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THE STATE CAMPAIGN. The Events of the Week. THE RICHLAND MEETING. Disorderly Crowd-The Speakers Heard With Diff?culy - The Crowd About Evenly Divided. The Riebland county meeting was held at Shandon, the new suburb of Columbia at the terminus of the elec? tric car line. The crowd numbered about 800, and was nearly evenly divid? ed between Butler and Tillman. There were a number of drunken men present, who kept up a continual disturbance and at one time almost succeeded in breaking Op the meeting. The candidates for Superintendent of Education, R R. Commissioner and Adjutant aod Inspector General led off. They had nothing new to say. Gov. Tillman spoke next. The State9? report of Tillman's and Butler's speeches is as follows : Wheo Mr. Ben Tillman, candidate for the United States Senate, was intro? duced, three-fourths of the crowd raised a sky-piercing yell calculated to loosen the joints of the solar system. It lasted for a minute, and as it died away half a dozen hisses were beard. At the same moment the Governor be? gan to speak, and somebody yelled. Another spasmodic yell or two fol? lowed. The Governor's stern face hardened. "The chairman appointed fifty mem? bers of a reception committee to do the courtesies of this occasion," he snap? ped, "and not one marshal to keep the peace and pot down trouble." (Cheers.) The Governor, deliberately : * 'Unless I can speak and be listened to, 1*11 stop right here. (Cheers ?ad a variety cf ferocious sounds.) . Chairman Ray, in the midst of the confusion, indignantly denied any res? ponsibility for the uproar and declared that be had done his best to preserve order. Governor Tillman turned bis face from the music with the parting shot "that be didn't care three straws whether he spoke or not," and sat down in a chair aod also io disgust. The music proceeded, aod Senator Butler advanced to the front and stretched his hand io a deprecating gestare.. The storm at ooee increased in vio? lence. Seoator Butler persevered io trying to be beard. Then the lion in the soldier of Treviliiao's awoke. His voice could be beard, bot it was uni in? telligible io the dio. Chairman Ray again attempted to qu?ll the disturbance. A drunken man ?led to climb oo the stand. The chair? man firmly poshed biol back. A little boy casse forward with a bouquet for the Seoator, bot the Seoator was not io a flowery mood aod waved bim back. The air vibrated with the yells, but they soon subsided slightly. Tillman advanced aod stood by But? ler, whose voice contd DOW be heard exclaiming io tones that rang and rang again : "This is an outrage ? It is a shame for you men to behave like this. You are acting like d-d savages. Let Governor Tillman speak ! Let bim speak ! I shall not attack him un? less be speaks ! I give you fair notice that unless he speaks I'll not appear before you V Slowly, as if cowed by Butler's denunciation, the maudlin howlers ceased and the noise sauk away. Chairmain ?Ray exclaimed : "I shall allow no man to charge me with unfair? ness. I shall give every man a fair fhowing. I give you ootice that unless the Governor speaks I shall allow no other mao to attempt to speak." Governor Tillman, who all the time bad re m ai oed perfectly cool aud self possessed, begao bis second heat. He explained that he had merely said that DO marshals had been appointed to keep order-that was all. The Governor sparred himself and sprang forward to ?be charge on Cleve? land and Congress. It appeared to the reporter that be was employiog the tactics of the Israelites ?round Jericho against Wall Street. He blazed, ful? minated aod catapulted great sounding epibets. Congressmen and Senators, he said, had been bought and sold. He waded through twenty sentences of scorching invective and sarcasm. "Governor, what are you going todo when you get there." "Do jost like I've done as Governor. Ron over all such fellows as you.!" (Long and load applause.) The Governor denounced the ''treach? ery and double-dealing aod hypocrisy" of the President, and said something about the gold reserve "being a nest A Voice: "We'll break the nest .gg." Tillman : "I want to put some more eggs in the nest. I want to put some more eggs in South Carolina's nest." (Great cheering. ) At this point a youth become ob? streperous at the left A the speaker? and for several minutes there was a 1 tempest of profanity aod a vast deal j of scuffling, but nobody was hurt. When the Governor resumed he had a few words to say directly to the peo- ; pie of Columbia ; "I came to your city," be said, "four years ago. I have treated your people kindly aud courteously when I have come in contact with them, ior somri reason or other the majority of voa i.ate and despise me. You have cut yourself off from the remainder of the State, alon? with four other", counties. If you persist in going to the ] devil with them I can't help it. I bear | 00 malice or dielike to any person Columbia, bat voa have compelled farmers of jour cwo county to I aloof from voa. Your streets are of beggars. There is nothing for j people to do except io the oil mills roilroad shops. If you perist io course you cao have oo prosper You will utterly dry up/' After marking that be was already asst of success, the Governor closed, an* course was cheered vociferously. Gen. Butler was cheered as he a forward to speak. He said he saw reason why the people should be tak each other by the throats like cowbc It made no difference who was elec to this office or that, but it did mas difference as to how popular goverom was administered It alarmed 1 wheo he heard the people crying al< for any man. When be heard th shouting "Hurrah for Hampton," ye ago. he had told Gen. Hamption tba frightened him. If he had nothi else bat cheap demagogic popularity commend him to tbe people, God hi mercy on hts soul. Gen. Butler said he had bees in Senate a long time. Voice-Too long. Butler-I am almost inclined to. lieve that I have been there too loi and if I am to go back on the deot ciatioo of others, such as I have seen this campaign, I tell you I will not back. I have been criticized right here Colombia. It is the right of the p< pie to criticize me, bat I am no: resp< sible for those who have been or ha not been appointed to offices that th sought, I represent the legislative < partaient, and I have no more voice any public appointment of the Fedei government than the hamblest citize It bas been said that my official positi entitles me to a certain weight. Ail can do is to recommend. That I ba done impartially and justly. Wh men who -have been . disappointed obtaining office visit that disappoin ment OD me they are simply un jut and the man who is my friend ai ceases to be such wheo he fails to g his appointment is a friend for reveni only. 1 did not seek the United States Sei ate. but when tb? people commissions me to relieve the old commonwealth carpetbag is m and scala wagism, I toe that commission and went to the Sena with a Republican majority of two, ac finally succeeded in getting my seat i December. Almost throughout his speech Get Butler was interrupted by a dar skinned Tillmanire reeking with Hquoi who was on the stand, and strange I say he was allowed to keep it up witt out let or hindrance. Gen. Butler said that he had no pei sooal ambitioo to gratify, but he though, that from bis long experience in th Senate he was better able to serve th people judiciously and effectively than newman. "While my opponent,*' h paid, "speaks with great confidence, le me remind bim than by bis untrue an slanderous accusations against th Senate he has put every Senator agaios him. If the people think that I bav beeo tbere too long, let them seo? somebody els? there, but send bin fairly Give us a separate box at eacl precinct, where the people can go an? cast their votes without being influence; by cliques and rings.'' The Congressional candidates, Far ley, Duncan and Wilson next presentee their claims. They were rather per sonal in their remarks. Duncan pate his respects, to Larry Gant io vigorooi laogaage, denouncing him as a jackal etc. The State reports the speeches of thc Gubernatorial candidates as follows : Secretary of State Tindal compli? mented the people of Columbia af being a people of many excellent virtues-cultured, educated aod church goiog. With all these advantages, un? happily for the State, Colombia was opposing the great masses of th 3 peo? ple aod had not conquered ber preju? dices. If elected Governor be would ose all toe moral forces of the State to briog tbe people together. Tbere is great anxiety all over the State as to to whether we are goiog to have fair play io this race. Comptroller Ellerbe promised the Re? formers of Colombia if elected that he would stand to them. He admitted that both factions bad made mistakes. Ellerbe theo began to beard the lion io his deo io this manner. **I am DO hero worsipper. At Wioosboro Governor Tillman said he was goiog to give me a little spanking becaose I had happened to differ with him. I want to say to the Governor and ? to the people, and I say it good bomoredly, that the mao who under? takes to spank me will get the worst spanking he ever had. (Applause ) I am as good a Reformer as Governor Tillman or aoy mao and I am running oo my record, lam goiog to criticise Johnny Evans's record whether it pleases Governor Tillman or not. "Governor Tillman is a candidate for the Senate. Let him ruo bis campaign and we will run ours. Wheo I want an advisory attoroey I will notify him. I am free, white and twenty-one and whenever Johnny gets too big for his breeches I am going to spank him. Voter-It's all right down io our county. Here's lo mau. (Slapping John Gary E"<*ns on the back.) Go ver*: ^r Tillman characterized my plan as a double back action affair. I tell you ic is a straightforward plan. It is none of his business. We are fighting this battle and we don't get. the office from Governor Tillman. Wc get it from the people and what we j want to know is what you have to say j about this matter and that is of vastly ! more consequence to me. Geoeral Ellerbe then got very rash ! ; and proceeded to say that Governor i j Tillman had "made a great blunder in j issuing the proclamation to open the j dispensary. The Supreme Court has ! decided the act of 1892 unconstitutional ! and that closed the dispensaries. The j act of 1893 has never been passed apon j i aud I think it is a mistake to open the : dispensary until the court decides on ' the constitutionality of that act. We 1 ! could have that done in a very short time, just as we did in the bond case j j The sentiment of the people is agaiost j j the opening. ''I am a LU ember of the State board of control and I have never been con- j suited on this matter. If I had been I \ would have told the Governor that it j j was a mistake and I would have voted i I against it." Theo came John Gary Evans with the electrifying statement that the j people of Columbia had a newspaper that did cot represent them. If the young men were at the head of things they would condemn this narrow-mind- ? ed policy. He referred to Ellerbeks remarks about a primary as the "utter despera- j tion of a defeated candidate appealing to the prejudices of the people/' He declared that when Ellerbe criti? cised the Governor for opposing some of the Alliance demands he ought to CS have been frank enough to have said that he himself stood on tue same platform. Ellerbe was advising the people to join' the Alliance when he himself was not a member of it. Evans said that the dispensary act of 1893 had not been passed upon and that if Tillman did not enforce it he ought tu be impeached. Ile thought that the dispensary law was the the best ever devised and that if Ellerbe was allowed to tinker with it he would ruin | it. "It's good for bellies," said he. ? "They will last ten years longer that if you had barrooms." He said that heretofore if any bod y wanted to be elected to office in Columbia they had to go to thc bar- ! keepers. "On the first of August," said be, "you will have the dispensary despite the action of the board of control to the contrary." Evans complimented the good order, peace and sobriety displayed at the j meeting and said that he felt like tak- j ing Columbia by the hand and saying well done. Dr. Sampson Pope appeared on the campaign again after a long ab? sence. He made a notable speech in a conservative vein and said that he was not the man to excite passions in order to get office. He declared that many a time when the Reform move? ment was in danger Evans and Ellerbe could not be found. Taking up the dispensary matter be ' said : "I am a law abiding man and I j intend to obey the decisions of the j Supreme Court of the State. That j court has passed upon the dispensary act of 1892. In pursuance of that Gov- j ernor Tillman had the dispensaries closed. Under section 2 it is left not to ! the Governor to manage the dispensary but to the board of control, and in my ! judgment it cannot be opened without j two of those gentlemen sanctioning it. ! I am opposed to opening it, though 1j favor the law, I am a peace-loving citizen and I had rather see peace in this State than any other thi?.? (Loud applause.) That's Christianity, j I don't care what faction yon belong to, you have no right to lose sight of the j divine admonition to love peace. I j think to open the dispensary again will j simply turu loose the floodgates of the devil upon the people and cause the I spilling of blood. "Shake not thy gory jocks at me. Thou canst not say 1 did it." With the decision standing j as it does it will cause men to risist the officers of the law. God grant that it ! will be averted. Dr. Pope then got down to business I asked the committee, said he, to re- j' scind the order for a convention and I absolve Tindal and Eilerbe from doing so. 1 did so because the Conservatives put out no ticket. I believed they were j in earnest. When Larry Gantt went home after the committee refused to grant my request he stuck a rooster at ; the head of his paper and declared it was a victory for John Gary Evaos ! ? As soon as I saw that I saw that the Gordian Koot should be cut and I j thauk God I have the courage to cut it. ? I tell you I will not go before that i convention, but I will submit my claims to a general primary of the Democratic party. (Applause ) I believe in ? throwing out the olive branch and ? allowing the Conservatives to vote for! whichever Reform candidate they j choose, and then no matter who is ; elected I shall roll up my sleeves and work for his success in November. THE ORAN GE BUR G MEETING. The Augusta Chronicle. Oraogeburg, S. C , July 26 -This was an interesting day with cam? paigners. It waa made notable by the sparring between Mr. Ellerbe and Governor Tillman aud the latter's re? marks concerning the dispensary and the determination of the ?State Alliance to apply the yard-stick to senatorial and legislative candidates. The Governor declared the Alliance could run a hun? dred tuen, but he would beat, the whole business, and judging from the crowd that faced bim today, he's about right. There were about 1,800 persons aud they cheered him on everything lie said, aud when he took a hand primary . OD whether tbey would vote for hi against any candidate the Al ?ian might bring out be got all the vot aod the Aliaoce none. Gubernatorial Caodidate Ellerl bucked the Governor, and declared 1 ought to be impeached, but it look? very much as if he was butting a stol wall. The crowd was impatient to be Tillman and Evans and didn't tal much stock in anybody else. Io meetiog the Alliance propositk to put out a candidate that stood a fours with its platform, the Govero> said it was idiocy to inject the su treasury into national politics at th time. "I know what all this means," I said. ''Some men in South Carolii have had daggers up their sleeves f me since 1891. They want to pull n down in your affections and get hight places. Look at Marion Alliance th passed those resolutions the other da; They propose either to make me eat'm words or run in another man. The can run in a hundred men if they wai to, but I will never eat my words, am neither a moral nor a physic coward. Ifycu* believe 1 am capab of leading you, you have got to mali some of these people take back seat: I am not afraid of any straight Alliaoc candidate. If they want to trot out sub-treasury dark horse, if fee will met me I will run him to death or Fm nigger. (Loud applause.) If tb Alliance, through its leaders, undei takes to be false and puts that yard stick ou you, the people will resent il It simply means that I can't be elected It means division in the Alliance an between those two divisions, and otbe reformers of the State our enemies wil laugh and snicker and trot out a candi date. I am not going to fight the Alli ance. I ain't built that way I clair to represent tts true principles. Ba for me you would today have thc Thin Party in South Carolina, and your Alli ance would be beaten as it was in othe Southern States.'' The Governor warned his audienc if straight Alliance candidates for th Legislature are put in the field, th Haskellites and Conservatives will voti for them simply because they hate bin and declared if they wanted him to g< to the Senate they must ask each candi date if be was going to vote for Tillman The Governor said the extreme Alli ance haters, in case the Alliance ticket are put in the field, will be found vot ing for this ultra sub treasury plan The amalgamation of the Alliance ant: the Haskellites would be like that of th* prohibitionists and the whiskey oeoplt that is seen in this State-children o light and children of darkness uniting to serve the devil. The Governor de? clared that half a million dollars woulc be spent by Wail street and the whis? key people to prevent bim going to the Senate. The Governor pitched into Ellerbt for his statement at the Columbia meet? ing yesterday that the Governor had not consulted him concerning the re? opening of the dispensary. He declared that Ellerbe misconceived his powers and duties as a member of the State Board of Control if he thought he (Tillman) was going to consult him on that question. "His duty," said the Governor, "is to help control the dis? pensary while it is running. He bas nothing to do with enforcing the law. That is my duty as Governor. He criticizes me for not waiting until the Supreme Court passes on the act of 1893. I would like to koow if I did not revive the law and put it to work again, how could the court get hold of it. Mr. Ellerbe suggested it could be done by making up a case and asking for a special session of the court, as was done iu the bond case recently. The Governor began to make some re? marks about whining because he bad not been consulted when Mr, Ellerbe interrupted him with the statement : "Tell thc truth. Governor. I said you did Dot call the board together and I just wanted to put the responsibility for opening it where it belongs." 'Thank God," replied the Governor, "you have a Governor who is willing to assume the whole responsibility. I could have gotten out of this if 1 had wanted to play politician, but we have a debt for whiskey, because we bought on credit, aod I want it paid." There was so much applause at these remarks that the Governor said he had a mind to turn loose the dispensaries to-day. He larruped the Supreme Court for walking up the streets of Columbia and seeing a dozen barrooms open and doing nothing about it. Ellerbe-"Governor, tell us why you i closed the dispensary. You ought to be impcachd for it." The Governor said he was afraid the j Supreme Court would have made him do so, and be did not care to bc ordered ! about by anyone. The court let the act j of 1893 alone, and as soon as it ad- j jourtied he decided be would open j again. Ellerbe-"Did not Attorney General ! Buchanan advise you against it ?" Tillman-"No." Ellerbe-"I heard he did " Tillman-"Well he was a little weak backed, like you, and he wanted to wait till after the primary, as he was afraid the people might go back on me. iiiu they haven't gone back ou mc, and never will." Gen. Hurler was introduced as the old war boise, and he said he was tile nair that wa> going to win in this race He said l>en had better get out, as bc wanted to be President, and ir was an historical fact that uo senator had ever been elected President. Comptroller General Ellerbe declared he had hoped for a friendly tussle, in j which the longest pole would knock down the persimmon, but he was Dot j getting fair play from 6ome directions, j Evans's own paper had slandered bim 00 the dispensary issue. Gen. Ellerbe had to do a lot of tussling with the crowd, and between that and dodging the rain he did not get a chance to say much. John Gary Evans struck an awfully friendly crowd to-day, and they listened with great glee to him. He said Eller? be was like a turtle, "you can get any kiud of meat in him you want " He said Cleveland Democrats were worse than Republicans, and knew no more about Democracy than a hog did about salvation. He was for? a Wes? tern man for President in 1896 with Tillman for Vice Presideot. Dr. Sampson Pope talked "rather too plain to this Tillman-Evans crowd, and they came very near howling him down. He declared he was for the true principles of reform, not bogus principles. "In all justice," he held, Governor Tillman should have called the State Board of Control together and got its consent to re open the dis? pensary. I am a candidate before the Democratic primary,77 said he "and 1 will not be a candidate before a re? form convention." "Sit down, then," cried a gruff-voiced follow off the stand. "I will sit down when my time is out and not one minute before/7 replied Dr. Pope, and the Evans boys and Till? man boys began yelling, and just then the chairman called "time" and Dr. Pope took his seat. Secretary of State Tindal said the reformers must either come together or they would rue it to the bitter end. He did uot ask them simply to vote for him, but only to look the future square? ly in the face and mark well where they stood. Speeches were made by other candi? dates, eliciting the same old story with nothing of interest J. W. G. THE NEWBERRY MEETING. The meeting was orderly, and the speakers stuck more closely to a legi? timate discussion of issues than they have at any of the recent meetings. There were many men from Edgefield, who did most of the yelling. The crowd was, however, unusually good humored, and there was no disturb? ance. The general opinion in Newberry is that the Conservatives will carry the county by a safe majority. Even the Reformers are beginning to realize that their chances are dwindling away in Newberry county. It is a well known fact that the Conservatives had the county safe in 1892 until the big row occurred at the campaign meeting. Gov. Tillman talked more about the alliaoce demands than he bas at any time yet since the campaign opened. He, of course, depreciated the fight that the alliance seems determined to wage against all candidates, who do not sup? port every one of the planks in the Ocala platform. He predicted that the alliaoce would but its brains out if it fought for the sub-treasury before it got an increase of the currency. Gov Tillman plainly fears the alliance, nothwithstanding his big talk to the con? trary sometime ago. He is willing to run over the alliance, but he don't want a fight with it. Gen. Butler made a speech that took well with the crowd. He referred to several incidents of his war record, and the old soldiers cheered him to the echo. The other speeches were not new, nor particularly interesting. THE LAURENS MEETING. The Laurens meeting held on Satur? day, was lively, but there were no particularly important developments Tillman and Evans both spoke io favor of re-opening the dispensary. They asked : "what difference does it make if blood is spilled in the effort to carry out the law?" Gov. Tillman coolly declared that, "if the law is resisted we may have to kill a few of them.7' Gov. Tillman plucked up a little more courage, aod said that he was ! opposed to the sub-treasury. He also j made bold to claim that he had saved the | alliance from destruction, by keeping it in the Democratic party when some of the leaders wanted to go over to the Third Party. Geo. Butler stuck to natiooal issues and bis war record. His speech was j well received, although the crowd be- j longed to Tillman. The meeting was closed with a speech j from no less a person than Senator J. ! L. M. Irby. tmm"\mm -~ ? An agricultural writer has estimated j that the farmers of the United States j waste every year by wear and tear of horse flesh and the loss of time con- j sequent upon the use of the ordinary I narrow wagon tire, the enormous sum j of $o00.000,000. By an experiment ! recently made at the Ohio State Uni- i versi?y, it was found that a double team could draw upon an ordinary i wa^00 fitted with three-inch tires just twice as heavy a load as upon a wagon with the usual narrow tires, the trial having taken place upon an ordinary earth road. ?! has been found also r h at the wide tire helps to keep earth roads in order by rolling them flat and smooth instead of cutting them into ruts. This is so well understood in the old countries that some European governments lay a tax on the narrow tires, and the money thus accumulated is spent in keeping the roads in order. *. The Campaign Schedule. Spartauburg, August 1. Greenville, August 2. Pickens, August 3. Oconee, Augusta 6. Anderson, Augusta 7. Abbeville, Augusta 8. Marion County Alliance. At the last meeting of the Marion County Alliance the following resolu? tions were unanimously adopted : Whereas for the first time in the his j tory of the grand old County of Marion i she has a candidate before the Deople ' for Governor ; and whereas that man I ii Gen W. H. Ellerbe, a true and tried ! Reformer and Allianceman ; therefore, be it. Resolved, That it is with enthusiastie pleasure and pride that the Marion County Alliance DOW assembled endor? ses and recommends to our siter Coun? ty Alliances and through them to every sub-Alliance and every true Alliance mao io the State, Marion's own Dative eon, Gen. W. H. Ellerbe, for Gov? ernor. With unlimited confidence in his devotion to the demands of the Alliance and bis unquestionable sin? cerity of purpose, if elected to carry our. the principles of our order, "equal rights to all and special privileges to none,'1 we call upon every Allianceman to stand by Marion's noble soo, who bas been tried and proved equal to every de? mand made upon him. 2. That a copy of these resolutions be sent to the Columbia Register, Cot? ton Plant and Marion Farmer. T. 6. STACKUOCSE, President, D.MCINTYBE, Secretary. Whereas the same causes now exist that made it necessary for the organiza? tion of the Farmers1 Alliance; and whereas it is of tbe utmost importance j and absolutely necessary to the final success of our cause that our organiza? tion continue, without relinquishing one iota, to work and maintain with re? newed ardor and zeal and to advocate and press our demands; therefore, be it Resolved, That the Marion County Alliance now assembled do reaffirm our allegiance to the principles and de? mands, as laid down by tbe National Allinnce and Industrial Union ; and that we will earnestly and faithfully persist in working for their fulfilment and enjoyment; and to the speedy accomplishment of these, our demands. We, the Marion County Alliance, urge and admonish every true Allianceman who values our demands to see to it than no ooe is elected to the Legislature or Senate wbo is not in favor of these demands and who will not pledge them? selves to vote for no one for United Stares Senator who is not in full sym? pathy with the Alliance, and will de? fend and stand upon all of oar demands. 2. We, the Marion County Alliance, urge upon the State Alliaoce to reas? sert its declarations in favor of the Al? liance demands and to sound a note of warning in no uncertain sound ; that the Alliance of South Carolina will not re? linquish one iota or suffer one scintilla of compromise from our demands. That these resolutions be published ? in The Columbia Register, Cotton Plant and Marion Farmer. T. B. STACKIIOUSE, President. D. MCINTYRE, Secretary. Say! You Bee-Keeper! 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