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VOL. XLVI. WINNSBOEO, S. G, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1891. NO. 52. J S^RMO\ IN TliK W FST Iaud lhe tyrannies that have D^IUlUi> li\ 1I1L HLOI. i be swept down under the wrath of God. who hates TALMAGE DISCOURSES FROM A CHAP and who, by the strength c ?p. _ _ right arm. will make all me I CK IN KU i n. so it 1S illdividuall}% and I and in the cnurch, and in 11 sorrow and Suii?riiit' Develop*# Charac- through.darkness and storn ter?UofualteriBK i*il? rui?hip a Glorious men, women, churches, na Virtu??The> Beauti ul t'euiale lmJu?try. Again, I learn from oiy Gkeen Mountain Falls, Col., events which seem to be n Aug. 2.?Dr Taluiage preached here to- Cant may be momentous, day to an immense audience. His West- anything more unin em tour has beta one continued ovation, the coming of a poor worna Never before has he been so enthusiasti- to Jud;ea? Can you imag cally received or have the people come more trivial than the tact t! to hear bim in su^h vast number* He just happened to alight?a arrived here from Tut-bio, which city he just happened to alight on i..^i >v. .. l t??o _n ~ii imu \jix i* cuutouaj Kion in a uii pvti.i- JDO^l^r JL tTl# ill! iW* ed by the railroad company exclusively have an mlerest in the fact for the use oi Dr. T~image and his sec- to become an ancestress retary. In this car be will visit cities Jesus Christ, and all natio in Colorado, iliunt&ota, Wisconsin, doms must look at tbat oi Kansas and Utah. It is side-tracked at <jent with a thrill of uumi plates where Dr. Talmage has arranged eternal satisfaction. So it5 to stay to preach or to lecture. His tory and in mine; evei sermon redolent with the breath of the thought ot no importance great harvest field of the West, indicates been of very great momen that the popular preacher bas read in Ual conversation, that ace: his surrounding suggestions of Gospel jDg?you did not think of i lessons. His text is taken from Ruth long while; but how it chj ii; 3: "And she went and came and current of your life! crloQnr?rl in tho 1 hf> . x ? t - and her hap was to light on a part of 1 fsee "? lef the tielj belODg.ni! unto Boaz who was unl?lte * friembhip. I s of the kindred ol Eliraelecb.? "ere Ple.nt>' 01 ,rMt'"ls,lor Within a few ?<reks 1 have been in she was m prosperity: but North Carolina, Virginia, l'ennsjlvan- qnsintances how many w< ia. Sew York, Ohio.'Michigan. Canada, trtu<1P f? w'tb ncr toward Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, she had to make that Ion. and they are one great harvest tield, and One the heroine of my. no season can l>e more enchanting in any absolutely one. I suppose count, y than the season of harvest. ' n^-tasiam! was living i The time that RuU_^U-*S5BFSrrive Plenty of money;-and all -at it was well, they had a great man. - -r - -** ...... . .1 sunnose that after her I tSea sheaf leu irom a load | ~ 7" in the harvest field for the reapers to re- a j 'ier ProP?r'y went, anc luse to gather it up; that was to be left ana poor, she was not t lor the poor who might happen to come muC^W1^ callers. All tl that way. It there were handfuls of sang In the bower while tl grain scattered across the field after the ?ave ^ne t0 their Dests> r main harvest had been reaped, instead a?Jallen. of raking it, as farmers do now it was ' these beautiful sun by the custom ol the land, left in its 8Pread out tbeir collor iu place, so that the poor, comln** alon0- hour! but they a.e always that way. might glean it and ?et their the 8ua is goin= down! Jo bread. But, you say, "What is"the use ^'frJends wheD he.was the of all these harvest fields to Ruth ant1 *a^zj but when his proper jSaou2i? Xaoaii is too old aud feeble to trials came, theu the^e go out and toil in the sun; and can \ou muc^ ^bat Pestcred as xJi expect that Ruth, the youn? and the man*te, Biidad the Shu - - - - - nh?>- the Xaamathite. beautiful, should tan her cheeks and r~~ blister her hands in the harvest held?" Life often seems to .>e a Boaz owns a iarge larm, and he <*063 w^ere *^e successful pla>e out to see the reapers gathe~ in the pother men into his o grain. Coming there, right behind the susP^ions arise about a m: swarthy, sun-browned reapers, he be- an<^ ^ecomes "^e * holds a beautiful woman gleaning a *\aQ*c an<^ a^ ^ie 1D,putati< woman more fit to bend to a harp or sit break down in upon a throne than to stoop among the c^aracter which in due tim< sheaves. Ah, that was an eventful day! ^a^ strength to delend itsel it was love at first sight. Boax forms rePutetion8 that have beei an attachment tor the womanlv <?leaner ^ building, v\ hich gi -an attachment full of undying interest ^touch o" to be church of Goo m allots; while * h Buth witbanephah. or nearly a oushe ln this world, so of barley, goes home to ^Naomi to tell r ' K,? ' >,r her the successes and adventures of the jessn?3S a yH J' 4. ? > .i. i i a. u i. is to find some iriend as ia ?**; (1^a!.^atf\wholeft,h? aat,v1 of adversity as in dajs oi laud o iioa!) in darkness ana journeyed such a friend in through an undjmg afiection for her t; . , h frf d moiher-in-law, is i~ the harvest-field of f_r(yr>f. *i1?>,r Boaz, is affiauced to one of the best fam- * ? ? f . , .= nnpsinhoni ilies in Judah, and becomes in after-time ?!? .r n . the ancestress of Jesus Christ the Lord hf c . , . c- j i - 1.4. j- i who adhered to him on tne of glory! Out of so dark a night d.d lmd such a 0Ee in Ruth, w 1 learn! in ^the^rst "place? from "this "'Entreat subject bow trouble developes cbarac- 'XlJ thou sroest Iwill 2 ter. It was bereavement, poverty ana ; r ;?-? i , exile that developed, illustrated and an- ^ lodgest I will lodge; nounced to all ages the. sublimity ot shall be my people and thy ( Kuth's character. That is a verv un- where thou diest will di fortunate man who has no trouble. It , ouried the Lord was sorrow that made John Bunyan the more also, if aught bu better dreamer, and Doctor Young the thee and me. better poet, and O'Connell the better Again, I learn from this orator, and Bishop Hall the better paths which open in hardst preacher, and Havelock the better sol- oess often come out in pi dier, and Kitto the better ei cvclopedist. When Iluth started from 2 j and Kuth the t-etter daughter-in-law. Jerusalem, to go along witl 1 once asked an aged man in regard to suppose the peopl his pastor, who was a very brilliant . a, -00^b creature to ? man: "Why is it that your pastor, so , F tatners house, to 20 0 very brilliant, seems to have so little womon toward the lan ' . Thev won't live toaetacro: ? !he leasorMs^our pastor has TbeWfflbe never had any trouble.' When misfor- 0\Va very d* lime comes upon him, his style will be , ', H. different." After awhile the'Lord took ^e?^th, 6^?a, a child out of that pastor's house; and bf l^ld hero m, textnthe i u i o? Boaz, to be amanced to on though the preacher was just as bnl- ofthe ]and an(] bt.come liant as he was before, oh, the warmth, 0i thf J*?d' anf(1T ttc0,m,er the tenderness of his discourses! The ^a^dmoth"%?LJn iact is that trouble is a great educator. ,?? ,7J ?a. rL.ic You ste sometimes a musician sit down . start8 en J at an instrument, ami his execution is lit, y* .it,. cold aud formal and umeelimr. The , J* eV "8^ Vt , reason is that all his life he has been , car .w as t it u prospered But let misfortune or be- ^nte ? and b^t knUs" reavement come to that man. and he ~ _ * sits down at the instrument. and -ou ibe sins of your hie poun, discover the patbos in the lirst sweep of an . uas 1 . s , the keys. Misfortune and trials a, e saw when you hrst lound o sreat educators. A > oun-; doctor comes -"f' '?? into a sick room where there is a dt ins ,?e'dh?J>.f * child. Perhaps be is very rou4b in his n he .of ? '"? *?? j . ,. Lad more sheaves thsn yoi prescription, and very rou?h in his man- . . , ? x, ,. Jn uer, and romjh in tbe feeling .,1 the U,e.T10,,1ce. nf.t. n pulse, and rcugb in his answer to the m8: ."BlessedUs the man mother's anxiSus question; but the a^-ssrons are forgtveu and _ ixa?kn ^e covered." A very dai , ' , , T conviction, a very briuht i dead in his m n house; and opw be comes , , u h j aid t? into the sick room, and with tearlul eye *, r__ pl? he looks at the djm< child, and he sajs: ve'rJ.'often in our wot v m' r "f rT met mi' Cbar; or in our Virtual career. wc he!" Trouble the great edoauoi! d ? , w , ' ^w-I see its touch m the grandest mav ,tiiriljk1 t.acfe- Imt tliei painting; I hear its tremor m the sweet- ,&i or a voice from al est song; I leel us power in the malm- ,.You must go," and we 1 est argument. tlie ?an_ aQd we }luve to cat Grecian mythology said that the t'oun- an{}' we hare to traverse tl tain of Hippoerene vas struck out by we are poundt d and fiailed' the ft'ofc of the winded horse. Pesabus. L.ntotmn uTul onrl 1 have often noticed in life that t .e urge our way through ten i brightest and most beau'.i'nl fountains 8lac]es that have to be slaic ot Christian comfort and spiritual life rjght arm. We have to fc Lave been struck out by the iron-shod W(? {iaye to climb the mouut hoof of disaster auu calamity. I see gtorm the castle; but bit Daniel's courage best by the tiash of <]ay ol lest aud rewari Nebuchadnezzar's furnace. 1 see Paul's On the lip top of the cap prowess best when I tind him uu the m^ots w , will thout the viot foundering ship under the glare of the this world, then iu that u lightning in the breakers ot H< 'lia. God Lhere is no gall to drink, n crowns his children amid the howling uf carr>, , 0 battles to light, wild beasts and the chopping of blood k.?ow it? Know it! I knov splashed guillotine and the cracki ng q0(j sa>ss?: "Ihey shal tires of martyrdom. It took the peise- more, neither thirst auy m cutions of Marcus Aurelius to develop shall the sun liyht on them, i Pol^carp aud Justin Mart>r. 11 took for t:,e Lamb which is in the pope's bull aud the cardinal's curse, tbe throne shall lead the and the world's anathema to develop fountains ot water, and (Jo Martin Luther. It took ail the hostili- a]j tears from their eyes." ties against the Scotch covenanters and was very hard for Noa the fury of Lord Claverhouse to develop the scoffing of the people James Kenwick, aud Andrew Melville, whilG he was tryin<j to bi and Hugh McCail, the glorious mart\rs anj was every day ouizzed ? ot 5>cotch history. It took the storm v boatthat would never be of ? jgkg-5ea, and the December blast, and the use; but when the deluge ct Xew England coast, and the j0p3 0f mouutaius disa war-hoo^ot savag^to show forth the the backs of sea-monsters, prowess O^be PiigriJn lathers i rv,eDls< ]ashed up jQ lurv, cl sang> hands over a drowned world Ana the stars beaCM^id tne sea; . , . , . , , And the sounding aisies of the dim wood !n , e ar? rejoiced ia his ow Rang to the anthems of the free. IU "*e safety ol his lamnj'. It took ail our past national distresses, on the wreck of a ruined ear aud it takes all our present national sor- Christ, hounded ol peised rows, to lift up our nation on that high a pidow, worse maltreats career where it will march along after thieves on either side of thee the foreign despotisms that have mocked hate smacking its lips in sat ; jeered. shaU j er it had bepn draining his last drop ol A A P|\ TTY p " : omnipotent | blood, the sheeted dead bursting trom -UL,-ci viv ^ ? u j i, oppression i ',he sephulchres at his crucifixiou. Tell f his own rea j me. (j Getbsemane and Golgotha! were CHIEF JUSTICE FU n free. And j there ever darker times than those:' Like FAVOR OF T in the family, i the booming of the midnight sea against :ie world that I the rock, the surges of Christ's anguish a aud trouble j beat against the gates of eternity, to be The Motiwn Continui tious. are de- echoed back by all thrones ofheaveuand injunction ana Ap all the duugeons of hell. But the day o ' subject that reward comes for Christ: all the poinp <*r?nu-d?jcciee sin lost insi^uili- &Rd dominion of this world are to be Cooaaw octopus Ku Can youim- hung on his throne, uncrowned heads ,, ? iportant than are to b^w before him on whose head 7\k" 1 -ii a.. ?i fl^fiviinn nf {'huf Ji n from Moab are many crowus, auu an Uie ceieoum ( ? ine auyihiug worship is to come up ,t Ills feet, like ! Coosa w case was n fiat this Ruth the humming of the forest, like the r.,,7 cs they say? rushing ot the waters, like the thunder- Simouton that field of ing of the seas, while all heaven, rising thlS afternoou. The generat'ons, on their thrones, beat time with their seen, is a complete that she wa* sceptres. Hallelujah, Hallelujah, the *'Coosaw octopus " of the Lord kingdoms of this world have become the fnr t)lo n,.' ns and king- kingdoms of our Lord Jesus Christ. . .Rotate. Ihe le little inci- That song of love, low and far, cision in full: stakable and Ere lopg suall swell from star 'to star; State of South c is in your his- That light, the breaking day which tips Tillmax et al. its that you rhe golden-spired Apocalypse- Mixing Compan ! at all have It seemed to be of uo importance t ha Two motions have deutal^meeL' Jl!?! inv?nted rude instrument of n:ui?uu. t a?aia for a fh*v = th?m liarP an{1 organ; but - To continue tl m-ed alAe Inrll' ? ?8i mtrod"ction of all the Preliminary injuncti - au "be *.?rld * minstrelsy; and as you hear the a receiver. , , v?ratllouj)f a striQ^ed instrument, even My conclusions ar< the beauty of after the lingers have been taken away 1- That upon the uppose there *rom it. so all music now of lute and motion to rema .Naomi while arum and cornet is only the long-cou- entertained. The 01 ol all her a > tmued strains otjubal's harp and Jubal's tion "'as adjudicatec i<e willing to organ. It seemed to be a matter of very the 21st of April J Judaja, when jjttle importance that Tubal Cain learned reexamined at this'st ely journey? the uses of copper aud iron; but that rude ioSS. But if the que text. One? foundry of ancient days has its echo result would be the D la0T j rat Birmingham machinery, in the opinion of trie md they had and the roar and bang of tactores on the here on Ana^-' i?< thorn went Mernmac. _ 804). Tl/^Ziiotx i y caw^rs; but Again. I see in my subject an illustra- 'ore overruled. ,i us band died, -on Cl the beauty of female industry. 2. As to the motic ? ,) Heboid Ruth toilinor m the harvest-field ,tlle contention of tin i sue gut uiu roubled very1 under Uie h?l; sua, or at noon takingI" ^s, oy contract ie bird* that plain breac with the reapers, or eatin?- virtue of the act ofl ie sun shone the parched corn which Boaz haoded to r!S^t to mine all t low the night ner. The customs of society, of course, within a defined p; ^ f changed, and without the hardships River- for all time, nowers that *aj exposure to which Euth was sub- dol'ir per ton. Th the morning jected, every intelligent woman will find on mining operat asleep when something to do. I know there is a n t?,e particular loo b had plenty sickly sentimentality on this subject. In of 1S70, which gave rtchestmau some families there are persons ofn > *or the full term'oft ty went and practical service to the household or ** Per ton. The a, were none so community, and though there are so r'?ht exclusive, and ipbaz the Te^ many woes all around about them in the Petual, because it wj ihitP, and Zo- world, they spend their time 1anguUhin<? feiulant (as well as over a new pattern, or bursting into should have the ri?l mere game ears at midnight orer the story of some longer," than it shou t P^1Is down lover who shot himself! Thev would aod pay the rovalV ?vn lap. Let ?ot deign to look at Ruth carrying back royalty thus referred ansc .a-rac- the bariey on her way home to her act of 1870. It was ~ .. .. TJ.jf.ifir. Hnsnn f!nrar l bank in a mother-in-law, .Naomi. All tins lasticu- * *DU8 rush on ousness may seem to do very well while Lhat the rule of cons a day that tliey are under the shelter of their !? tIie r'oht t0 mine i would have father's house; but when the sharp win- '?ahle streams coma; f. There are ter ot misfortune comes, what of these Posits is the ordinary 1 halt a cen- butterflies? Persons under indulgent ^ grants of public ri o under some parentage may get upon themselves ?iact to be a emple is con- habits of indolence; but when they come ^avor of the State au ? sulphurous out iuto practical life their soul will ,^e* ^ concur in the Dt a century recoil with disgust aod chagrin. They rule here, it fuli of heart- wiJl m their hearts what the poet s*oa .^at the legislat >w thrilling it 80 severely satirized when he said: definite ?raut by the ithful in days 10!ks are so awkward, things so impolite, connection w?th tka : prosperity! They're elegantly pained from morn till Jt Lm! Hushat; the night beiD0 uOne, it seem, n l f i c i >_ ration ol the exclusi\ *U'* --< .n,lA hmv 4W*X? aTyU ^ , AUiuUK" waismcu; ^ u^vuuwj vu? je; Paul had many men and women have marcheu, siou is strengthened is. whovisted useless on earth, to a destroyed eternity! of the many acts : in the Marys, Spmola saia to Sir. Horace Vere: ^'Oi phate mining referee cross; Xaomi what did your brother die?" "Ut hav!fi2-U^4rhis motion, wind ho cried out; not ing to do," was the answer. **Ah!" the Shite to have bee !iee, or to re- said Spinola. "that's enough 10 kill any tion of thettjrtiLvu ir thee; for aeneral of us." Oh! can it be possible in it cannot be properly o, and where this world, where there is so much sutler- tended to depart fr thy people, ing to be alleviated, so much darkness to 1S76. It loilows ths Sod my God; be%nlightened. and so many burdens to def'endent to the exc e, and there be carried, that there is any person who within the mentione do so to me, cannot find anything to do? itely, at one dollar ] it death part Mada ue de Stael did a world of work sustained. in her time; and one day, while she was 3. This being so, subject ttiat seated amid in-trument s of music, all ol provisions of the Act lip and dark- which she had mastered, and aaiid man- tion ousrht to go ag? aces of joy. uscript books which she had written, restraining it, as pr doab toward some one said to her: '"How do you take out a license ui i her mother- 2nd time to attend to all these things?' and otherwise comi e said: Oh, ikOh!" she replied, "th^se are not the such an order may b< ro away from things I am proud of. My chief boast order made by the i' with a poor is in the fact that I have seventeen should be vac tted, sc d of Judcea! trades, by anyone of which I could make a ent with the order s( ss the desert, livelihood if necessary.'' And if in sec- 4. Pending the fil e sea. or the ular spheres there is so much to be done, memorandum and th will destroy in spiritual work how vast the field! therein agreed to, t irk morning How many dying all around about us agreed to submit tin 1 Xaomi; but without one word of comfort! We want ing already had, as < , i i j ? u:, m.irii 1t? < ! aarvesi-oeiu mure ^vuiijawo, myic iiauuan?, iuvis uicn supuiauuu m i ,e of the lords Rebeccas, more Mary's more Deborahs been duly considere< one of the consecrated?body, mind, soul,?to the and decree may be eu ist. the Lord Lord who brought them. with the result above s that a path Once more I learn from my subject the Melvill: euds very value of gleaning. Ruth *01 ng into the August 3.-1891. harvest-field might have said: "There Judge Simonton c< heaven, oh, is a straw, and there is a straw, but opinion. :ouviction? what is a straw? I can't set any barley ? 1 deviis tor- for m\self or my mother-in-law out of , shot in? ickened! All these separate straws." Not so said Chaklottesvill red upon you beautiful Ruth. She gathered two straws. A ('0^ardly att?-mp >ur you ever and she put them together, and more nhi hv r ? your sub. straws until she.got enough to a.akea p J ^ on 1 the harvest- :>heai. Putting that down "she went and Chesapeake and Oh !gan 10 glean ;:aiuertu luuxc straws, uuui sue uau an- jjdsi0 {Jity aue iiei ise, and you other ?h<?at, and another, and an- mornin"-. The assass u could carry other, and another, and then she brought berth of Connell, sedyou, say- ihem ail together, and smoothed them intrusion with a kic whose irans- out. and she had an ephah or barley be murderer fired a j whose sins nigh a bushel. Oh, that we might all eeffct in the abd k starting in be gleaners! Conneil was brough jDding in the Elihu Burritt learned many things ^es in H precarious ie triumph ot while toiling in a blacksmith's shop, rumors are rile as Abeacrombie, the world-renowned h?Q?^u?\ . e w Idv business philosopher, was a physician in Scot- esca^e( ! start oft" on laad, and lie got his philosophy or the ^o. The flesh chief part of it, while, as a physician. May ?nd i> eisa voice he was waiting for the door of the sick- Rochester, N. Y >ove, saying, room to open. Yet how many there are cial to the Morni iave to drink in this day who say they are so busy Medina, N. Y., says: ry the cross, they have no time for mentf 1 or soiritu- of Shelby, who is ie desert and al improvement; the great duties of life 9^ a#e> ant* little El of misrepres- cross the held like strong reapers, and fourteen, are the ch; we have to carrv oft'all the hours, and there is only ro|liaQce interesting thousand ob- here and there a lra<.rment lei: that is ^ltjy arfe novv , by our own not worth gieanioe." Ah, my Mends, ,sJSs .rd the river you could go Into the busiest day and & and drivi , am, we have busiest week ol your life and hnd golden village had the knot :ssed be God opportunities, wtnch, gathered, mu:ht at that "the giri was ovt I will come, lust make a whole sheaf for the Lord's of age. White was tured battle- garner. It is the stray opportunities on the charge of abd ory; if oot in aud Ihe stray privileges which, taken up ed on his own recogn rorld where and bound together and beaten out, will Is'o trace of him can 0 burden to at last fill you with much joy. ? yr-; How do I There are a few momenta left worth _ ^ eu*u^ T fit because the gleaning. Now, Ruth, to the field! Louisville, Aug, 1 hunger no May each one have a ueasure full and proceeding quietly t ore. neither running over! Oh, you gleaners, to the indications tnat 3or?nyheat, field! And if there be in your house- stuutjoa, against wL the midst of hold an aged one or a sick relative that been made, will b in to liviug is not strong enough to come forth and ^r?e ma.l orit), and LI d shall wipe toil in this lield, then let Ruth take home *jT0Vru tne other to feeble Naomi this sheaf of gleaning: |?eLwf.e" 30'000 fnd : h to endure "He that szoeth forth and weepeth, bear- r tIckets m ^e. ^ ------ ' mulwl thftf- flip Thir/1 iii his day in? precious seed, shall doubtless come ir^onTftn"l""jild the ark again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves x f ibout his old with him." May the Lord God of Ruth .'' ' C ^ my practical and Naomi be our portion forever! element udeared1 like Kls7ed herlasf good l,ve* ' th. saloon* and the ele- Galveston, July 30,-Miss Maude Bentox. 11L, Ju1j apped their ?*rtrude Smith, aged 17, daughter of the Eastern part of i then Noah Captain Alonzo &nnth oi this city and serve(j notice on t L satety and ^11 known in the west committed Th0mp80nville, a st ;. , j suicide by shooting herself just above t..? ,? _,.cf \f and looked liie ^art. Sne was with h? r aunt and S * . ,?1:k lJl- . sister at the time and kissed them both three saloons, wh?ch: mors, denied before she expired. No cause can b'-' the Country, located d than the assigned for the act, although her re- not closed at once tn :ross. human lations state that she had been morose town. Parties intero .isfaction aft- and melancholy for some time preious* to comply with the c / ^ FOR COOSA W. DEMOCRACY DIVIDED. " j A Sj Rf Iureu!?<* Bitterness Between the Factious LLER DECIDES IN BETWEEN 1 in Chnrleston. hestate. umbia Charleston, S. C.. July 29.?The unas the j'reiimiliary terriiied Democracy of Charleston went Newspaper a; to pieces today without bloodshed, but tween Mr. : pointing a Ke-;eiver ... , ,, . ... ,, with more bitterness than ever known Hai* Mr. m. lonton Concurs?The even in the days of active Republican- j Cornier, ockeii out. ism. A dual convention was held and J Columbia r A,,,* > Tho two executive committees are now in ! monotony of o.? 1 llli i rt.Qo cnHHi-n is i ice Fuller Id the the Hel(i- Tlie reformers, with a large| broken ^ iceived today, and number of ??gus delegates, met m an-1 SOnal encom ' ^ . " * other Dart of the citv and marched i Tighe, the C ed his concurrence down tQ jjjbernian han jn a body, bead- j the News an decision, as will be eJ hy ex.Mayor w A Coiirtenay> They Gonzalesrua *noc -ou oi t ie ruShed into the h til capturing most of o'clock in fro and a signal victory the chairs and started into elect Mr. bureau otV-cp following is the de- Coiirtenuy chairman before the chair- few minutes man, of the Democratic executive com- known from _ . . , mittte had called the convention to or- other, and w akoliaa, ex rei. ^er_ The chairman, however, called the The casus be, vs. 1 he Loosaw body to oider, and then leff the chair primarily c< Y> with nobody to preside over the conven- which have been argued: tion. The regulars jumped in then and colums of th then elected J3. F. McCabe chairman, the initials ( le order granting a and captured the books, records and editorial utt< on and appointing gravel. The reformers then elected Tighe intimj (Jourteney chairman, an i the two con- persomttWy"1 >: ventions proceeJed with business. tendencies'ai face of this rccord Futile efforts were made by the con- news of an nd ou^ht not to be servatives to bring about a compromise, movements. nf ir-krlif. The regulars offered to elful a reform ed yesterday i Kv f-i^c J ~ f r," chairman if both VcCaoe and Courte- which, amon 5Q7 on ? o, ? nay would .vacate. Mr. Courtenay de- ing referenct .891, and caonot be c|jDed, atiu the two conventions weut on, "Mr. Tige age oi tne proceed- in the same hall, and elected each to kuow, and stion were open ' .c one aQ executive committee. W. A. owned excli same, ac i concur Boyle was elected chairman by the reg- its editorial '' ^irict judge, filed ulars and T. D. Jervev by the reform- trolled by th< '1. (45 Fed. llep., ers. * at the head o o remand is there- The split in the party is now regarded whom no on' as hopeless, and the feeling between the other )n to continue, &c? two wings is intensely bitter. It is re- straightest s j defendant is that garded as almost certain that two tick- feiuwi-auy t with the State, in ets will be in the field for the mayor- *US ?r cessat 870, the exclusive alty. Mr. Oourtenay will probably head nection what he phosphate lock the reform widg and Mayor Bryan the Democratic* irt of the Coosaw regular. Both wings will endeavor to indirectly, at a royalty of one get the recognition of the state exccu- .In making 0 defendant carried ?ve commmee.-Augnsta Chronicle. -ions prior to 18 <0, Gaunt Fumioe in IJesttarabla. the Cii.li'ieStC ality, under an act London, July 30.?A St. Petersburg city, has beei the right to mine dispatch states that the greatest misery der, unredte ft-enty-one years at exists in Bessarabia, owing to the fail- truth. :t of 1870 made the ure of the harvest and the scarcity of "If Mr. Mc , it is argued, per- food. In the villiage of Koushany the has sent to is provided that de- people broke out in a riot and plunder- not intend t( 1 other companies) ed shops of provisions. The local po- was in some it "so lon? a-id no ^ce tr*ec* t0 strain them and were lican conoec ild make the returns J""?1*' be1a;teD'one of their number being introduced ll n,.pcf.r;hpf7 ThA Keintorcements arriving from between thewoe tovv*n of .Bender, the rioters were at he is an idio! t length dispersed, and a large number i "If, on the ueciciec m state vs. were ma(je prisoners. Two of the pris-! ence to The any (ll b. C. o0,) oners were shot to death in the public craticpyper I itruction applicable streets, as a warning to their late com- j he did intern in the beds of nav- panions, and six were selected for ira- of this news ining phosphate de- mediate deportation to Sibera. The The editor r one in the instance wives and children of the exiUs were j that Mr. Tig] 1- i '1 I f tiu ,-PF ] gilts, namely, that not permitted to speats. iu mem ueiuie i l.i<= a%.a^ Dnstrued strictly in keparting, and nothing was spared that that he wa^ d against the gran- would be likely to strike terror into the Tillman pari it view, and apply- UQbappy peasentry. At Xishenau, the in the gener forbids the couclu- ch.ief place place of the province, it is voted for J uc .ure intended an in- sailJ tba.t not less than twelve persons that Mr. Tig terms usprl Thp ha.ve starvation and pedury The State, a cessarilv be read in J?1S rPonth- ^ot Jews alone, but many May was sti] it Sn th? Russians, have buried across the front- stall. J Hmp th?'r ?? ,?,, iermt0 P''umania, in order to escape Yesterday i clear that the du- the severe measures instituted since Mr. (JoDzale e right, as claimed, the outbreak. him that hi i?6(l? This cooclu- with him &s by an examination Asphyxiated iu a Tunnel. 7a^,ert , n relation to phos- Portland, Oregon, July 30.?En- though he di d to on the bearing gineer Jack Kocheford. of the through meet Mr. Go 1 show the policy of express, south-bound, met death in an ever he plena ;n to limit the dura- unusual manner iu tunnel 14, sixteen pleased, auu iu??a policy which piles south ot Ashland, yesterdav mom- stilletto of tl vj .w rr? in?.- JTwo engines are required"to take Js said to be ' neiu uie omLe om by the Act of the train"o'TeTriiir-^kvous". Rocheford | uul as neun it ihe claim of the ^ front ensjine. lvHen~lfre-"a:n 'ceiver ot ^ lusive right to mine ,was nearly through the tunnel the countT^*6^2^ :d territory, indefin- lin? between the mail and express ears accurate-Cp per ton, cannot be broke. Twenty minutes wer.j consumed (ionz iles P* In akia2 a new coupling. The smoke company w and in view of the and gas from the second engine blew ' t of 1890, an injunc- Erectly into the cab of the one aheid u'nst (he defendant, suffocating the engineer and fireman 'it I Med, until it shall ?? decided to back out of KZiel,' fngilrGo* Qder the latter Act ana wnen ine xrain sioppeuuuusiue iuc iiv thpr^wiih mrl engineer and fireman of the front engine nurnecuy to i substituted for the were ,A78farl1? revea*ed lh.e State court, which engmeerlying dead by the track with lately cUni > far as is inconsist- his left arm cut oft by the engine. lire- ^xJomeS ) entered. man Fitzpatrick was lying unconscious ing wf the foregoing by the track, but revived later on. Both co^nts of sev e entry of the order ?ot ort the eu31Qe. to escape sullocation the sheriff,2? ?he parties havin? and were asphyxiated by the time they zales several 3 case on the h?at? cached the ground. Rochelortl sell with that time U Dn the merits and llis arUi across the track, and bled to and neither that behalf having death. ^"h*1 f tf ^ 1, a final judgment Draceed to Death by a Horae. J>Ottl 01 tneil itered in accordance Chicago, July 30.?Arthur Thomas, V-i i indicated. the nine-year-old son of Manager Ar- i*,,. e \V. Fuller, thur Thomas, of the "County Fair" h J j Chief Justice. Company, w,. ttrow.. f^ ^back of UUoa ot tlie incurs m the above U1C ui mc uwo? ?3cU m ct.at&H i,.cf. _ play, Monday morning and was almost tltfu , A instantly killed. With his father and !^r, * J?.1 siet-per. a party the boy was out riding. His "ll,lseir ac lD e, Ya., August 1? horse ran. mr. Thomas pursued him it was made upon on Queen, but though Queen is the fast- !! f ell, of Portsmouth, er horse of the two, she could not gain , ft - n white man on a on the Dude. The boy lost all control f jnJ rc'' :rain Xo2, on the ofthe horse, and dropping the reins io Ilailroad, near tried to keep on by holding to the mane. ' f,'i e at 3 o'clock this He lost his balauce, falling to one side, in approached the but his foot stuck in the stirrup and for * who resente I the full two blocks he hung suspended, his k. when the would htad striking the pavement at every louea pistol ball, taking jump made by the horse. Ilis head 'r omen of Connell. struck the horse's feet at one time and | Columbia t to this city and the animal gave a \icious kick, which I lecturer J. II condition. Many caused the boy's foot to slip from his public a le to the cause of tbe shoe, and he fell to the pavement dead. O'Xeil, ex-m as extracted today. .. ~~?77L"~.... for some ve. land has not been ? LUb,llty a???c* publicans. 1 Charleston, b. C., July 31.?The suggests as; Farmers' Alliance store in Spartanburg depression b ecembcr. County failed some time ago, and. al- price of cott< .July 30.?A spe- though the store was under the auspices ion crop in t ng Herald from of the County Alliance when the failure His plan, in Stephen L. W bite, ^ame, the Alliance disJairued all res- refuse to sell seventy nve yeans pynsibility, holding that it lay with the during the itwit <, o l'i+H8 managers person illy. The creditors, a m',n(Jm? 1-3 s- e Baltimore tirrn, finding thev could no: | Land wife""71" debt, tave enterejUuit m the : claim that White ^-a1^ -tates Court for ^--- -> It is vvould be abL girl tc elope with expected that the case will soon come from 1 to a neighboring UP? It is one of the first of its bind ever i,eiog aepen< tied by claiming hud iu the country, and the decision will and would m ?r seventeen years* probably define the labilities of the Al- on cotton w promptly arrested liance organizations. plant it. action, but releas It K?led Her Ht A v izance and escaped T. ? , , 01 be found Pittsbukg, Pa., July 31.?While m Kansas u ' Paris with her parents four years age Star's lope sieciiou. Martha Prick, then aged two vears. from Harriso . 3.?The voting is swallowed a pin. To-day she died at *roru this <ill over Kentucky Cresson Springs us the result. She was nounces the J the proposed con- the daughter of Henry C. Frick, the j"',iff- iaSju lich a strong fight millionaire coke operator and steel .nan- credit-d ii e ratified by a very ufacturer. She felt no ill effects until the kind iii tl: lat the plurality for the winter of 1889, when, after much savshehasti Democrats will be suffering from a pain in the side, an ab- pJopfe's pari 35.000. There are cess formed and the pin was discharged, throngh wtiic i^lrl s?nrl if. m psii. 11, left, her t.hp vir.tim of a neeuliar dlS- t'nrms f^vori ! partyites will poll ease, which has ever siuce baflled the leiving their The next legisla- beat physicians in the country. in great bme e, be Democratic, a trip.? lynchiu^. ???/? .tion uf the farmer Montgomery. Ala., Aug. 1.?Last portthenew* Friday night, in Henry County, a short ? Must Go. distance from Gordon, a mob took from ' ,* 31.?Farmers of oflicers four negroes?two men aud two I f.uVR^iUEL< this County have women?who were charged with burn- j a * ;lie merchauts of ing a dwelling house. On t'^e way to J. | nail place where the river one of the men escaped and ^erj (jeI^0ifs ir trading, that if was shot at. lie rolled down the baak t|0vvn an(j {ot are all there are iu of I he river, aud by feianius death es- the church, si m that place, are caped into Georgia. The others were ;Vere on the j ev will boycott the placed on .the bank of the stream and ing two cows sled have promised shot. The body of one of the women the vicinity.' lemand to-morrow. wa3 recovered. negro is hard ? | * ? - :er encounter e an=^_ghtin A Third State Ticket to Kuter t 'WO WELL KNOWN COL- Todav. NEWSPAPER MEN. SPRIKGFIELD, O., Auij. 5. rticies Cause Bad uiood ue- the People's Party convention w; S". G. Gou/.:iles of The State ^0 Order iOtlfl.V by Hon. H. T. F. Tlffhe of The News and ^ kLasfc f^.0,,delegates Occupicd the beautitully decorated hall, orderly and intelli eat conve , d. u., ivug. 4.? rue quiet seldom seen. Many lauies wei summer life in our city floor of the hall and several of Ly, but not unexpectedly, eupied seats on the sta^e. The rday afternoon by a per- were opened with prayer b1 jUci between Mr \1 F c^wford ?,d chairman Ban d Conr^r amf \fr V r "ad letters of encouragement ii Lg?n "editor of The State at01'IWer and Hon- H- G*'"1" iccurred about half-past ? ber of the national committee nt of the News and Courier bama. , and naturally enough in a Hugh Cavanaugh, of Cincini after its occurrence it was introduced as temporary chairc one end ot the town to the when he advanced to the fro as the theme of all tongues, stage he was greeted with h? lit. as the lawyers say, was plause. Cavanaugh said this irtain newspaper articles most important convention hel latterly appeared in the party for many_a-yesr:""It is c e..^?vvs,p.Df ^ouri?r over 0f rngxurhT) have no axes to grii trances in Vh/.?lar"r^ Pro?ose- J*t0 ??wotice .kdttetalfetaSbiada ly matmg part.es that they hav. fhTState, had Republican ??' then- ?me- We diSer from nd al ways received the tirst 0t^er btate conventions wLich h v important Republican he1d tlns jear, notably from th< To this The State respond- Columbus, in that we have not morning in an editorial in senatorial candidates In the fie g other things, the follow- aie here to represent a princip s were made to Mr. Tighe: must in the end prevail. P has had the opportuuity have been saying, "You till the [ knows, that The State is we will attend to politics." isiveiy by Democrats; that Cavanaugh said that JohnS policy 13 absolutely con- j^g jQoralls, would be relegaU appearf vate life. "If tbe Mansfllld s dare aecus, to his faie of understood his position 1 than a Democrat of "the sav' WUf? >vwisey: iiau A Ul eet;' that it advocates the the Pe?Ple Wlth half the strengt >f Jefferson without swerv- served Wall street, it would ] ion, and that it has no con- le- ~e me in my old ago.'" ;ever with any other paper, Hutchison was selected as te jr Republican, directly or secretary. Various committee.5 and pending their return to re^ : what every one will recog- crt Schilling addressed the coe lations to the contrary, Mr. After receiving reports trom con iighe, the correspondent of the convention adjourned unti m .Newsand Courier in this row S/1^0^8T"he committee on resolut e been wrestling with a platforn itthew F.Tighe, in what he P- aad at 10 P- m- adi?ur the News and Courier, did tomorrow morning without ) insinuate that The State reached a conclusion. The manner tainted by llepub- points are the prohibition, lar.-i anri fnr ti.ui- r?acnn farm oroduct loan features. ' ; into a business difference districts insist that a prohibits owners of the .Record, then would cost the part}' thousands and they will fight it to the hi other hand?and his refer- Regarding a tickot, everything State as an 'alleged Demo- There are a dozen candidates, i bears out the supposition respective advocates are not s I to impugn the Democracy There js benea[h lhe sllrface c, faHn^icsUon also chareed ble feelm? between the Fede he ba(?sought a posftion on Lawmen and the Knights o Che Statp, and had asserted whlch cfses the farmer elemet not in sympathy with the Pec^ hoth. .y, and thcit it he had \Oted Temperance Men at Sant al election he would have TTvrov t r Tu]v 31 _Th Ige Haskell. It also charged L ' 1 , ' July -f1 he desired to take stock in meeting of the grand divide cd as late as the month of Sods of Temperance wasbvid 1 il seeking a position on its nesday and Thurday zc San subordinate division? were res afternoon Mr. Tighe sent by delegates. The r.eports of _ .. v; </?riho anri r? reran i7.P.r shflWfif 5 il UUie ill \\ I1H LI XltJ LU1U ~- 0 ...? 6 could not escape a light crease of six new divisions di lie had escaped one with past year. The plans of the and Mr. Gandy, and that al- year, bespeaks a decided grow d not go armed, he would order by the next annual nzales wherever and when- Much interest was manifeste ed and with any weapon he representatives present. Th< that he did not carry "the ing officers were elected and lie Spaniard;" at least such & r the ensuing year: the contents of tue letter, Grand worthy patriarch, Jo er the sender nor the re- ander, Columbia. have given it out for pub- , Grand worthy associate, D. above may not be literallv Santuc. iod^eipt of the letter Mr. Grand scribe, F. S. Dibble, ocure?nf^6Gwhide, and. in burg. ith W. /X- Grand treasurer, S. S. Stoke 'Pi? he, who wi^aFNgfcbfrffiand chaplain, J. W. Greg in front of the News andWfcfe, , ? _ TT _ - I iiVTSWi conductor. .T. II. 1} e. onerm xtuwan, who oau ^ ?s previous can e up, see- Santuc. zalts approaching with the Grand sentnfc&l-C. \Y. Davis, king out of his pocket, said The order is onzhStSj^y &r? him. "None of that, X. G.," while the representati&L 'wa poke Mr. Gonzales struck those having the manage^?* ighe, and they imme- order in this State feel some^ ;hed. They were separ- couraged as tothefuture of it, :arily by the Sheriff but got ask all interested in the growl in, and according to the ac- temperance cause to exert th eral Lystanders, including, during the coming year and Ir. Tighe struck Mr. Gon- vance the interest of the cause blows in the face, and by individual efforts. Tho 1nr?al rfivlsirvn at Sant' lt-v v\ere again srpaiaofu, - of them appeared to be tained the representatives in a orse for the encounter, pitable manner, and they left 1 were summoned to ap- homes highly pleased and wit he Mayor this morniDg for ed zeal for the cause.?Greenvil nduct and lighting on the Tw(> De8tr?ti? w?ck, bus far no further steps , T aken to prevent any repe- Lexington. Xy., July 30.encounter. Sheriff Rowan ^ie worst and most destructive light to a Register repor- that have occurred in a long I umor that h? had posted pla e on the Cincinnati South e News and Courier office road this morning, in which sev le before the difficulty in pie where injured and one or twi of if, was positively with- ed to death. The first wreck on in fact, lie says that he one mile south of Hiiih Bridge fi to go home by a back freight train commii north to 'im-iuberiog some buisDess was thrown from the track by nged his mind and went axje aQ(1 Qve heavily loaded a .111 street, and had been at ' uor,, . tumbling down the embankmei >ok *plac^*as ^above^men- construction train at La Dev 1 ordered to go to High Bridge at : all possible assistance. Wben is I*tic * sciieme. arrived at a deep cut near Dc ' July 31.?Alliance collided with a freight train. . kinsler, has to day made giues and a large number of c irom UpL Richard demolished. The en2i. {?rem*? of the construction train "n this letter Capt. O'Xeil from their engine and were ui i remedy for the existing Ben Carroll, engineer ol the irei iv reason of the reduced hi? fireman, William McKinle in. the skipping of a cot- both caught in their engine. C lie wiioln South next year, ceived slight cuts and bruises brief, is for the farmers to Kinley was buried beneath tl.e but half the present crop When extracted he Wis mashi next twelve months, de pulp. All trains are blockade i cents per p.iurH, plant no tiig excursion that was to le nesi season, oui raise ioou ^js morning for Niagara ?"al! In this way the new Mul- g0 over Xentucky Central. figures that the farmers = 1 ? r.o once for ail free them- a Fai?? Lover Killed, bondage to the West as to Jacksonville, Fla, Jul' lent 1 hereon tor supplies, Zellwood, Fla. special to the aKe something handsome ^jni0a sav?* hen next they choose to ?Late ^ ni?ht Miss Myra } a beautiful girl, only 10 years < oiiucai Pro^eijte. an(] instantly killed A. C. Jo [TV, Mo, August 4.?The tion foreman on the Florida Cei ka special says: A letter Peninsular Railroad. She lay " ' Ex-Congressman jor at a g^ge^ corner and listrict, in which here- approached blew his brains ou Kepuplican parry and de- * inlv<?r fuLure Iih will be found -i , i, PefTer, Polk and Simpson "lor nearly a >ear past Jc been uaMUir devoted attention iuic tain, luaii au > <r > rui vi ? - - . . , ie pas', few months, Keliy Puncher, and common report de trued to the new* party,th?* them as engaged to be marr cd. Ly, aa the br-st medium two months ago. however, Jo :h to accomplish the re- carded her and married anotl ug their measures, and be- Since then Myra has been d S] enactment would result and at times revengeful, but no tit to the people and both pected that she intended anv vie > having rejected him he Jones. rical tiling to do is to sup- l,Since the shooting she sa Parl-V- .Jones became criminalty intim; uck by Lightniuc her under promise of marrige : S. C., Aug. 4?During could stand her disgrace no longi itorm this afternoon the was immediately arrested and ' . UrocKi'fQri o o nhtir/'.h tt?Oq -1 il. ? i... ^ 4 IV. M vn?.sv' j. itsujicnau ^UU'W' unauuu, me UUUUbJ scat, 1UI pic, htnina. The bolr, after ut- trial. Public sympathy is ent hing the steeple, passed on ijer sj^e> .Jones's remains we eaway the front part of w Lake City for hurial." iunningtwo negroes who >orch at tbe time, and kill- Those papers that have been which were grazing in fun at Gov. Tillman for presui rhis goes to show that a fight the Coosaw octopus has er to kill than a cow. laugh turned od them. \ 4 0h,a Faculty of clemson. he Field SOUTHERN INSTRUCTORS FOR THE .?When CAROLINA YOUTH. as called ^ Barnes 1 heor*tlcal a8 Well as Practical Instrac.-? seats ID tlon Will be tiiven; bat i Theories A more ^Fill be Reduced to I'raHtice?Work \ . > ntion is -e OU the Done by the Board of Trustees. them oc- Pendleton, S. C., J uly 30?The board proceed- 0f trustees of Clenison college held its y Joshua i meet;nCrthis mernin? andtodav the H6S tf)6D ~ " ? ~ * om Sea- various members left for their homes. s, mem- '^he lon? session of the board was of Ala- caused by the difficulty of the selection of professors from the multitude of latl, was applicants, all of whom came with unot^Ahe excePtional)Ie references and recom'arcv ap- mendations. The board proceded slowwas the ly an(l with the greatest care. The vaiky s&j uOuc credentials of the applicants were omposed read and every endeavor made to secure ad. We the very best possible men for the posi- -r* Served ions?^or ^18 t:ustees recognized that both the upon selections, in great measure, ave been would rest the fate of the college for i one in success or failure. so many It took several ballots in each case to Id. We agree upon the men for the different ile which chairs. oliticiacs The board not only endeavored tosesoif a id cure men best <laalifi?d for the positions, as far as possible, na'.ive South Car ,, olinians, and men who has been active supporters of the movement for the ja to pri- establishment of a separate agricultural iceburg an(j mechanical college in South Carole would iina# The application of this last rule at served caused great difficulty in several cases b I have in the election of a professor. I0t no >V TIIE FACULTY. II. B. The following were the professors mporary elected this morning: > retired, Professor of English?C. M. Furman, iort Rob- Greenville. vpnfinn Assistant Professor of English?T. P. imittees Harrison, of Anderson. Professor of Physics-C. W. Welch, of 1 to-mor- Xewberrv, . Professor of History?W.S.Morrison, ions has 0f Greenville. 3 since 3 Professor of Agriculture and Hortined until culture?J. S. Xewman, one of the fachaving ulty of the Alabama Agricultural and sticking Mechanical college. 1 tax and Assistant Professor of Horticulture? The city J. C. Dupre, of Abbeville. on plank Professor of Mechanics?A. V. Zane, of votes the United States navy. He is a iftur phh' native of Maryland. - ' Instructor in Drawing?William oL thS: Welch. of Newberry. ana tneir professor of Mathematics?President iangume. gtrode, a native of Virginia. onsidera- Associate Professor of Mathem atics? ration of j. (j.. Cllnkscales. one of the faculty of f Labor, the Methodist Female college at Columlt to sus bia. He is a native of Anderson. Assistant Professor of Mathematics? T. P. Perrin, of Abbjville. uc* Associate Professor of Chemistry? e annual R. Brackett, of Charleston, in of the Associate Professor of agriculture? ast Wed- >v. u. vveiiourn. ui urccuviij , xnoo. tuc. Six At previous meetings of the board )resented H. A. Strode, of Virginia, bad been the State elected president; Dr. M. B. Hardin, of i an in- Virginia, professor of chemistry, and iring the Messrs. Shiver and Symmes, of Columensuing bia, assistants in tke analyzing of ferth of the tilizers. meeting. All of the faculty are Southerners, d by the and the major portion are natives of i follow- the Palmetto state. With such a strong installed and learned faculty, with such a brainy, courteuus gentltmeu as Professor hn Alex- Strode at its head, the success of Clemson college is assured. It will do noble B. Fant, work in training the young men of the state to be true and faithful citizens; it Orange- will well equip them for the stei^n battle of life, and fit them to increase the * ' tKA Citota r 5, union. WtitlLU (1UU ]JU? Cl Ui 11JC QWLV.. J. V^?? ory, San- by year the wisdom of the founders will become more and more apparent, andolph, and by all future generations tney will be hailed as statesmen and patriots. Marion. two distinct parties. wtb, and At the meeting of tha board there s small, were two distinct parties. One favored it of the practical education alone while the &hat en- other wanted some theoretical instrucaJJ3?t?ey tion in the curriculum. The advocates ih of thH?lPracticaI? industrial education were emselves vicl8S6^?. Theoretical instruction help ad- will begivefiSi4^^?soncollegp, i by their all the theories 1? >jr<?'l ">11 ' * _ to practice. uc enter- The trustees have not arranged the very hos- curriculum and will not do so for some for their time. Late in the summer a joint meeth renew- ing of the trustees ana the professors le Xews. will be held, and then the course of study and work will be mapped out. '* If the buildings are completed in ?Two of time and judging from the present rate s wrecks of progress they will be, the college will ;ime took commence work February 1, 1892. Tb9 em Rail- session will be nine months long. eral peo- The brick residence of the professor d chrush- or'chemistry, another brick residence, occurred tbe chemistry building, the barn and^ wheD a five wooden residences for the foremen ~ -"fhi<s -t and professors have been completed. i mechanical building is almost lina oroKen yery little work remains to be 113 done 0D be e^orts of the laborers at. I he will now be concentrated on the main llle was building, the foundations of which have id render been laid, and the dormitory. Work the train has been commenced on a wooden cow tnerail it barn. Atter the dormitory has been The en- completed, work on the kitchen and ars were dining loom will be commenced and neer and als0 on tbe president's house and the i iumped residence for the professor of agricul2^5 Quite a little town will be formed at ^ Fort Hill bv the buildings of Clemsou were College.?Charleston Wor.d. arroll re- ? aad Mc- What Does the President Wau?? engine. Tacoma, Aug 1.?George Hazard, jd into a Secretary of the Democratic Central id, and a Committee, has received from the gov:ave here eraoient Quartermaster at Vancouver s had to a ticket from Tacoma to Washington and return, sent by order of President Harrison. Hazard was formerly a lead ing Republican in Indiana, ana pouticians heie believe that the Prsident iiuie3- neetjs hig services in tne coming campaigu and will try to win him from his m If1* PartJ* The result of the visit causes )ld, shot muc[, speculation." nes. sec atral and Locust Placue in Colorado. in wait Denver, Jaly 30.?Recently the when he wind blowing in from the west brought L with a with it thousands of Rocky mountain lo- > custs. Thaair was tilled with them un>nes had til the elecmc lights were dimoied by to Miss their covering the globes. Stores were AIaoa 4 UAI i? fA si^uttlcu uull^utcu W tivoc tuvii uvvio w ?vv^? About the pests from covering and destroying ^ me i dls- their goods. The streets were for hours ler girl, covered with them and thousands were pondent, swept ofl' in the sewers. The hoppers one sui- were going east toward Kansas and Xe>lenceon braska, and the main bod} continued their journey without stopping. The ys that last time Colorado was visited by the ite with locusts was in 1874, when they went and she into Kansas and Nebraska and destroysr. She ed the crops to such an extent that the taken to sovernmen* was obliged to come to the iimmary aid of the settlers. irelv on ? ? ? Death of Ex-Senator Sawyer. iv ittkch - 4 -y-* Shawnee, Tenn., Aug., 1?ExUaited States Senator Sawyer of South making Carolina died here last night. lie was ning to a prominent figure in the South during had the the reconstruction, and had amassed a large fortune in realty.