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Words of Peace, Clark Howell, Tne Eloquent Georgian, Delivers a Not? able Address. H? Speaks for Peace Progress, Prosperity. Thc annual address before the South Carolina State Press Association was delivered bj HOD. Clark Howell, aod it would not bave been other rh au it wa? -an address to be remembered, one that cannot be forgotton. The address was delivered in the As? sembly Hall of the Graded School, which bad been teodered by the School Board. ID addition to the members of the presa there were a large oumber of the citizens of Sumter. It was an aud? ience that could appreciate the speech and speaker. Mr. Howell began by making a few introductory remarks and then spoke as follows : **l am not unmindful, Mr. chair mau, that I speak to-night to the representa? tives ?T the press of a state which is divided against itself probably to a greater degree than any other state of the union, and from the bitterness of which division has developed a conten? tion which bas permeated every condi? tion of life, and created a fale god of discontent whose merciless decrees have levied tribute aod commanded obeisaoce from every phase of human endeavor. "The public official who has not be some involved is au exception ; the merchant who has not been fired to say or do that which does not comport with the placid and charitable rule of peace, U lonesome in his solitude ; th? farmer who, in piautiog his cotton or his coro, bas no: sown at the same time the seeds of anger may congratulate himself on the evenness of his temper, which makes him a rarity of mankind ; and, if reports which have reached Georgia are correct, the demon of Hate bas even raid his unholy hands on the pulpit, buried itself in tbe ermine of the bench, and, not contented with its malevolent inroads upon the sanctified field of brotherly love, has aimed its blows at the ark of the cooveoaot which en? shrines the heart of woman. It would be most unnatural it, tn this carousal of ill-temper aod bad blood, growing oat of political issues, the press of the state was not affected by the ruling pas? sion to blame somebody for a condition which nobody approves. The 'outs' are condemning the 'ins/ and the 'ins* are retaliating io kind ; households are divided, communities are asunder, and aver and above it all is the black cloud <>f strife and disorder, which, catching i rhe conflicting emotions of fscri<>u* and ! feuds, echoes them back in a dio of tur? moil and a peal of lamentation. "I claim the right to speak plainly to night because I speak as a native. Mia way between Allendale and the Savannah river, in old barnwell, did my eyes first greet the light of life's day, and though my lot has been cast ? the sister state, which stretches hands across the Savannah, [ have ever iee a proud of the state of my birth ?be state which, for generations, has kept my maternal ancestors, nuder whose sod their bones have bleached, in whose name their blood wa? spilled, and on whose sacred altars the life of more than one waa laid at a time when the unity of her people bespoke their loyalty to her flag Not on the ears of a stranger have the grating sounds of discord emanating from here fallen, but 1 father oo those of one who, being more than a sympathizer, bears with aching heart the breaking of the cords of peace and the dissonant murmurs of personal contention. "Fellow South Caroliniaos, look to the glorious past of your great state and ask if it josifies the conditions existing to-day ! 1 shall be strictly impersonal .nd impartial in what I say, for in a representative gathering of distin? guished journalists of the several sides -for I believe there are about six ele meats in the field now-I would not do j violence to the propriety of the occasion j by makiog offeosive alignment : but, ! appealing to all, let me carry you back to Cowpens, and to Camden, and to : Hanging Rock, where, under the in spiration of the intrepid boldness of South Carolina chivalry, Andrew Jack- | son first began bis career as an Ameri eau soldier and pat-iot. Did Pickeos and Sumter and Marion-ail nobie SODS of your noble state-and Lee and i Greene, whose most brilliant service in the revolutionary army was done in the defeose of the homes of your aocestors, against the combined forces of foreign j aggressors and native tories-did these ! heroes write their names io letters of eternal life on the pages of the history of your state, that in the turo of a cen? tury their deeds might bc forgotton aod their examples be lost to posterity ? Just across the way-over io Georgia -six counties bear the names of these six patriots and there they will ever stand as memorials to men whose hero? ism is respleodeut in the shining pages of Carolina's glory, and whose virtues should be ideal types of thc chivaly. the bravery aod tbe prtriotism of Carolina manhood. Go back with nie beyond the period whicL molded these men of , iron and see, if from its earliest days the history of South Carolina was writ? ten to countenance civil contention aud breed the evil results of fratricidal strife. It was Joseph Blake, the bro? ther of the great English admiral, who brought the dissenters to live among these people, that they might worship | as they please ; it was Cardross who brought the Scotch Presbyterians to breathe the free air of this clime, and it I was to South Carolina that the F?**iu' i Huguenots turned, when, wearied HU I disheartened from the religious iutolr ance of a bigoted monarch, they ai swered the revocation of the edi^t. i Nantes by planting their feet uti this so j to live in an atmosphere of peace, an ! warship in the unmolested comfort < ! contentment and sereni'v It was o I this shore, at Georgetown, tnat fne ni j mortal LaFayette first put his feet o j American soil, when he came to dra ! his sword for American freedom, an ! after the lapse of a century, a? if t signify to the world that South Caro , lina was first in the new roll call of pa ! triots. it was her sons who received th j first ^ot at Sumter and her sons wh I first turned from their fields and tb?i j homes to bare their bosoms to the con ! fiict of the war of the confeder*cv. i ? "If the pa9t has its lessons for th I future, let us profit by it ? A? brav as were our ancestors let us be ! Yo every shining star in the firmament o the past glory of your State there an conditions to-day which will make ; counterpart above the t orizon of peace People whose ancestors were once 1er by the peaceful Archdale and wb< went to war under the fearless Craven and again who plucked their decoration.' for valor io the brightest fields of om soldier glory, covering the period from Independence ball to Appomattox-son? of scitms whose courtly politeness and high sense of honor have been tradi? tional for a century-these people will not surrender to the despot of inter? necine strife and humble themselves and t eir past greatness by the contin? uance of an ugly and seemingle.su local agitation which, whether justly so or not, is making Sooth Carolina thc subject of the jeers and ridicule of the continent "To what agency, above all others, should we torn in invoking the restor? ation of harmony and in appealing for such dispassionate consideration of pub lie issues as will enable mee to meet as brothers and bury their differences in the arbitrament of the majority, which i* the trae essence of democracy and the corner stone of republican form of government? Naturally to the press, and it is to you, fellow joornalists - to you, fellow South Carolinians, that I come io this spirit. "To the mao who holds faction above state my words will fall upon un? willing ears, bat to the patriotic press -that to which I am invited to address my remarks, in response to the senti? ment given me by yoor chairman-I approach the subject with confidence that my words will not be misunder? stood, nor my motives misconstrued. "To the factionist I say-*A plague upon both your houses V Yoo have more to live for than the mere triumph of personal ends You hav^ a charge to keep, and you must keep it in a manner that will honor the past and glorify the present. Let the press start the strain and .??og the anthem of peace nntil the populace will take up the choros and echo the melody to the \ farthest corners of the earth. If you ; are as successful at peace as you have been in strife, the world will resound with yoor good deeds, and iostead of outsiders commenting upoo the stereo- i typed and misfit phrase that 'bell's broke loose in South Carolina/ uni? versal praise will be sung that, here in this state, first io so many things, the advance guard of the miileoium has come to keep company with the historic tradition of the first shot on Sumter. "Glorify the state and make peace with the onion ! The war has been over thirty years, and the flag of the union belongs as much to South Caro- : lina as it does to Massachusetts. In? stead of fighting among ourselves let us devote the same energy and make ! practical illustrations of the parable of ; the bundle of fagots, by getting to? gether and fighting the other fellow. "There is a world of meaning in the term, 'the other fellow,' as here used. He is a gaunt, determined, iconoclastic j enemy who cares not for the sacred traditions of the republic, and whose I chief occupation is the destruction of the ideals which prompted ocr fore? fathers to establish a government of: the people and for the people of this country, and not for any other country : This enemy walks like a stalking horse over the hallowed traditions of the past and makes merry music as he shatters the inspired sentiments around which our national glory was built. I refer to that weather-beaten relic of the past who choked the struggling republic in tts infancy, but who himself was choked out of existence as soon as the young nation was big enough to stand alone the tory. He departed with the last century, and by some strange mishap ? be has come to tauut the dying years of 1 thia one; but by the grace of God and t the patriotic resistance of the American < people, we will do with him as our re- ] volutiooary ancestors did at the close 1 of the ia6t century, and wc will, like < they did. enter the new ccutury with a 1 clean bill of health, as far as toryism is ] concerned. 1 "Thc modern tory is more insidious t than his prototype of old. He is mores 1 cautious, but no less dangerous. If he ? moves along different lines it is because ( conditions are diffcreut, but opportunity I would clothe him with the saaie habili- s ments of his ancestors He sneers at t the doctrines which, through the usage 1 of time and good service, have bc3ome t part of our fixed public policy, and c tells U9 that Jefferson was a demagogue t and that Monroe's bold contention that a America belongs to Americans is out of t date, and that it must yield to the c theory of 'international commerce'- i an insidious pretext which is being used a in many directions as a Trojan horse a to turn the Greeks into the walls of j rj our independence and to surrender the j y \ control nf our affairs foreign f lock?. F?e views wi: M *:.prov eqjanimity the eonstruc'ton of mas fortifications on ;hr cordon ut Eng! possessions commanding th?* jjatew of ?he oeenns arnuiid Ur> ; receives w stolid indiff?reftCii or positive appro the news of the lovering of ?he >t and stripes from the flighty ot public building of Hawaii, and wr all America has centered its hope a its desire for the construction o waterway aero.--' Nicaragua. io f.e un< our control. he -alu'es the raising the union jack at (Joritito, ?nd -uiks the protest that it mu*? come down the United S'ate- wiil know ihe rea?i why ! "If any people nf this country ou<; to know the tory, ir is those of Soi Carolina, for here he flourished a festered in the days of his early gjor ])j you recall Tarleton V It was who, reinforced by 'he tories, march his cavalry ovr-r the Americans on t VVaxbaw, and while negotiations I surrender were pending massacred t whole company ; and in rhe words history, 'for this atrocious deed Cor wallis commended him to the speci favor of the British parliamen! There are Tarleton* negotiating f terms of surrender to-day. and the are tories helping him. and woe be the hapless and helpless participan when the mordern Tarleton and h tory brigade, iu possession of the we pous of defense, 'charge upon our n tiona] prosperity and lock again tl bonds which were stricken froui ot limbs by the insane idea of our revob tionary aucesforo that this country coul lake care of itseif without the cooser ?>f England or any other nation on tr face of the earth . lt was Patrick Henry who said i bis inspired and impassioned pied f< independence : 'We are three ml lions, one-fifth fighting men, who ar t>old and vigorous, and we call no ma napier ' It is the modern tory wh ?ays: *Wc are seventy millions wit inexhaustible resources, with the great ?st country on which God's sun eve jhowu, with mothers who have taugh JS what it is to be loyal and father ?hat it is to be brave, and yet Britisl jold has made cowards of U6 alf.* ''We are of right, and we ought ti je, independent. Wheu the mercile land cf war had turned the plowshare )f the south into swords, laid wash ts fields and checked the annual re iponse of the soil to the touch of th< lusbandmeu, the great wheels of Mau chester's cotton mills ceased to tum he spindle and thc loom Uy idle ii heir frames and hunger aod destitu'ioc ?eized a hundred thousand souls Thc lorn of plenty which the south emptiec innually into these eager arms was ex laustrd, and with aching heart* and ervid prayers these poor, c?re-wonj vorkicg peopL looked anxiously foi he season that would bring them \merican cotton to put bread in their ?uogry mouths and clothe their half ixposed bodies At last the war ended md the first cargo cf cotton from the ioutb reached Liverpool At Man ibester a vast throng of idle operatives net. it, and what followed is told by Scribner's in a most interesting article ?n the subject. " One man,' if S8js, 'perhaps a a?her who had sat by a fireless hearth. >rokeii of spirit and helpless, whilst tis young swami cried for bread-a >oor, gauot fellow, who. lifting his hat mn tears mouing down his checks, aised his voice iu the "Doxology,'' me after another joining iu. until the rbole mass sang in one great, swelling thoms : 1 ' ''Praise God, from whom ai! blessings flow ; 'raise Him all creatures here below." ' "And yet they say we are depeudent Jod forbid ! "If dependent, to what country rreater than ours are we thus rated ? L'o England ? No. We were once, >ut we whipped ber twice, and un ess our chivalry and our courage ?ave decreased in proportion to the ncrease in our numbers we can do it igain if it becomes necessary-a rial, however, fren? which I hope we viii ever be spared, for I am nut one jf those who desire conflict between his and any other country-so long is they let us alone. Great Britain md its entire possessions, reaching iround the world, might erect walls rom now until the end of mankind o shut itself out of this country or 0 shut us out from it, and it is problematical if we would not be nfinitely bettered by 6uch action han without it. Are we dependent 1 pon France ? No ; for there is not i material nor a necessary staple hat ia 6ent us by that country ; bat cannot be duplicated by our >wn Upon Italy ? No ; for with j Honda and California combined ? vc can give Italy odds and liscount it in either raw material or inished product Upon Germany ?! io ; because we could a thousand 'mes more readily do without Germany than Germany without the Juited States. Then upon whom re we dependent 'i Upon no nation m the lace of the earth and upon no icing but the Lord God Almighty, nd we do not merit Ills divino proj? ection nor his sacred blessing if we raven't the manhood and thc courage u at least make the effort to take arc of ourselves Away witt? this 1 alk about our being dependent on 1 nybody and the necessity oi for- 1 ign countries setting the cotnmer ial ?ir the financial pattern that wc 1 mist follow ! it is an ignominious \ dm?68?on that our forefathers made i mistake in declaring our indepen- 1 lenee, and as for me I am not as yet ' ?repared to admit that, and I do not jJ believe t hat you are. But develop? ments abroad are of sufficient interest and demand your united attention and lo call you from the fi^id .>! civil Kl rib' Conditions ?If Slicli as re quire harmonious action among' th >s<* who believe in the triumph ot Amer! can principle and who aie ready to defend the sentiment which is the corner stone of the republic-that ol the equality of every man before the law, the rights <-f the masses and the principle that in this con try there shall be no class discrimination. Upon this contention the eyes of the! whole country are now centered, and : on it you, as journalists and as. patriots who love your State and your country, should unite in tlie ' common cause that calls you to a patriot's duty. "And now, in conclusion, fellow journalists, let me take leave of you with the ase u ra nee that what 1 have said comes from the heart If I have offended by frankness, I throw myself on your mercy. Measure your judgment by the golden rule, j and *do unto me as I would do unto you' if you came to Georgia under the same circumstances. But per- j haps in your domestic contention you are like the housewife who al- ? ways complained about her own j cottee b".t who never permitted a j guest tr- agree to her invariable | Statement that it was very bad. and: who said to one who had responded, j 'Yes, madam, it IM vile,' 'It's as good j as y??ll are accustomed to getting! sir V "We have our ups and downs in Georgia-and what state has not ?- j but whatever may be our differences, j let us abide the action ol the ma- : jority, and like good citizens accept j it in good laith. If the majority I should be thought intolerant, so much the worse for it, for time is the ] certain arbiter, and it evens ali Lhiuge. "It does not pay tn be intoleiaiil-| it will n' t pay to treat a minority as ; aliens instead of citizens. The re- ? action will come and the penalty will be liiet^d 1 do not say that this is; j being dour now or that it has been j done in the past, but i do say that j ( this charge is being made now and I j that it was made by those who, now in control, were once in the minority j <? and were bitterly complaining of the i t intolerance of the principle of vested j r supremacy, which they said they , were attacking, in antagonizing 1 he { idea, whether the cause or not, that I? the control of the State belonged to i f those who had been in possession for ' j a century. If p?lititical ?flairs tn ?j those days were conducted on that : principle, it was intolerance, and the j _ people ought to have rebuked it. ?f? ? on the other hand, the political ad- j e ministration of the affairs of your; State is now to ostracise a large and J r most tespectabl- element of citizen-j ship and deny ?.? it the privilege of| f practical participation, that is in- i tolerance, and it ought to be re- j buked j c "You will observe that I do not t speak as a partisan, but as one who j A condemns factionalism, and more T especially the personal factionalism ! () which has characterized political ! t develoment8 in South karolina for '. e the past few years In Georgia it is t said that there are two classes in " South Carolina-the South Caro- j j, linianH and the Scuth Caroleenians- ? ^ the former representing the new ? j regime and the latter the old Per-1 sonally. I do not believe that any- j f body in this State ever held, even in j t( purpose, to the ridiculous theory :, that control should pass by in keri- e tance, and if so, I would think that t. the Revolutionary War had been ? j? fought in vain ; but I speak to you j ^ neither as a South Carolinian nor as! j< a South Caroleenian, but as an j gi earnest well wishei of your State, i j, without regard to political or per- j 0 sonal differences and with a devotion ; _ to its future greatness scarcely less j hopeful than is felt by even tiie most D sanguine and loyal believer in its Jj final triumph, over all the perplex- R( it ?es involved in a divided citizen- (j 8h,'P; . "Let your active and your pair: Dtic press take up the cause of peace C( -instill into the hearts of the peo? ple state pride and loyalty, and love Tor the union and the flag of our 0 common country. r( "The destiny of your State is ^ written in its fertile valleys, in the tj priceless deposits of its soil, in its ?j t)usy mills, its great ocean front and Q 'ts kingly citizenship. The division : )? a day will pass like the clouds at light and the dawn of the new day tv ? ll unveil a vision of happiness and prosperity which will crown Caroli? na's brow with a diadem of match ess wealth and wreathe her with lau ;e;s of perpetual contentment. God C ?peed the day !" io - ? -mn- Ol CHICAGO, May 28 -Eugene V [)ebs, who arrived io thc city from Perre Haute, called on United States tc Mai>hai Arnold ?his afternoon and de- In ivorcd himself into thc custody of the ai narshai. The latter told him that he L lid not expect thc mandate from Wash- hs ogton for a week ur more, and until be of ?eceived it, the men were ar, liberry on h heir bond. Mr Debs then lett with bj he marshal, his itinerary through Min- at icsota and North Dakota, for the next, cn days so that he could be telegraphed w or when needed. I have written ro all Ci )f thc others out of the city, said Mr. as Debs, and it is our purpose to come in tn t body and surrender ourselves and go Ci jack to Woodstock jail. Mr. Debs has is ibout one more week of freedom "The Duty of iii.; Hour." '_ An Old School Democrat Thinks Hampton's Coun? sel Golden. To flu Editor of The Statt : The lr:ter of General Hampton is characteristic of the Graiul Ohl Man. His words so fitly spoken are ''like j apples nf gold in pictures ot silver." I Would that his mantle could Ml on some one with the physical ability to lead in in this, our time of need. The article by a "Hampton Demo? crat" is also a spendid sequel to the G"iieral's letter and both should be read, pondered and in wat div digest? ed by every intelligent Democrat in the ?tate The action of some of the young leadeis in Richland County is looked upon as inopportune and unwise. Richland County may have a safe Conservative majority, but if they take separate and independent action and commit themselves to the li by ; pi ?mary, they will be tied hand and foot in the event the Conservatives i af tlie Stale determine lo make an r>pen, square fight. Will it not be best to take Hampton's advice and make a desperate efibit to redeem the State from that anarchy into \ which she is last drifting, while we dave the opportunity t Shall we ; make use of the means providential ly placed in our bands for our own j political salvation, or will we foolish- : ly cast them aside and risk the dan-j 2fer of those very means becoming j he instrument of our destruction. Is the continuance of white auprem- | icy an assured fact ? May there lot be dan fifer lurking in our fancied j ?eci?rify ? The negro bas been trouser] by the threatened, danger to iis citizenship. Ile is appealing to lie Conseivatives for protection from political annihilation, ile has pub- j icly avowed that he is not seeking 'ffice, but simply the privilege to rast his ballot. ?Shall we turn a deaf! *ar to lu's piteous pleadings and ? ?..ave him again to shift for himself ? j iVe should rememeber that the late \ lecision of the courts throws the jallot box wide open to every male ; citizen twenty-one years of age. j L'hat we have made open confession I o the world that the use of illegal ueans were heretofore necessary t?) ? estrict the colored vote in order to I prevent them from dominating the government. That, through the ness, we are now appealing for tonest elections and a fair count 'hat we are on the eve of a most mportant election in which there viii be but one ballot box and one icket, requiring no intelligence or du cation to vote aright Suppose, in the face of all these ; acts the wbite6 consolidate in the nteresl of white supremacy, and the legroes, fearing the direct conse- : [uenees to theil race, turn in de- j pair to their former white Republi an leaders and put in the field a full icket. With an honest election and j fair count, what will be the result i Ve must als?? remember that in view if Judge Goff's decision the eyes of ? he whole country have been attract- \ d to this State, and the conduct of he coming election will be watched j ir Uli the most intense interest. Mr. Mi tor, it is not a theory that con- j -outs us, not a mere sentiment, but j ard facts that stare us in the face. What is the remedy ? Follow Iampton's advice. Have nothing \ 0 do with the Irby primary. Ignore j t as completely as though it had no ? x?8tence. Organize in every couti- ! y ; hold county coventions and norn- j late as candidates for the Constitu- j ional Convention the best and brain- j ?st men in the State Promise to ! ee that the negro is protected in all ; is rights, then accept every vote Sered without regard to race, color, j r previous condition of servitude i f we can persuade the colored peo le to vote with us, and prove to i iem that their rights are saf ande ! 5cure, and thus gain their confi ence, the race problem will be jived in this State in so far as the , olitical status of the negro is con? er ned. The duty of the hour is upon us. We must either adopt the policy utlined abo\e, risk the danger of a ' ?turn to negro Republican rule, or ecome the abject political slaves of ie most treacherous, tyrannical ring j tat ever cursed the State of South arolina. Which will you choose ? OLD SCHOOL DEMOCRAT. ;( ?ishopville, May 28. ----~mm- - Crisp's Monetary Views ATLANTA, May '?S.-Ex-Speaker j risp has sent to the Constitution the Hewing card restating his position 1 the financial question : A MKRTCtrs. < 't a , M av ->;. "Ever since I gave consideration ? the question, 1 have been a be? aver in and an advocate of the free ul unlimited coinage ol silver, vcr since I entered public life, I ive spoken and when opportunity fe red, voted for it I still favor thc ce and unlimited coinage ot silver i/ thc United States independently , the ratio of 16 to 1. "How any one at all acquainted iib my public utterances and acts m have mistaken or been in doubt i to what my position was. is a ystcry to me. My excuse for this ? ird is misrepresentation : my hope that this will end it. I Signed) "CHARS i's T CRISI\" McMahan's Mind. He Speaks it co a Small Audience at the Court House. An audience of about 20 peopte at first. gradually increasing to about 75 or lue, towards the end. heard Mr. John Mc M aban ventilate Iiis political views al tlte court house last evening. Prominent among them were Col. J no. P Thomas, Sir., Dr. Edward S. Joynes, Col Willie Jones, Murray Kirkland, J. T Rideout, Judge Mel? ton, Dr. Clayton, Dr Folk, Capt Isaac Means and others. Mr. McMahan announced that the platform on which he stood was that it was ruinous to a white and civi? lized race to be put on an equality with the negro as voters. He be? lieved this, not because of the lack of education and ownership of pro? perty on the part of the negro, but simply because of his racial differ? ence. Whatever the negro may attain in education and property ownershiD, it would be detrimental to our government and civilization to al? low the negro to participate in the government. Mr. McMahan then defined the pur? poses of the existence of the human race as he saw them, and the process of the 'survival of the fittest " He declared self preservation to be the first law of natute. and as applied to the community, patriotism was an? other good form of self preservation, and the highest form of patriotism was the love for race. Such patrio? tism was the highest duty As he conceived it, the disfranchisement of the negro was a duty of the white man-a duty due to the generations to follow. The Anglo-Saxon race, above all races, had shown itself capable of grappling with the prob? lems of government The African, through the countless centuries of ab? solute self control in Africa, had ?bown himself peculiarly incapable of forming any government at all. To give him equal privileges with the white race would be as conducive to the progress of civilization, as to ex? pect a cart horse to be yoked with ari Arabian stud to go as rapidly as tlte Arabian would go alone.- The State May 29. MT? *J? W. If indmaa ^ Fon Lawn, 3. C. Best For the Blood Hood's Proved Its Merit-Eczema Cured. MI have used Hood's Sarsaparilla and know it is the best medk-ine for the blood I have ever taken. Two years ago I had a sore on one of my lin:bs telow the knee. I Spent Many Dollars for medical attendance and treatment bet all in vain. At last a friend.urged me to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. I told him it would not do me any good as I had the best of doctors in this vicinity attend me and they said ir was a severe case of eczema. He prevailed upon me, however, to take one bon ie and "when it was all Hood's SarsajH taken I noted a slight S S ?*?*^ improvement. Xhav*>fc ^WI now used six bullies ^?fJ^ '%^^^%r^t and my 1?T i* well. Had it not been lor ?kod's S.i/.-H. arilla I do not think I woald e*.Ar have ecrv^: er?-d my com plainL." J. \T. ;:;>-;.> M A . F> ri Lawn, S. C. Hood's P" is . ' '?" a"? ' constipar tum, i/?l?<>':-'i:*!>$. ' .ie. indigestion* HONEY. NEW CROP 1895. White Comb Honey inSee tions. Choice Extracted Honey, by the gallon or less quantity. For sale at my residence, or orders may be left office of the Watchman and Southron. N, G. Osteen. The Si Bre? Stallion ~~ FANCY BOY. is NOW AT W EPPERSON ? CO 'S Stable* LIBERTY STREET, SUMTER, S. C . Where hf trill ?./ ;.'.. the Season r? !><"?"