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...-or- - -m #; ' " ' ' f ; ? m(PIIS r5ALVl Theo He Discourses on a Sermon by a Northern Preacher. RLPLAiS WORDS OF ABUSE. Bartow Philosopher Shows How Some Pen pie i eel Toward the South. "Fre not thyself because of evildoers. Frot not thyself because of him who prcspcretb in his way' and bridgelh wicked devlcesi to px-*s." There is good philosophy and much comfort in that palm. lis frequent perusal will fortily us against poirble and laave us calm and sereno at least for a time. Bui I don't believe thai David had as many things to exasperate 1dm as wo <lt). Now iherc is a Chicago relig.ou-? paper sent to me to disturb my tranquility. i't contains a sermon recently delivered by the editor t > a large congregation of his followers and the;, paid amen and amen at every malediction that he uttered cwain. t cur propie. I don't fr<i myself about what a northern preacher says nor a u >rther:i editor writes, but I don't liue that amen fiorn the saints, and it grieve? ITiO IO roai::/e Viutl lUti uiirm man. ....in an editor Ls against us the more* subscribers liis paper gels. Kjv; this Chicago editor *ays Li his so run. n: "if I were president when the iiexlynching take* place in the s;m:h f would put a cordon around th.u di trictt and hang a hundred of ; n?..n and I would shoot a hand? i. Wor by of cannibals are the horrible thirgs carTied on in the souith. As so re as you live these eight million negro s will ere day hur t loose. If it is io be b'cod for l?h?Kl. then wo? to you 'n the bisck bolt.. You .-.out homers with your robrilires pride si'iil left you lynch ?lr poor nrgixo far tiie very crime fl at . your fathers committed en their slaves. Th;ve is one voice that will spo k if ai cuthers a*e silent. (Appl-u .1 When the time cones we will do ni e than speak. Ood will judge you?y a wit:led sepulchers who stia'.n a r *t; auu swallow a camel. 1 have be ni t'.'.d that I have lost friends at tv?| rcuth. I never had any. They w?re never worthy of my friendship. Ti { are neither Christians 11 t good e:t;zens. I hear tho march of eight nVii ! lic.n Ftthionians. and it will be an awful \ day vhen they burst loose in the black, belt." My wife says that I had bet'cr tike the f.owcrs out of the greenhouse an I maybe that will relieve me. I see tha the first rose of summer has pome forth in all Its crimson beauty. A pair C'i tiny sparrows are d "inking at th? fountain In the front yard. Thry a c yellow and black, akin t the eanarie--. A mocking bird is Singing in a n it'll box's garden. Our lick of pi/eons 13 ailing around In graceful curves The peacock is strutting and spreading h s TEogniftceut tall and is h:v>py in his vanity. Tshe dog lies lazily on ; 0 j blue passes and everything Is hapny (tat God has made oxcoy: sren? inferable people who arc nevo;- happy unices Miey are ahuslnr something <i finding fault with their neighbors. Pot about thore preachers who ar?? co distressed about the negro. I wi-h to remark that the same paper that gave Dr. Gunea.ulus's senMmfvr.s about the negro hiul tin the next c ?lumn in lorge headlines a press dispatch from Connellsvil.le at a/n account of fiendish crime committed by eight negro:? upon Mr. MoMlltan and his wife shootlag h!m and subjecting her to an out rage worse than death and left them bo-Mi for dead. I hope the poa-e haa got. the iiegrw* and lynched them by (this time Do you reckon I would have refused to help lynch the brutes if 1 hod been there and If that Chicago preacher had been there and refused < helping hand I would "have said "N'ow toys, let's han? him up by the leva and give him lime to repont?the cowardly dog who wouhl not avenge a woman's honor." That's my faith and part of my religion, and I've been on that line ever since these outnares began. I reJolce over every lynching of a brute. uf the same kind. Governor Candlrr ir-ay purg? aig awn roc or a aooui i-r.-nIng and donounre that Philadelphia rdIter who lied on him, but I am not Governor?and am not a target to be Phot at and I nm free to say that i man w\> v?:>u'd wait for the slow, unrerta-in pre ess of the taw and thcto-urts to av -nee cur wives a:-d daugh tPTs is no vi tin a* ail and has my scorn end coat em i?t. i think I had b<v*<M ferrl a p.s:.'m "r 20 out and plant so.re mere beaut>. for n;y wife rays sh? wants a snwssi ?? of crors of all the- e leguminous vegetables. I think that is what she allerl th?m. It is that samo puritanical ret of preachers? wlro brought on the war and we thought the next generation would have more sanec and lot us alone since slavery was abolished, but like fathers Jlke sons and they* are yet miserable ra long of Mordera! Is sitting at the gale, team? of our wvHers and orators declare that pence and brotherly love now prevails, but it is like the game of "three card monte," now you see It and now you don't see it. Henry Grady made a great speech in Boston and fairly <iaptured his amfience. but in less than two weeks the Hr-sbon preachers were belittling his effrrt arrd howling at the poubh for its had faith to the fifteenth Amendment. The nace profolem is ?till . ; # * r> ' V;'n. s. mm.1' MANUFACTURE'S OF DOORS, SASH, BLINDS, MOULDING AKD Building Material. Dealers iu Sash Weight?, | Cord, Hardware, Window glast, etc. We guarautee our work superior to any 9old in this city, ; all being of our own manufac- ! ture. E.H.HACKER, Proprietor CHARLESTON. - fl. CHu'r eanitp.1 stock and it has spread m New England to Chicayo and the '- it west. The G. A. R's. have apfe.oir.tod a commltte to writ? up a history of the civil war, and the n^xt hiny will he to force it into the pnhl o "hools. The G. A. R's. are a poww In the land and their creed is to draw more pensions and biyyer cars, but I can't understand lOv Ihey can look a .>nf<>d crate soldier in the face and horns' of anyrhinc:. If it took four of if* to whip otic of theni I'd never h y r.'oiut it r.nr ask for a pension, and if Ft wa< r'ven nte I would conscientious iy it back in Ihe jur. When God I vi Adam He planted n garden f.v j h' r. end p.it him in it to keep it and j i':css it and that was innoe-nt and manly, and so I will go out and dig rmue gnd turn the hydrant lose, for it is a-Mil dry. Wish 1 could tu~n it !.. -e >n those preachers. S'.n^e BKiup far. ikr exclaimed in hi? head line', "Oh. fo** one more breath of Put It anisn!" I've be a perusing bi-'tory. Of p nurse he didn't nman th rs*? PuHtans who came to N*e-,v England and went t-< importing negroes and robbing thn Indians and burning witches. Mr. St adman and Miss Hutchinson have eleven volumes of American literature and the second is devoted to those horrible witchcraft times when Increa93 Mather ami O.Mon Mather and Samuel Sewall and other saints had helpless women arrested and tried and hung for witchcraft. The whole procedure is in this volume and It makes th.? heart sick to read how the poor creatures begged for their lives and in their last moments en the galows denied their guilt. How as many a-; edzht were hung at one time and many m re at various times and how o'.d Judge *?wad afterwards repented and tin twelve jurymen repented and publish d their repentance and asked God to forgive their great sin. etc. One woman, Mary Watkins. who was a hired servant. a white woman, was tried but tin evidence was not quite sufficient to convi -r. and #o they did not hang her. but sent her off to Vii"?inia to b? sold as a slave. This Is only a little scrap o? New England history, and if any of their descendants is ah anted of it th y have never said so to me Those northern brethren are awful slow on apologies But I must go and s ick the sweet peas and hury up the flowers for the June wedding. Our neighbor's [> oty daughter is to be married and they are singing to me? "Bring flowers, bring flowers, for the bride to wear. They are born to blush In her shining hair." Bill Arp in Atlanta Constitution. RAMS' HORN BLASTS f"p\HE man who i3 I afrail1 if llis sl;in nCVeP 8ftV(' h'8 Sympathy is tho equal rights but not J2$A\ \Vw&>f resolution to reaca MM \\ them. \ Every church -'^3^7 ought to have a corral for the kicker i% to^air his heels. The sermon prepared for the head never reaches the heart. The hest friend of the devil is the n.an who proclaims his disease. He who talks of his neighbor's ir.ote does it to hide his own beam. God will demand an accounting for ecclesiastical millinery and pyrotechnics. He who who has no treasure in heaven will be but a poor beggar when he gets there. The people who talk most about their citizenship in heaven are often those who pay no taxes there. Men who deny a personal devil conclude that there are a good many persons who are devils when they come to fight organized sin. It's the good stock that finds a ready tale. Chloroform Restored Its Victim. The Diesbach family, of Atchison, had an old horse which had lived out Us days of usefulness. At last it hecame so old and decrepit that it got down in the barn and could not get up. The family sent for a horse ambulance and turned the animal over to the town scavenger with money to buy chloroform with which to give the old horse an easy death. The horse ?? ? ? ? -?-#< 11 > fr/~\ f K a Kr\n W<13 tu cue uuiicjaiu and a pint of < hloroform was soaked in a sponge and placed beneath its nose as it lay on the ground. Aftpr sniffing at the chloroform the horse jumppd up, kicked'out its heels and ran cavorting out into#the country. And yet a man ; once wrote a l>ook to prove that anl- I mals have no sense of humor.?Kansas City Journal. The President's Wor< Increasing. On the same day that M. Lagarda, the Philippine representative, called at the White House, there were visitors present from Hawaii. Alaska. Porto Rico and Cuba, as well as a large delegation of Indians in paint and feathers. Each one of these callers represented a late addition to the territory under the old flag. On some days the secretary is compelled to' report to the President that he saw only one-half of the callers; next day a third; next day a fourth; next a sixth, until the geometrical recession reaches a fraction of less than one-tenth, during the rush. Some inventive Yankee will have to invent a presidental automa ton to Keep up wan inc necessary uemands for handshakers?especially if this spirit of expansion keeps right on expanding.?Joe .Mitchell Chappie. In the National Magazine. Amelia Bingham, in a talk delivered lately before a woman's club on the future play, said: "The risque play is done for; the people are weary of Saphos and French farce is no longer wanted. The good plays translated from the German, such as Augustine Daly used to make known here, will be in favor again and soon. What the public wants is relaxation? sweet, wholesome, lively pictures of real life. Playgoers have no mind for question with a capital Q. The coming play will touch upon fresh American life and represent live American types." Doctors, Lawyers, Mfrrbantf, And people in all conditions of life, who have used Crab Orchard Water, continue to u?c it and recommend it. No testimonial baa tho same effect as personal experience. Great Britain's trade has multiplied twelve and one-half times since 1801. An oil well and an orator are neither of them much good unless they spout. Indigestion is a bafl companion. Gel rid o." ii by chewing a bar of Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti after each meal. The exchange editor goes through life a I a pretty rapid clip. A .Tlsath'i Test Free. If you hare Drspepsia, write Dr. Shoop Racine. Wis.. Box 14S. for six bottle* of Dr. >uoop h nenoraiiTe. j.xp. paiu. ,-icuu n money. Pay 55.50 if cured. The man who keeps on grinding wii! make his point in the end. The laundryman Is one who rea'lzes the Irony of fate. 80. 19. For La Grippe and lleadnelie. These disagreeable and dangerous diseases may be relieved immediately by the t mely use of Hicks' Capudlne Headache Cure. 15e, 25e and 50cat all drug stores. If your druggist does not keep it send 6c for postage on trial bottle. Hicks Cheshcai. Co., Raleigh, K C. German chemists have at last pro- ! dueed a synthetic indigo which is i rapidly displacing the vegetable pro- ! duct of the planters in India, and the government of Bengal has devoted 50,000 rupees to be spent in the improvement of the indigo industry, so j that the planters may compete, on j r.w-n to,-iris at least, with the German 1 laboratories. | This is 9 ^ Made also ia four larger sizes. & evcrprbcfe. I^ ^ ' ' I ' I , All manner of extravagant e: II a woman's nerves are overwroug The spasm at the top of the v I "ball rising in the throat," vi< I laughing and crying by turns, i I the arms about), frightened by tl | rences?are all symptoms of a h 2 rious derangement of the female Any female complaint may must be regarded as a symptom yields quickly to Lydia E. Pin) pound, which acts at once upon nerve centers, dispelling effecti symptoms. Mrs. Lewis Says : ? I Fee! Physically and "Dear Mrs. Pinkham:?I wish to Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and suffered everything from nervousne back and abdomen. I had consulted di; try your medicine, and I soon found it 1 tinned its use and now am feeling liko a n< and am glad to add one more testimonial Mrs. M. h. Lewis, 21Gd Valentine Ave., 1 Writing to Mrs. Pinkham is \ to get the right advice about all dress is Lynn, Mass. She advis< is an instance : Mrs. Haven's First Lette "Dear Mrs. jpinxhami wouia i troubles. I suffer every month at time ol and for so long that I become very weak, with a discharge before and after menses, times that I can hardly get around have e pain in back, bearing-down feeling, a dos pains in passing it; have leucorrhoea, h< times have hysteria. My blood is not in from you. Iain," Mrs. Emma Haven, 2*508 (June 3, 18S9.) Mrs. Haven's Sec " Dear Mrs. Pink ham I wish to e: medicine has done for me. I suffered f< Every month I flowed very badly. I got work. Was obliged to sit or lie down the a long time, but obtained no relief I be E. Piiikham's Vegetable Com pour and Livor Pills?and now feel like a ne 23U8 South Ave., Council Bluffs, Iowa. sgip ?Ml ! Mlliat.ll I ? Use CERTAIN t^'CUBE.;; > tltik Op It CP cf r?ery flMrrlrRoB/,??? HER?V "UBLLO junction Guer-.ntiywt. ninWrit* for rrit-**. JK8SK MARDF.N Join .. li.y ,s Cha*l?? 8?..BaLTI*oi:k. Mt? At V'Xc'/irJIi iThornuton's Eye Wafer ?? Mllllllllllll IfiMIIIW fllUPIPI ill ill > the ^-2 B ? ?tn\ i jy% Flamelj? it ?Ll ? * tpressions are possible when lit. find pipe or bronchial tubes, ilent beating of the heart, nuscnlar spasms (throwing le most insignificant occurysterical condition and seorgans. produce hysterics, which only. The cause, however, Cham's Vegetable Coiiithe organ afflicted and the lally all those distressing ! Like a New Person, flentaily." speak a pood word for Lydia E. . For years I had ovarian trouble 'ss. severe headache, and pain in fferent physicians, but deoided to ivas giving me much relief. I con;w person, physically and mentally, [ to the value of your remedy."? Tremont, New York, N. Y. she quickest and surest way female troubles. Her adgs women free. Following r to Mrs. Pinkham. ike your advice in regard to mr menstruation, and flow so much also get very dizzy. I am troubled , have pains in ovaries so bad someore feeling in lower part of bowels, iire to pass urir.e frequently, with jadaclie, fainting spells, ana somegood condition. Hoping to hear ^ South Ave., Council Blods, Iowa. 1 nn/l I pffor tpress my gratitude for what your )r four years with womb trouble, so bad that I could hardly do my most of the time. I doctored for gaii using your remedies?Lydia id, Blood Purifier, Sanative Wash w woman."?Mrs. Emsla. Haver, (Feb. 1, 1900.) DO win i,' to the fact -hat some skeptical people have from time to time questioned the genuineness cf tlie fstiraonial letters we are constantly publishing, we have lational City Bank, of Lynn, Mass.. $5,000, > any person who will show that the above tnuine, or were published before obtaining the ission.?Lvdia E. Pinkham Miuucrot Co. ????c ???ara zawM ICE NTS*; Brohard Sash Look and Brohard Door Holdtr tive workers everywhere can earn hi* tnpaan vara a steady demand for our roods. Samplo ih lock, with prices, term,, etc.. free for 9c atam* postage. TllK BKOHAttD (O., {Station "O." I'Uladelelua. Fa, Ileal 1 Stovei y t . ' 'j: '