tbe immediate and unconditional rej of the Shermau law. Why ? Beca with the Sherman law ont of the w the next step is to fix the gold stands and the chief movers have good rea to bel ?eve that they can force congi to issue $300,000,000 of golds bondi replenish the gold reserve. It is a great programme, and if i carried out it will stand in history the most stupendous and extraordin; scheme of robbery that has been und taken in modern times. It will cai more wide spread distress than war famine, and ten thousand pantos cam measure the suffering it will give rise It will be a splendid victory for I money power-for the national ban But what are the people goiog- to about it ?-Atlanta Constitution. Prepare Your Rye Lands. Now is th'1 time to sow your rye green feed for next spring. If so? now it will be ready to cut by the 21 of April. Rye is a first-class hay ere and is the best crop for early green fo for stock, for there is no danger frc scours, and it is three weeks earlier tb .any other crop you can grow for tl purpose, so prepare your land and sow least two acres, but do not make t .cow mon mistake of sowing on poor lan for you will not make an early crop Sc your rye now, and manure it this wint at the rate of forty loads of manure the acre, and you can plant the land corn after the rye is off. This syste of intensive farming is far better th: the old way by which a piece of lai was idle half the time. Some farme say you will exhauts your land, as it ca not stand two crops in one year. Wh is the difference between a crop of r and weeds, and a crop of rye and corn The weeds exhaust the vitality of tl land as much as the corn, so hadn't y< better grow a crop of rye and corn ai keep down the weeds ? The rye can 1 used as a starting crop for clover i grass, which can be sowed with it, ai when the rye is cut the land can 1 given up to the grass crop. The decision of Judge Simonton i the U. S. Court at Greenville, S. C Monday, is a big point scored by th opponents of the State Dispensary la? it is practicality a decision that tl railroads running into that State ba? the right to carry and deliver package of liquor from any point outside of til State at any point inside of it. Tb court decided that the section of tb Dispensary law under which proceeding were instituted were in violation of th State Constitution, which prohibits die crimination between classes of citizens and also in violation of the InterStat Commerce act. The dispensary pro habiting mandate assumes that the rail road authorities and employes knen what is in every package they ship o deliver, which they may or may not for if it is the purpose to evade the lav articles may be >hipped under othe names, but in this case the claim wa broadly made by. the railroad whicl brought the action that it had the -igh under the Inter-State Commerce act ti carry liquor, and deliver it to any ont ordering it. This decision was ii accordance with decisions rendered ii the prohibition States of Kansas ant Iowa, where the courts sustained th< right of the railroads to deliver un broken packages of liquor to purchaser! who imported from other States, and t it goes to the Supreme Court it will sustain the Greenville Court.-Wil? mington Star. The McKinley law has played havoc with our trade with Mexico Prior tc its enactment 5G per cent, of Mexican imports were from the Uoited States But that law imposed heavy duties on silver-lead ore which up to the time ol its enactment had been shipped to the United States to be smelted. The tax was imposed at the demand of a group of mine owners in Colorado who made genereou3 contributions to the Harrison campaign fund in 1888. Its effect has been to create a heavy smeltiug indus? try in Mexico ; to cause a transfer of $10,000,000 of American capital to (hat country ; to deprive the interna? tional railroads of a valuable and growing trafile, and to induce Mexico to retaliate by increasing its tariff on American goods, thus raising new obstacles to prevent a free interchange of products We feel much relieved since we found out how the crisis has been brought about. Bill Nye makes the matter as plain as the noonday sun. He says : .'The engorgement of the channels of trade with over-production of unearned increment over the percentage of former years, and making the bimetallic and baser metals subservient to gold and the reserve of gold and paper money the general funeral currency and noticeable hesitation of goods to go out during the season of mourning, together with shrinkage of values of things you have got, while things that you want real bad become suddenly of great value, causes what you might call stagnation of satisfaction anda general revival of sadness in the realms of trade. Gov. Tillman as the tail to the j Augusta Kite at Chicago had a re? ception and made a speech He assuru ed the roll of seer and prophesied that Chicago would be the biggest town on earth. He spoke of having to travel a thousand miles to "get thar" and ex? pressed some surprise at the bigness of thiscountty. He apologized for South Carolina not being represented, but the apology is not given If he had read from "Shell's Manifesto" writteu by himself all would have been plain. To keep ice in the sickroom over night set the pitcher in a newspaper, gather up the ends, twist them tight and snap on a rubber band A Prophecy Fulfilled. What Mr. Cleveland Said Eight Years Ago and What Has Happened Mr. Cleveland is too greata man to come down to "I told you so," but it is a striking coincidence that some of h is message contain the very wording of that message which he eent to congress in December eight years ago, foretelling the very dis? aster that has come to pass if the country persisted in its silver course. In that message eight years ago, speaking of the monthly coinage of two million dollars a month of silver, he said. "Continued long enough, this opera? tion will result in the substitution of silver for all the gold the govern? ment now owns. The proportion of silver in its certificates received by the government (custom duties) will probably increase as time goes on, for the reason that the nearer the period approaches when it will be obliged to offer silver in payment of its obligations, the greater induce? ment there will be to hoard gold against depreciation in the value of silver, or for the purpose of specula? ting. When the time comes that gold has been withdrawn from circula? tion, then will be apparent the differ? ence between the real value of the silver dollar and a dollar in gold, and the two coins will part company." Notwithstanding this warning, the Sherman bill was passed in 1890 and Republicans and silver Democrats alike flouted the prophecy of Mr. Cleveland, the realization of which is now found in the terrible financial strain accompanied by closed factor? ies, unemployed workmen and all the other attendants of a panic. Since some of the Churches have begun turning out their members for selling whiskey wouldn't it be just as well to apply the discipline to the mem? bers who get drunk on whiskey ? Bot the trouble there might be the drinking members might be in the majority and torn out the teetotalers and moderate drinkers and have the preacher depend? ent for bis salary OD the intemperate communicants. That would be a rather uncomfortable position, and, possibly, it would be .just as well to let the whole business alooe, because the drinking members might take ii into teeir bead to discipline their preacher.-Cheraw Re? porter. John M. Langston, colored, a poli? tician of Virginia, in a speech in Chi? cago the other day declared himself in favor of an educational qualification for colored men, a* a requisite to right to vote. Re said no negro ought to be allowed to vote who cannot read and write. The Republican press didn't skin bim, although they went red-eyed for the Legislature of Mississippi when it adopted an educational qualification for white and back. The report circulated some time ago that Representative R C. Watts, of Laurens, intended moving to the Cash estate in Chesterfield county in order that he might be eligible to succeed Judge Hudson in the Fourth Circuit, seems to have some truth in it. The organ in Columbia bas lately given publicity to the move and other papers have mentioned it. A close calculation shows the num? ber of officials under the Dispensary law to be five hundred at an average annual salary of $500. A neat little army of Knights of the Carolina Cocktail4. A neat little sum of a quarter of a million ! "Make me clerk of the irons, let me live upon the fruits of other mens iodustry, and fatten upon the plunder of the publie "-Laurens Advertiser. The best evidence that the people have not caused the stringency by hid? ing away money in their socks is that the people have noue to hide away, lt is ooly the banks and moneyed class who can hoard money; and they are doing it, while the people sweat. Augusta Chronicle. We have but little hesitancy tn say? ing that the man who would accuse Judge Hudson of being bribed to ren? der a decision will never be in want of fried chicken for breakfast as long as he can fiad one in his neighbor's coop. -Union Times. If money is too scarce as a circula? ting medium and the government vaults are overflowing with silver, why not pay the pensioners in that metal. It would be an effectual way of increas? ing the circulation. A Million Friends. A friend in need is a friend indeed, and not less than one million people have found just such a friend in Dr. King's New Discovery for Coughs, and Colds.-If you have never used this Great Cough Medicine, one trial will convince you that it has wonderful eural ive powers in all diseases of Throat, Chest and Lungs. Each bottle is guaranteed to do all that is claimed or money will be refunded. Trial bottles free at J] F. W DeLorme's Drug store. Large bottles 50c and $1.00. ' _ 1 Bu ck leu's Arnie? Salvo. Tbe Best Salve in tte world for Cats, Braises Sores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum. Fever SODS, Tetter, Chapped Hands Chilblains, Coras and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give per? fect satisfaction, or money refunded. 'Vice 25cents per box. For sale by Dr J. F. W. De L.>rrae mmmmm- -*mm~ Drink Glenn Springs Water for headache, indigestion and general debility. For Over Fifty Years. MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP has been used tor children teeibjng. lt soothes the child, softens ihe gums, attars all pain, cure? wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diar? rhoea. Twenty-five cents a bettie. LADIES Needing atonic, cr children who want build? ing up, should take BROWN'S IKON BITTERS. It is pleasant to take, cures Malaria, Indi? lestton, Biliousneos and Liver Complaints Highest of all in Leavening Power.-Latest U. S. Gov't Report Baking Pomler ABSOLUTELY PURE Ay ER'S Sarsaparilla CURES OTHERS, Will CURE you. R?p?ns Tal)nies aro of groat value. Office and Mills at .I ft Bft C AKE? Contractor and Builder, Sumter, S. C? DEALER ?N Rough and Planed Lumber, Doors, Blinds, Sash, Laths, Cypress Shingles, Lime, Glass and General Building Supplies. Mill Work Of all kinds made to order, such as MANTLES Dc.1 OR AND WINDOW FRAMES, STORE FRONTS, MOULDINGS AND TURNED WORK OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. C. ft. A.. and C. S. & N. R. R's. THE SIMONOS NATIONAL BANK OP SUMTER. STATE, CITY AND COUNTY DEPOSI TORY, S?MTEK, S. C. Paid op Capital.$75,000 00 Surplus Fund. 11,500 00 Transacts a General Bunking Business. Careful attention given to collections. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. Deposits of $1 and upwards received. In? terest allowed at the rate of 4 per cent, per annnm. Payable quarterly, on first days of January. April, Ju Iv and October. R M. WALLACE, L. S. CARSON,. President. Aug 7. Cushier. TI BM If SI II!, SUMTER, S. C. CITY AND COUNTY DEPOSITORY. Transacts a general Banking business Also has A Savings Bank Department Deposits of $1 00 and upwards received. Interest calculated at the rate of 4 per cent, per annum, parable quarterly. W". F. B. HAYNSWORTH, W. F. RHAKB, President. Cashier*. H. A. HOYT, MAIN STREET, SUMTER, S. C. FINE DIAMONDS, Clocks, Jewelry, Spectacles, MERIDEN BRITANIA SILVERWARE, *c. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. Feh. 1 A. WHITE o - SK.N'I) FOB - SAMPLE COPIES AMD CIRCULARS, A hipped under othe names, but in this case the claim wa broadly made by. the railroad whicl brought the action that it had the -igh under the Inter-State Commerce act ti carry liquor, and deliver it to any ont ordering it. This decision was ii accordance with decisions rendered ii the prohibition States of Kansas ant Iowa, where the courts sustained th< right of the railroads to deliver un broken packages of liquor to purchaser! who imported from other States, and t it goes to the Supreme Court it will sustain the Greenville Court.-Wil? mington Star. The McKinley law has played havoc with our trade with Mexico Prior tc its enactment 5G per cent, of Mexican imports were from the Uoited States But that law imposed heavy duties on silver-lead ore which up to the time ol its enactment had been shipped to the United States to be smelted. The tax was imposed at the demand of a group of mine owners in Colorado who made genereou3 contributions to the Harrison campaign fund in 1888. Its effect has been to create a heavy smeltiug indus? try in Mexico ; to cause a transfer of $10,000,000 of American capital to (hat country ; to deprive the interna? tional railroads of a valuable and growing trafile, and to induce Mexico to retaliate by increasing its tariff on American goods, thus raising new obstacles to prevent a free interchange of products We feel much relieved since we found out how the crisis has been brought about. Bill Nye makes the matter as plain as the noonday sun. He says : .'The engorgement of the channels of trade with over-production of unearned increment over the percentage of former years, and making the bimetallic and baser metals subservient to gold and the reserve of gold and paper money the general funeral currency and noticeable hesitation of goods to go out during the season of mourning, together with shrinkage of values of things you have got, while things that you want real bad become suddenly of great value, causes what you might call stagnation of satisfaction anda general revival of sadness in the realms of trade. Gov. Tillman as the tail to the j Augusta Kite at Chicago had a re? ception and made a speech He assuru ed the roll of seer and prophesied that Chicago would be the biggest town on earth. He spoke of having to travel a thousand miles to "get thar" and ex? pressed some surprise at the bigness of thiscountty. He apologized for South Carolina not being represented, but the apology is not given If he had read from "Shell's Manifesto" writteu by himself all would have been plain. To keep ice in the sickroom over night set the pitcher in a newspaper, gather up the ends, twist them tight and snap on a rubber band tbe immediate and unconditional rej of the Shermau law. Why ? Beca with the Sherman law ont of the w the next step is to fix the gold stands and the chief movers have good rea to bel ?eve that they can force congi to issue $300,000,000 of golds bondi replenish the gold reserve. It is a great programme, and if i carried out it will stand in history the most stupendous and extraordin; scheme of robbery that has been und taken in modern times. It will cai more wide spread distress than war famine, and ten thousand pantos cam measure the suffering it will give rise It will be a splendid victory for I money power-for the national ban But what are the people goiog- to about it ?-Atlanta Constitution. Prepare Your Rye Lands. Now is th'1 time to sow your rye green feed for next spring. If so? now it will be ready to cut by the 21 of April. Rye is a first-class hay ere and is the best crop for early green fo for stock, for there is no danger frc scours, and it is three weeks earlier tb .any other crop you can grow for tl purpose, so prepare your land and sow least two acres, but do not make t .cow mon mistake of sowing on poor lan for you will not make an early crop Sc your rye now, and manure it this wint at the rate of forty loads of manure the acre, and you can plant the land corn after the rye is off. This syste of intensive farming is far better th: the old way by which a piece of lai was idle half the time. Some farme say you will exhauts your land, as it ca not stand two crops in one year. Wh is the difference between a crop of r and weeds, and a crop of rye and corn The weeds exhaust the vitality of tl land as much as the corn, so hadn't y< better grow a crop of rye and corn ai keep down the weeds ? The rye can 1 used as a starting crop for clover i grass, which can be sowed with it, ai when the rye is cut the land can 1 given up to the grass crop. The decision of Judge Simonton i the U. S. Court at Greenville, S. C Monday, is a big point scored by th opponents of the State Dispensary la? it is practicality a decision that tl railroads running into that State ba? the right to carry and deliver package of liquor from any point outside of til State at any point inside of it. Tb court decided that the section of tb Dispensary law under which proceeding were instituted were in violation of th State Constitution, which prohibits die crimination between classes of citizens and also in violation of the InterStat Commerce act. The dispensary pro habiting mandate assumes that the rail road authorities and employes knen what is in every package they ship o deliver, which they may or may not for if it is the purpose to evade the lav articles may be >hipped under othe names, but in this case the claim wa broadly made by. the railroad whicl brought the action that it had the -igh under the Inter-State Commerce act ti carry liquor, and deliver it to any ont ordering it. This decision was ii accordance with decisions rendered ii the prohibition States of Kansas ant Iowa, where the courts sustained th< right of the railroads to deliver un broken packages of liquor to purchaser! who imported from other States, and t it goes to the Supreme Court it will sustain the Greenville Court.-Wil? mington Star. The McKinley law has played havoc with our trade with Mexico Prior tc its enactment 5G per cent, of Mexican imports were from the Uoited States But that law imposed heavy duties on silver-lead ore which up to the time ol its enactment had been shipped to the United States to be smelted. The tax was imposed at the demand of a group of mine owners in Colorado who made genereou3 contributions to the Harrison campaign fund in 1888. Its effect has been to create a heavy smeltiug indus? try in Mexico ; to cause a transfer of $10,000,000 of American capital to (hat country ; to deprive the interna? tional railroads of a valuable and growing trafile, and to induce Mexico to retaliate by increasing its tariff on American goods, thus raising new obstacles to prevent a free interchange of products We feel much relieved since we found out how the crisis has been brought about. Bill Nye makes the matter as plain as the noonday sun. He says : .'The engorgement of the channels of trade with over-production of unearned increment over the percentage of former years, and making the bimetallic and baser metals subservient to gold and the reserve of gold and paper money the general funeral currency and noticeable hesitation of goods to go out during the season of mourning, together with shrinkage of values of things you have got, while things that you want real bad become suddenly of great value, causes what you might call stagnation of satisfaction anda general revival of sadness in the realms of trade. Gov. Tillman as the tail to the j Augusta Kite at Chicago had a re? ception and made a speech He assuru ed the roll of seer and prophesied that Chicago would be the biggest town on earth. He spoke of having to travel a thousand miles to "get thar" and ex? pressed some surprise at the bigness of thiscountty. He apologized for South Carolina not being represented, but the apology is not given If he had read from "Shell's Manifesto" writteu by himself all would have been plain. To keep ice in the sickroom over night set the pitcher in a newspaper, gather up the ends, twist them tight and snap on a rubber band tbe immediate and unconditional rej of the Shermau law. Why ? Beca with the Sherman law ont of the w the next step is to fix the gold stands and the chief movers have good rea to bel ?eve that they can force congi to issue $300,000,000 of golds bondi replenish the gold reserve. It is a great programme, and if i carried out it will stand in history the most stupendous and extraordin; scheme of robbery that has been und taken in modern times. It will cai more wide spread distress than war famine, and ten thousand pantos cam measure the suffering it will give rise It will be a splendid victory for I money power-for the national ban But what are the people goiog- to about it ?-Atlanta Constitution. Prepare Your Rye Lands. Now is th'1 time to sow your rye green feed for next spring. If so? now it will be ready to cut by the 21 of April. Rye is a first-class hay ere and is the best crop for early green fo for stock, for there is no danger frc scours, and it is three weeks earlier tb .any other crop you can grow for tl purpose, so prepare your land and sow least two acres, but do not make t .cow mon mistake of sowing on poor lan for you will not make an early crop Sc your rye now, and manure it this wint at the rate of forty loads of manure the acre, and you can plant the land corn after the rye is off. This syste of intensive farming is far better th: the old way by which a piece of lai was idle half the time. Some farme say you will exhauts your land, as it ca not stand two crops in one year. Wh is the difference between a crop of r and weeds, and a crop of rye and corn The weeds exhaust the vitality of tl land as much as the corn, so hadn't y< better grow a crop of rye and corn ai keep down the weeds ? The rye can 1 used as a starting crop for clover i grass, which can be sowed with it, ai when the rye is cut the land can 1 given up to the grass crop. The decision of Judge Simonton i the U. S. Court at Greenville, S. C Monday, is a big point scored by th opponents of the State Dispensary la? it is practicality a decision that tl railroads running into that State ba? the right to carry and deliver package of liquor from any point outside of til State at any point inside of it. Tb court decided that the section of tb Dispensary law under which proceeding were instituted were in violation of th State Constitution, which prohibits die crimination between classes of citizens and also in violation of the InterStat Commerce act. The dispensary pro habiting mandate assumes that the rail road authorities and employes knen what is in every package they ship o deliver, which they may or may not for if it is the purpose to evade the lav articles may be >hipped under othe names, but in this case the claim wa broadly made by. the railroad whicl brought the action that it had the -igh under the Inter-State Commerce act ti carry liquor, and deliver it to any ont ordering it. This decision was ii accordance with decisions rendered ii the prohibition States of Kansas ant Iowa, where the courts sustained th< right of the railroads to deliver un broken packages of liquor to purchaser! who imported from other States, and t it goes to the Supreme Court it will sustain the Greenville Court.-Wil? mington Star. The McKinley law has played havoc with our trade with Mexico Prior tc its enactment 5G per cent, of Mexican imports were from the Uoited States But that law imposed heavy duties on silver-lead ore which up to the time ol its enactment had been shipped to the United States to be smelted. The tax was imposed at the demand of a group of mine owners in Colorado who made genereou3 contributions to the Harrison campaign fund in 1888. Its effect has been to create a heavy smeltiug indus? try in Mexico ; to cause a transfer of $10,000,000 of American capital to (hat country ; to deprive the interna? tional railroads of a valuable and growing trafile, and to induce Mexico to retaliate by increasing its tariff on American goods, thus raising new obstacles to prevent a free interchange of products We feel much relieved since we found out how the crisis has been brought about. Bill Nye makes the matter as plain as the noonday sun. He says : .'The engorgement of the channels of trade with over-production of unearned increment over the percentage of former years, and making the bimetallic and baser metals subservient to gold and the reserve of gold and paper money the general funeral currency and noticeable hesitation of goods to go out during the season of mourning, together with shrinkage of values of things you have got, while things that you want real bad become suddenly of great value, causes what you might call stagnation of satisfaction anda general revival of sadness in the realms of trade. Gov. Tillman as the tail to the j Augusta Kite at Chicago had a re? ception and made a speech He assuru ed the roll of seer and prophesied that Chicago would be the biggest town on earth. He spoke of having to travel a thousand miles to "get thar" and ex? pressed some surprise at the bigness of thiscountty. He apologized for South Carolina not being represented, but the apology is not given If he had read from "Shell's Manifesto" writteu by himself all would have been plain. To keep ice in the sickroom over night set the pitcher in a newspaper, gather up the ends, twist them tight and snap on a rubber band