has sprouted out of ail reason. That this creature of the people may opdor the sale of poison to be discontinued as injurious to the life of the neople, that it may even prohibit the manu facture of liquor entirely is perhaps true, hut that it should be used, us is the Government of the United 'States, to levy tribute upon the peo ple for thu benefit of persons in u few lines of business, or should go into the business o'f selling liquor, is one of the most curious perversions of governmental function with which we are familiar. The new law is calculated to em barrass some of the citizens of South Carolina, for it will afford no relief to the thirsty man with fifteen cents in his pocket. He must put tip a half a dollar, or fall in With some friend who is armed with a flask. But it is very questionable whether this embarrassment will curlail the rale of liquor, for the mutt who Car ries a flask is apt to drink earlier and oftener than the man who depends upon the saloon for his drink. The new law creates a number of new offices. Now watch for the scramble among the politicians to fill Iln> position of dispenser.—-The Memphis Appeal-Avalanche. for Enfants and Children. “ Cast or! a is so well adapted to chUdrcn that (recommend itoaruperior to any prescription inown to me." II. A. Arch: n, M. I>., * U Co. Oxford Ct., Brooklyn, N. Y. B CaAtorla cures Colic, Constipation, I Sour Stomach, Diarrhnra. Krueiaiion, I Kihs Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di- I gestion, | Without injurious medication. Tub Centaur Company, 77 Murray Street, N. Y. Woods and Woods, delight ' hill. ly unway m sunumg an me nowersj newspaper colTspomlcnts frnu to Mtt Hemphill; fur there is the j the capital withheld ihois support edi-Jr of the Sumter Freeman, who, | from the movement, and some ol whj/c not a member of the Senate, | roady to predict fuilnr hi# been advocating female suffrage every issue of bis paper, in the tnined into the measure Would have obtained the support of at least one paper and that one Is the Columbia Register, for no matter how infamous and ty* ranieal a law may b,*, so it emanatts from Governor Tillman or his Legis* lature, the editor of this journal will j j make labored efforts to prove that it 1 persist cut way, and has really i* very wise ami beiteiotal iu its re-Jd 0 m, more in this direction, than nutriments aud coald only have oi-f even { \ lc eloquent Henatyf Hemphill. Iginated in a hmiy where patriotistu', tt simple matter of fairness we in- lind statesmanship go hand in lianyi. that our Suintey'contemporary . / , ought to have sotve'flowers. He will During the iteigth of flux t’sfcife- j not go into a spasm of ecstacica over SWiit over the opium traffic ill China, j them, ns .ME Hemphill did, but he the Kiiipuror of that. country was | will appreciate them just ns much, petitioned w legalize the truffle ami j . derive a revenue from it. The re-1 Prohibiiion In Kanea*, ply Of this heathen ruiel- wae worthy | The Rev. Mr. Embree, u promi- df a Christian, wlieri he replied by nent clergyman of the Methodrat Saying that whije lie ntiglit not be Church, delivered a sermon in To- ttblc to keep it out of his country, he peku recently in which he took liigh would never consent to defiv. a reve- grounds against the prohibitory laws nne fro n an article that was doing of Kansas, He said that prohibition such great injury to the mimls ami was a complet,* failure; that it nmr bodies of his subjects. j bad been enforced, and never could Heathen, as he Was, this Asiatic i be enforced; mid that the continued the ■ oui of Senn'or Hemp- ; Hvbat monied interests of Hie cities! vidimi then no act of the Legislature | he ladies u,v not actfng fair-, .. ® IV iirravcd against prohibition. 1 In ay in sending all the flowers' - - ° 1 filler had a better conception of the Moral law than ivus exhibited by the violation of the prohibitory laws with impunity would lead to ati- Jle also said that when the from the beginning, The editor of the I’nss and Run ner in principle ami iir.i: lice Ivw been a consistent pmhiliitiouist from child hood, ami while the dispensary i iw is not wluit mis W intcd, yet we are in favor of giving the new law an honest and a fair trial. ItU the pa- represents triotic duty of our people to icmi ^j, (! their moral aid and encouragement to the enforeuiciit^if the law. Jurors, when trying cases, of its; position that can, in the slightest degree, make ! either moral or respectable for tin ! Stase to deal in iutoxicants and do-1 rive a revenue from the depraved up-: petiteg of its own citizens. The Legislature, by its own con-1 fessiou, wus pledged to prohiUtion, | and itisteiid of this they have nmde! everybody partners i i the liquor btiB-j i lies’. If the editor of The Advocate! t li c vie w s u 1 i i his deuotnitmtitni, then th'. : Metlioilist Church lias assumed i is lotii iiicousisteii' put the seal of their eandeinnation upon any effort to ovei*ride and break down the law, The prohibitionist should accept a half loaf as better tliuii no bread It is not to be denied that ubs Jute prohibition is a radical remedy. It cuts off whiskey rations suddenly, and this dispensary bill will let us down easy. After we get used to the digpenzury, and wheii wc wish to fur* ther curlifl the business we cun do so We believe the days of open drum shops in South Carolina arenumber- eJ. Wc can’t believe that we will ever take a stop backward in the way of the whiskey business. The temperance people have curtailed the business to a great extent within the lust twenty-five years, and their sue violation should uphold the law, mid j and indefensible, unless it subscribe- to the doctrine that Hie vnd justifie- life means. We eliulk-nge the edito, of The Advocate.to defend Hie Bil on moral grounds, and would beghu foi him to explain how a bar roon even if ii is managed by the State, oan lo made a blessing to the people. We have no hesitation in saving line we regard the Mt'iisure us Hie nios iniquitous and inexcusable act cvei passed by any legislative asseinhlagi in South Carolina, and one that vvil bring upon the Stute the de.isioi and contempt of the whole couuti v furnishing us it does th; pidubl. gpectable of a commonwealth aiding in the demoralization of its own ciii EDWARDS, NORMENT & CO. / yOiA w«xxt ixx Seif Fall ni filler Seels. We keep the BEST &00!>S made and our prleeii As low ns the lowest. Haulquartcrs is The Place make your purchases at. to FIRE! FIRE! I repreuent Twelve of the most reliuhle Fire Insurance Companies in tlic world— among lliem, llie bivernool amt Lomlon an.I tSlolie, of England, the Ingest lire eompiny in llie world; and the /Kina, of Hartford, the largest of all American tire companies Prompt attention lo business and satis faction guaranteed. F. E. \OiniE\T. DARLINGTON, S. C. Office between Edwards, NormciA Co., and Joy & Sanders' = THE = Sunday Sun $2.00 a Year Containing more reading matter than any magazine published in America. Address o-Ai-’oa, THE SUN, New York DARLINGTON UESl’EUm'UjVi Eiwaris, Norment & Company, THE DULINQTON Invites an inspection of their large and well selected slock for thu fall and whiter i trade which is complete in every partletilafi SHOES —All kinds of— Mnrblu Monuments) Tablets) diut tlFave Stones furttlsliCd oh short ttollct), and as cheap its can be purehesud elsewhere, l# 1 Designs and prices furulslicd on Al. work delivered Free on line of 0. A D. Ruilroad. Darlington Marble Works, DARLINGTON, S, U. PERPEOTSD CRYSTAL LFHSES MAS.. filtthy Fiirt ted Artistic in Booth C trulimi Ljgiilnture when it urolty. passed the Whiskey Dispensary Bill, j youth of the State see u portion of *,* i the laws daily trodden under foot Them la a vurv rarawsHbla fair, on becHttse the State is tinuhlc to enforce , . . , , . til ■ m mm S ill tl,™. tlu- Sfcrt ... t. 1,11 to f“ I" ">;■ l»»t mmm, them t. *™< hv. .mine u .-.vomu-Imm iku. vti. part oi .iii.iv tiio.igtitiiii (iitzuis, t- : keep itii the warfare until dnttjken*|depraved aiipetitcs. OtCMiirnlu^ tiljdJiltt'aliziilg tiindeucy iul ° oohtempt. I he Rev. Mr. Em-, )l3s3 v ,-i!! be removed from our sight. : . . .. df the Get,era! Government, mid it is ^ «irgued, therefore, that it would s -Abevilie Press and Banner; just such tdc-isnrds as were put into ^ letter t»j abrogate prohibitory; Onr usually able uud logical con ; 1 ' " " ’ * temporary was certainly napping when he penned the above article; it ts inconsistent in the highest de gree; t'iut is uiiluss a man can be a force by our recent Legislature that ktws as speedily as possible, and to famishes the excuse for these eu-^ct more reasonable laws for the crochmsnte Everv time that the,''^'iRiou mid restrumt of the man power of the Supreme Ooart, of the i ^“Cturc and sale of liquors. It is Nation is called on to protect th* tl,e liew b'elected Gaver person or property of tile private in- fiorof Kansas, Llewellyn, entertain* divdmil, it opens the door for more w** 011 the li fi llor <P'e«tion, Mil more supervision, of the States, llni l Hint he will use whatever offi- by the General Government, The; cm! influence lie may possess to se* distinguished staesMen whecompose ^" ru repeal of the prohibitory n .... /i -...... D^iuinture may laws.—Pliilitdtdphia Record. •5“ the South Uarjlluti nut he aware of this truth can't he denied. fact, bur Its prohibitionist and believe in selling whiskey at the same time. If tho editor of the Press and Bam Tho State .mi tho Saloon, Governments have been known n run telephones, lotteries, the tele graph and to conduct the husims'i oi a gas or water company, but it re mtiincil for Booth Curoli .r; uud.- the inspiration of great Pupulic- btatesmeii,* lo go into thu saloon biiH- ner, as most of the prohibitionists |Ike Evans liquor bifi has profess to do, believes that the traf-1 ji'R been signed by Governor Til flic is unholy mid immoral, will he man, ami it will go into effect i Those of oar tjoirompyraries who have beeh such entlulsnssric advocates of prohibition now have a Spiendiil opportunity to pay theft respects t.» the Legislature for giving Whiskey Bill.' if they don’t have something to say about it, the eon-, . . elusion will be inevitable that tjiey j ^ L ‘ were advocating pronihitlou simply 1 bccaus they desmed it popular. There is no escape from this, for the sim ple reason that the prohibitionist are the ones whose wishes have been ig nored uud insulted by the passge of this measure. If it is immoral for a private individual to sell whiskey, will somebody please explain how it crtu he made moral and respectable far the Stute to engage in the traffic!' THE HERALD FOR IhSff. The second year of oar Manage- nient of THIS Usu.w.n is now draw ing to a close, and we shall com mence Hie new year with a flint di ; termination to list mir.bcst efforts to . give oar readers a paper worthy of us the;?. . . , .' . their support and sympathy. As in please explain on what moral priuci pie the State can go into the business and practically convert itself into a whiskey dealer? Th next July. This is perhaps the most remwku blv piece of legislation of thu con tury, for not ou.y does South Car..- lilaijis in Duality, Reasonable In Price, ie legislature of South Carolina, j l ‘ l!u propose to regulate the trufii is, tie ule very free lo admit, a pret-j^bc proposes to sell the liquor. Ev- ty powerful body, hut it can’, change i l,, '. v brewer ami every distiller is pro the moral code, and if the sale of whiskey, by individual citixens is wrong, then it is certainly more re in tile past it shall be our atm to be; proheitsible for the State to engage perfectly candid and honest in i i,, it uud derive a revenue front the speaking of measures that affect the | traffic. For u lotlg time the complaints against the kertttene oil that w*> are compelled to burn, dr rather tfy to bnrn, have been lond and deep, uud with jult cause. Ohr local dealers arc in ho wise to blame, us they get, ths best to be had, but the fault Is with concerns that furnish tbs-oil, public tvelfarel but while doing this, the paper will be conducted with absolute fairness, and its col* nmns are even open to thu discus sion of mutters of interest to the people. Whatever uteusure of suc cess that we have attained in the profession of journalism is due al most entirely to the encouragement and appreciation of our friends, fur Without this tbs best directed ef forts must, of necessity, fail. We are anxious to increase the circula tion of Tau Heuald and ask that all onr friends will assist us in this endeavor. Of. course we are aware that a great many of our fellow citi zens differ from us in politics, but this should not pre 1 cut them from sustaining the paper, us its cclttmns arc just as open to them as to onr political friend*. In proof of this tU ilidlfliiittiug jtopeftiet are *d poor that Unless the lamp it kept en tirely filled the light tans down, and klmost gives otih There to either; fact that we gave space, during the something wrong about th^aethbd , campaign, to the prohibiholists, and of preparing it or it is adniterated in j that too without its ousting them a mi Vf 90! t$)00 if wy nf» i dufli MlWi hibite.1 front selling to anybody hut the Stale’s commissioners, and to persons who do not live in South Carolina. The law provides first for the appointment of a State “dispen ser,” or burkt-eper iu-ehief, whose duty it shall be to see that all the liquor for cousmnpti m by the South Carolinians is good stuff, and iu sup ply the county dispensers with such qualities of liquor as they demand. The county dispenser cannot sell to a singic individual more than tin gallons or less than half u pint ui - . ■ | one time, but we should think thu; THE SALOON Ml ST GO. no hardship to thu bibu'otis South So declared the qualified Demo i Carolinian would result from tin- •ratio voters of South Carolina at tin-! proviso, as live galioiis ought to lx There is no escape from 'his con clusion,'and uiiluss the prohibition* ists condemn this law, then they simply put themselves iu .he posi tion of having advocated a measure that thev did not really want, and of making a tight for political •ffect. udieYVhoes, Our stock in this line cjinnot bo 'surpassed. We have them in both Hutton and Lace, all widths, at from 7.1 cents to the cele brated Imml be wed goods of E, G. Harts Si Co's M'f’g, CHILDREN’S SHOES, Wo loiv.j taken special care to make this lin; attractive and complete aud can offer them from M cents upward; MEN'S SHOES. To call special attention to any one shoe in this line would bo an injustice to the others., nearly all of which itro worthy of mention. Rubber goods for Ladies, Misses, Boys and Men, all prices. Also a complete line Umbrellas, Trunks, Valises Satchels, Shoo findings, Polish, Blacking and Brushes, Cork soles, Ladies Woolen soles, &e. Newest Styles in Hats. woods & iiLirae, Proprietors Darlington Shoo Store. 768 primaries last summer; ami so hits decreed the General Assembly of the State after a hard and stubborn figh: iu opposition. The Ghilds-Roper Nettles bill—one of the most elabor ate and stringent p"ohibif!<m hill ever prepared—passed the House . 1' U pretun i at Ives by a large niujurty. On reaching the Senate this bill war substituted by the Evans Dispensary! bill, uud the substitute was accepted by the House, signed by the Govern- it is only necessary to mention the or and is now the law df the lutnL m . a . • * .. Thn una nLnrstlC I'D I.til <1 avHwi equal to the task of hypnotizieg ain man’s thirst, The purchaser is hoi a!lowed to open his package on the dispenser’s pr.-inises, so that when he has bought his liquor he must retire to some suclinU'd vale uud drink it. The point has been raised that the bill is unconstitutional, and it is Said! LEU mi tim Thu above designs la Cloaks and Corsets can be found at It is a curious experiment in liquor The Evan* Dispensary bill, u syunp-! legisiatlou and we would not hnvo *1* of which We ptib'ishon tseeighill ‘ i .• . t ^ page, is not sirtellv a pAibilimi | bill, ns our readers will sec, It do** riblemiist.U of opera knllfe. \et ffolilWt thy gfllftiii huwiwi', tiw A^iifdity ha* its itrivul sitk wo; u '' WOODS and WOODS. Nineveh, the unciint city, was fourteen miles long and eight Miief wide, surronodeil by a waUiOOfeut, Rl|li M twuntyriiinv fwt weI«, mm & Take pleasure in announcing that they are now prepared to issue Fire and Life Insurance i Policies, and can place all business entrust ed to them in some of the best companies in the United States. In FIRE INSURANCE they have such companies as THE HOME of New York, and the liABTFOBtD, oi Hartford, Conn., two of the largest and best managed companies in the country. In LIFE INSURANC - they invite examination into the plans ot the %, Y. MET CAL, offering, as they do, very favorable terms to to those who wish to insure. They also conduct a general Brokerage and commission business) 19 ly B. 0. BRISTOW* Book - Dealer - and * Optician Has tho exclusive sale of these cele brated goods iu Darlington, 8. C. KELL AM & MOORE, The only imtn it fad tiring Opticians in the South, Atlanta, Gti. > teit Peddlers are not supplied with these famous glasses. SKTew Livery Stables. I take pleasure ill nnitouticlng to niy friends that 1 have just opened n large Liven’, t. * and Feed to )U Main street and will bo pleased iiavc and examine my stock of Horses ami Rules. Thu best Care taken of stock put In my charge. D. 8. McCullough, Two-horse wagons are Manufactured at now DARLINGTON, S. C. CALL AND sEE THEM BEFORE PURCHASING ELSEWHERE. A COMPLETE STOCK OF Bugsies, Carts, Harness AND— FURNITURE Always on Hand, Undertaker's -«•. u - - v , i