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SHINING LIKE SAN REV. DR. TALMAGE CFFES SUBJME HOPE FOR CHRIST LAN W, RKERS A Good Example- Righteousn<ss by Praysr and by Christian Admonition-The Over whelming Thought of the T. it - Shtuitg Zhrough Eternity and R -ignting For( ver. This discourse tlashes a lbrich: li.ht ittn the life of Christian workers ut-i o:ler- a sublime hope for all those who are aged in their attempts to do go r mage's text last Sunda1y w. 1a'et x "They that turn many to -- shine as the stars forever aua e.er Every man has a t.ilsa thousand branches. 2i through all the earth. H:: b through all the heaven . 1 - ih voice. witb eye, with h-t with 1 } - silence often i lot1 :a thundler at in I is a dirge or a x' .,r is nou thing as negttive iniene. W e are :ilpi tive in the place we c::y, rkin the world better or nmatin' it wO'e- ou n L-rd's side cr on the up reasons for our blessedness or :-anishe t and we have already Ion con in ; op ie: heaven'or hell. I her r":l t"ll of wit' theyaregoing to do. A man who h:.-w down a city might as well talk : se:t; evil that he expects to do. or a man who ;a: ne I an empire might as well talk of oe I he expects to do. By the force of your er influence you have alretl a ni ue' ir ite values, or you have by the pover of a right influence won whole kingd'n-a 1-r t I1 It would be absurd for r, by elah,ra argument, to prove th-t the worja is off the track. ."u :. as well stand at the foot of an c:'nktut amid the wreck of a caps:zei rail train. proving by elaborate argument that sie thing is out of order. Adt-u ttu ea ve the embankment 60 centuries ao. an-d i; whole race i' one long trutan bat g-tO on tumbling in th'e 'same direc:inn Crash. crash: The only ltestioi now ., G what leverage can the crushed thing be lifted: By what hammer may the fragments be recon structed I .want to show you how we may turn many to righteousness. and what will be your future pay for so doing First we may turn them by the charm o: a right example. A child coning from a filthy home was taught at school to wash its face. It -vent home so much improved in appearance that its mother washed her face. And when the father of the houschold came home and saw the improvement in domestic appearance he washed his face. The neigh bors, happening in, saw the change and tried the same experiment, until all the street was purified, and the next street cop ied its example, and the whole city felt the result of one schoolboy washing his face. That is a fable by which we set forth that the best way to get the world washed of its sins and pollution is to have our own heart and life cleansed and purified. A man with grace in his heart and Christian cheerfulness in his face and holy tonsistency in his be havior is a perpetual sermon. and the ser mon differs from others in that it has but one head, and the longer it runs the better. There are honest men who walk down Wall s:reet, making the teeth of iniquity chatter. There a happy men who go into a sickroom and by a look help the iroken bone to knit and the excited nerves drop to a calm beating. There are pure men whose presence silences the tongpe of uncleanness. The mightiest agent of good on earth is a consistent Christian. I like the Bible folded between lids of cloth, of calfskin or morocco, but I like it better when, in the shape of a man, it goes out into the world-a Bible il lustrated. Courage is beautiful to read about, but rather would I see a man with all the world against him confident as though all the world were for him. Patience is beautiful to read about, but rather would 1 see a buffetted soul calmly waiting for the time of deliverance. Faith is beautiful to read about, but rather would I find a man in the midnight walking straight on as though he saw everything. Oh, how many souls have been turned to God by the charm of a bright example! When in the Mexican war the troops were waveing, a general rose in his stirrups and dashed into the enemy's lines, shouting, "Men, follow me!" They, seeing his courage and disposition, dashed on after him and gained the victory. What men want to rally them for God is an example to lead them. All your commands to others to advance amount to nothing as long as you stay be hind. To affect themi aright you need to start for heaven yourself, looking back only to give the stirring cry of ".\en, follow:" Again, we may turn many to righteousness by prayer. There is no such detective as prayer, for no one can hide away from it. It puts it hands upon the shoulder of a man J0, 000 miles off. It alights on a ship midatlantic The little child cannot understands the law of electricity or how the telegir:.ph operator by touching the instrument may dart a mes sage under the sea to another cont nent. Nor can we. with our small intellect, under stand how the touch of a Christia's prayer shall instantly strikc a soul on the other side of the earth. You take ship and go' to some other country and get there at 11 o' clock in the morning. You telegraph to Ameries and the nmessage gets here at 6; o'clock the same morning. In other words, it seemus to arrive here five hours before it stairted. Like that is prayer. Goil says. 'Blf~ire they call I will hear.'' To overtake a loved one on the road you may spur up a lathered steed until he shall outrace the one that brought the news to Ghent, but a prayer shall catch it at one gallop. A boy running away from home may take the mi lnight train from the country village antd reach the seaport in time to gain the ship that sails on the morrow, but a mother's prayer will be on the deck to meet him, and in the ham mock before he swings into it. an-I at the capstan before he winds the rope arotnd, and on the sea against the sk-y as thbe vessel plows on toward it. There is a mightiness in prayer. George 31ulier prayed a com pany of poor boys together. and then he prayed up an asylum in which they naigat be sheltered. Hie turned his face toward Edinburgh and prayed, and there came ?1 - 000 He turned his face toward London aud prayed, and there came ?12I0. He turned his face toward Dublin and prayed, and there came .?1,000. The breath of Elijah's prayer blew all the clouds otl the sky, and it was dry weather. The breath of ijiah's trayer blew all the clotuds together, and it was wet weather. Prayer in Daniel's time walke.1 the cave as a lion tamer, it reached up an-i took the sun by its golden bit and stopped it and the moon by its silver lit and stopped We have all yet to try the full power of prayer. The time will come when the American church will pray with its tace to ward the west and all the prairies and inland cities will surrender to God, and will pray with face toward the sea, and all the illands and ships will betomte Christian. l'arents who have wayward sons will get down en their knees and say, "Iord, send my i-dy home," and the boy in Canton shall getrgh up from the gaming table and ge down to fid out which ship starts tirst for America. Not one of us yet knows how to pray. All we have done as yet has only been pottering. A boy gets hold of his father's saw and ham mer and tries to make something. but it is a poor affair that he makes. The father comes and takes the same saw and hammer and builds the house or the ship. In the child hood of our Christian faith we make but poor work with these weapons of prayer, but when we come to the stature of men in Christ Jesus, then, under these implements, the temple of God will rise and the world's redemption will be launched. God cares not for the length of cur prayers, or the number of our prayers, or the beauty of our prayters, or the place of our prayers, but it is :he :aih in them that tells. Believing prayer scars higher than the lark ever sang, tlunge deeper than diving bell ever sank.dat quicker than lightning ever :iashed. Th auh we have used only the back of this weaa instead of the edge, what marvel-- ;;v be wroght! if saved, we are all the ca-tve of some earnest prayer. Would God that in desire for the rescue'of souls we migti prayer lay hold of the resources of the ILrd Omnipotent: We may turn many to righteoutsne.sb Christian admonition. IDo not waituni you can make a formai speech. Address the one next to you. You will not go home alone today. Between this and your place of stopping you may decide the eterna: destiny s it r .: t . T "ere , -ts ul en ear:1 s at C . . " 1 ri.e to tt . 1 i:- y u1 ri tly t'i~ili:.feet i :'a anid n a e 1 : an.d l'.:tch di-1 ta - \r': ery any oivers ant minert. an es puring iu vs of deti, an11 :.d.n reekle of danger can d ., i .PiTe stotCs ieart of sia, though er :rrotn e l by an ocean of ,r ~t r ,r, ,tn ter ChtristiI m hobardtiunrt :1! I" a t the -'11i of re,iem a tion. : ' all' a uonin' an I pr iver nvi ri.ti n work for nothing: \ly text pr: hat eternal laster. -- vy t'an tur manyl t? rihte *,'.u '. ,hatl -i1::e w,.l. ' . l. . r .e: '. 1 ear '" an i 11 e .-. :t 1 . i : e e w i 1 is 'ttt' I"' t , , .1 *. ~ r~. . n'1 r .a t. e hi:ii tol.' t he w i. I t. lyt, . e t rolia, t,.r there N t i t h ,Le**a i, hieLit. us L I v' , i' '-I. ,.* s the ret-er el live with hin. tie , . huir.:l them: as hiy com Sles in earth'y itoil an 1 temnembnr what the" iii :r the h.. ar o: his mate and for th'..-re.I of h, kintwn. All their pray er- awd te.1r' aU I work will risc before him aino their fices, an. he will di vi ie hi kingdomi with them--his petce their te te. his holiness their holiness. his jIy t::.ir *y. The '.ry of the centrcl throne rtle*ied from ti surrotn-ling throne-. the Srt s : sin s:r'uck from the t brist iin orb, andi the entire niture a treille ani a t.,-h with light. they si il sline as the stars forever and ever. A tin, Christian workers sit til le like the stars in the f.irrt thact they hare a light inde pen'ient of each other. L a k up at the nig-ht and see each world show its dLitint. glory. It is not like the cntia~ration in which yo'. cnnot tell where one t: ime stops and - other begins. Neptune, Herschel a:' e cury are as distinct a3 if each one of them were the only .:ar. So our indi:ilualiim will not be lost in heaven. A great multi tude, vet each one as observable, as distinct ly recognized, as greatly celebrated, as if in all the space. from gate to gate, and from hill to hill, he were the only inhabitant. No nixing up, no mob, no indiscriminate rush: each Christian worker standing out illustti. ous. all the story of earthly achievement ad hering to each one, his self denials and pains an I services and victories pnblished. IBefore men went out to the last war the orators told them that they t'ould all be re tuembered by their c:untry and their names be commemorated in poetry and in song, but go to the graveyard in Richmond and you will find there 6,000 graves, over each of which is the inscription, -Unknown." The world does not remember its heroes, but there will be no unrecognized Christian worker in heaven. Each one known by all: grandly known: known by acclamation; all the past story of work for God glea'ning in cheek and brow and foot and p+lm. They shall shine with distinct light as the stars, forever and ever. Again, Christian workers shall shine like the stars in clusters. In looking up you find the worlds in family circles. Brothers and sisters-they take hold of each other's hands and dance in groups. Orion in a groun. The Plejads in a group. The solar system is onty a company of children with bright faces gathered around one great fire place. The worlds do not straggle off. They go in squalrons and fleets sailing through immensity. So Christian workers in heaven will dwell in neighborhoods and clusters I am sure that some people I will like in heaven a great deal better than others. Yonder is a~constellation of stately Christ ians. They lived on earth by rigid rule I hey never laughed. They walked every hour anxious lest they should lose their dig nity. but they loved God, and yonder they shine in brilliant constellation. Yet I shall not lcng to get into that particular group Yonder is a constellation of small hearted Christians-asteroids in the eternal astrono my. While some souls go up from Christian battle and blaze like Mars, these asterotd< dar: a feeble ray like Vesta. Yonder is a constellation of rnartyrs, of apostlet, of pa triarchs. Our souls ns they go up to heaven will seek ot the most congenial society. Yonder is a constellation almost merry with the play of' light On earth they were full of sympathies and songes and tears and conratulations. When they prayed. their words took tire. When they sang. the tine culd not hold' the:m. When they wept over a .,orld's wes, they' sobbed as if hear:tbro. ken. When they worked for (btrist. the': : i:e I with enth.:sia-m. Yuder the': are circle of light, constellation ofiny, galaxy of ire:i Oh, that yotu and I tv that grace whzen car. transform the worsi into thihe: minht at lass stil in the wake of' that tleet at whee 'n tt-.t glorbitus group as the st trs forever an i evr .Xann Christi--an''rkes wiil -hinte lie the -'a-- tn swit ie-- of motion. The world 'd 0 ro )t to thne T1"ere tire no :1xe11 sasavast' rehctive po-itton. The star a-"areni-ly mio.t t' roughly fixed :iies thous andi -of mil-' tumiu-e The a'troanmer. uting 'i- tele cope for an. alpensteck. le-cp fromn world era' to world era: and tintu n -tar .t udng -till. The ch'tamois htuter ha o I to eitcht hi - re, bt not so -wift is I< <r:tm.e as that w:;hi the se'entist tries to 'hoot thrsg'h the tower of oh-ervit)ry Like petre'st mdathtic~ that sem to cvs fretm no sh::0e and bce bound to no l1:dn place. I rigI :ltim', s these gre i' 11ikso worlds rest not as they go. win.: tin i wi'g, age after agre, fctrever atn iever. The cie hastes to its prey:. lbut we shalli in stpe.ed bea the eagle'. Yout have noticed the veloeit of0 the swift hotrse, tunder whore 'e'et thte mile sip like a smnooth ri'on, antd is lie passes the fout- hoot's strike the enrth in suchiik eat ycur pul~ses take the samte vibratio. Bat all these things are not swif't in cempar-J sn with thte lotion of which I spea . 'lTe moon inaves 5 000U' miles in a day. Yonder Netunte I ishe's ca 11,'e0 miles itn ant hour-. Yonder M?ercu:ry gos Iv:,. nmiles in an hor cclk the stars, the Christian sha~ll hine 'In 'wiftness cf nottion. You' tea" now of father or amtner or child -ick l' ('ile's away, and it t tkes you two davs to a:. to themtt. Yout hear of somtCecase ofufring thait demtands your immttediate attenion, cut it takes you an hour to get there. Oh, the joy when you shall, in tul :nent of thie text. take starry speed and be e:ual to lU0,t000 miles an hour: Having on earth got used. to Caristian work, you will not 1it when death strikes you. You will ely take on more velocity. Thtere i-' a dy ing chi'l in London. and its spirit must he taken ur' to God'. You are there in ani in stat to 'Io it There is ai young man in New York to be arrested from going into that gate of sin. Yon are there in tin in smnt to arrest him. Wh"ther with spring of foot ot strtoke of wing or by the force of some new law that shall hurl you to the spot where you would no I ktnw nt b'ut my teat sutggests veloety. All spa-c open be fore you, with nothing to hinde'r vou iu mission of light and love atnd joy, ott -hall shine in swittness of motion as the -'ars- for ever aind ever. Again, Christiatn workers,~ li tars. shine in ranitude. The mo't il'iterate :mant knows thatt these thingsi'n'the -k. la.king like glit buttons. are greait nme of Iater Toeigh the:n: one nt.d: tritna tha:it wuldreunire scales witht a t:,lar hnresof thoussands of raies itigh and chis:ndred.s of thousand:, of mtiles iong. ania tebtomo of the chains basins con hi:er- lethunredis of thoutsands of muiles w:12. n i tht he ("nipote nce alone cou:i it - .e onI hi geometry''nd we-ghed w tiiapia-' wori Yte. he has puied liersel "ie- 'n 't'niles in a -ne.pter. Sur mi. es i d'teter, and that the sman s earl on te be-ach of hieaven 'is in"::ene be i: ret. i : , -- 1 h : :- . : :". w e1 h:.. tit .e ' \ . m t : :h i : . evC.r thingt, w a. L i h '.hl p e " ever thing -trenLt 1 Lh i: -'h !! pwe'- ev'eryiLi:c S't I: e al l rI t e i ' t i Itpe t i : i m' ': w l' II I: :. .t ' it t 1 kine nt he l" . -1: t 1 w1 r a v l - 0ile n2 l i e thin. hat :his areit is ime l :ip e ~ i h m ilor i the' d 11:::y c.:'uizh r iz 't o f wi: ' . I' I k ".- 'i t ec Ii:ai1. '' o k u :.i. :-' t :R 'h-i ':he witeC lilie" hLit bloem in nii i b a in d l i e n s o o u K. 'i " a :ce r L.T Ilt'v 11.1 e f'liI'1 OflC'f.'e t-:I5e l :.i t irm1 al t e . ce urie. T - -:i t a ct: a:i; e . r i' irranean au I Lhe 'ene i : tiL"L oun:.d i.t. way int' Le:a toL 'heir :itm'Tr i- 's b'rig1ht ingT a~ who~ in 'nc'i t hii'i ' h st" in their cur .iel To LIhe ancIie nts thers were ymni offf'( eternity, ht:t here :h' ilure of my'~ text je'tl" 'f the ''ig nt 'i'he tari' sh:il nt ":i:In 1 rv Th.'e b ine a:i th . ini .1like a ir l v. nA wl'n thef c nnecting It ctory fhin. i:t ugt I ftii t'ro'7i1 riii mil i a "i il the .mI'ilier wheels slat. enI ieir s1e, an- with slower noitin the'y turn Ufntil titey come I to at tuli Stop, so this greit nachinery of the Inverse, wheel with t!?Cept:h i.'tkig r vlt o a pp ";I : all;in speeat, hwll by he touch of i's h:td s'i the band _ires 'ot law and slacken and tsop. Tnat .wh it will be the matter with the mount ins. The chariots in which they ride shall'.lt si tuddenly that the king shall be arown out Star after star shall b< carried < ut to burial amid funeral torches oJ burning worlis. Cinstellations shall throw ashes on their heals, and all up and dowt the high ways of space thex e shall be mourn inmorin, htliouning, he::ue of th worlds that are deil. But the Christiat workers sha'l never quii ticir thon Thei shall reign forever and c e. A sherifr Condemned. At Thursday's session of the Execu tive Council of the Americ in Federa tion of Labor held at Washington, D. C., the following resolutions werE adopted: "Resolved. That we declare the at tak of Sheriff Martin and his deputiest at Latimer on the marching miners hea c1 strrke was a brutal unprovoan ed masacre, insired by the coal op erators of that slction to defeat thE demands of the men ft better Cwndi tions. "Resolved, That the ever ready use in late years of court irj motions armed force and state militia in times of labor troubles is only p srt of thE insidious programme to entirely sub j igate the workers of America t)> the most debasing degradation. "R:,solved, That we condemn mo s severely the wanton killing and wounding of the poor miners at Latti mer, and will give our fullest help through the trade unions and the American Federation of Libor, tc raise moneys for the legal prosectutior and conviction of Sheriff Martin and his murderous minions, that througs the courts of our land even handed justice may be done to at>ne for thes< revolting murders." The D-cl ne in silver. The gold editoirs of the co'untry are harping considerab'y on the faill in the price of silqer, and at the same tire pointing to the "bullion value' of the silver dollar, which is now, they claim, worth ermewhere around forv-two cents in gold. There is just one little poi'it cnnected with the qeton which these chaps sem to o'erlock Abouti a year ago, in s'1 ltlicial document, Secretary of the Tr.ns, Johnit G. OutLai sr.-d that the silver dol!ar is not redeenable in gold or in any other kind of money, and that the Treasuryi had nerer r.e deemed it in gold. Iiissmuch as te are not redeemable in gold, nor eve have 'been redeemable int tha:. coin, some of the gold bug editors oght to exlai" -why i'. is that the ballion valun of the ilver d.21ar, wortih .o ially nl forty' t-ro centsa int gold, still ~msintains its eq :ality of value wth gclJ. Way is it. now, breth ie, in view of the fact that the slv~ de1 ar, not redeemavble 'n old has net declinedJ in harm ony "with the raa o' thenvm ul of w'ihi Golidtte's i ettT' 'eare. The proest which the L indcn ba-nkrs dew up at their meeO ing in the clearing hoce Thursd iy against he policy of te governcr of ih~ DtB k ,f Eanrlnd la :nroonciug i's willing nes to maitaiu" one-ti tht of itk bullion re,.rve in sile, r was preserad to the' bank toda'r. TheO resoluti'ifn is ue:omn aied b~ a forral i'itter, and the esoluion itaelf is in tihl nam'e of the clearing ho use associa tion. Alithous h all the members were not repre-entd at the meeting, a misjiiy of the menlership was repre'sen.td arnd unanimously adopted the rzsolution, which is as follows: "That this meeting entirely disap proves of the Bank of England agree n .to exercise the option, permitted by the act of 1884, holding one fifthn or any other portion whatever of silver as a reserve againt the c'rculation of the Bank of E'igland ncies." An organizei~ movement has begun to induce other commercial bodies to protest a.Tganst the announcement of the governor of the Bank of E agland. Torp-do Boat U'ipsz7.8 Tor~edo boat N>. 26i has capsiz'd and suiak near the fiLst lightship cif Cux Haven, eight of iier crew, includ ing her cornmnder, Duke Frederick Willam of Eckitnburg Schwerio, were droivaed. The duoke was toorn in 171, held Ihe rank of lieutenant in the Gernan navy, and was a brother of the Grand D&de of Mecklenburg deherin. A salviie steamer has gone to the scene of diaas'er. F 'v'r o u : Fr-mtPop--r Tn'e ka:hi of the La jiy boay at Beaumont, T1 x is Weitesdiy miorn eg has caus-d consternat:Oa tue-re. Te town is rigidly o'uarantined. The little victim was a newrboy and ban die New ()'leans newspapers. Citi zens are Ileeing to the wood~s for ref uge from the dread dtslase. Sor:y f or Hiann i. Thie fact that Wellingt'io, of' Mary lnd is going to Ohio to speak in the campaignr elicits an expression of sypat'hy for Hanna from Washing ton Post. It s ays Wellington's cham-' pionship of his cause is the most seri ous drawback Senator Hanna has to VI Kv T }:f. ( I " C) *t_. :ATE .c S VIi 1t 7 '; ? t ( f c~ +! 7 7!^,~ The itter of gu!- . i th istm:'e: a~ti ofl( yell >. fl: e' u'm' . thet b-rd s 'nar thor ou i e i ' t) . the intrd.:ein ayelow fver y r e e ; mt tud' ofso-h !(o:s 1 above thes may b y m Lb-1 !".: > retiv sun r fa*iees that Ihe d >er any:' d n.. . on .... .>n by.. such...l.. de. for" Cn 1:e isem his pvilt a ate cane vadon f -5t f~in dt.he de M :d oret. evarris a.iner o the i bralta oas b'enC tcourge ad~~ fChaua nooea w lis bu art exemy : i-i ic t87 fr-on 1 ilt ople~ tfe of our sst 1 S 1:at es a s a may b.. ''1 il. te') r evtc s r r hees athat oI ct-es rnen:)ecsr of p e iso lt o irea fron the yellow ce- r sc r-eins by soc allyt as suc ie i onar b-: re rteatiy, etly ancnomcl peome by. i the Ane J+i us of u arr1.ti t ith rfald:: "TO'W hs bcu aly r)qure ai Ca in) ~ i-tP1_ i1 ;a~ - t S'fron" prt..oI- b such s altrin or~ bot car - +ece ire O at paced iun reitent shelf lie forr and the t eple of cr sstr Sats a teir ca llanity, we would ir ess uon the health authorities ine necessitiy of Pu r; fication of all b lgzaze and household affects of all refgees from the yellow fever stricken r gions, esecialny as suc puriSction can be readily, easily and econmtcuy performed by the use of Numi..tion Yith formaldehyde gas. RThis ny rquires a small tiht apartmen s uch as a small.ror or box car gh fence, wire orsea aced in convenient shelf likb form, and the use of speciaa lamps frvr generating the gas; these lamps are endorsed by all sanitary bodies and are in use dai ly by the q iarantine authorities, and are cheaply secured. iYellow fever prevailed in the New England states and Canada early in the last century and ravaged the tows in New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island. and was especially vio lent among the Indians who were al almost exerminated by its ravages. It was 6s mears after its ravages in Philadelphia, Boston, \.-w York and other places, before it appeared in Charleston. Ofe hundred an sixty years after its anpearace i a the north it appeared in New O:leans. tn ommerville Tenn.O is a town surndho ihdeatifu aren,n thm not her uderse huenor shampslod ate)i~win severalisacswr miesthe waer subjpts frlom are veian resouy unnfeted ytwns. ylow feveri atewa occurodcedo herey frost and mai.aIt asilnt wasig inthe msteroed stiums oftempatur of caroad fhreni pragils, from wnfmerevc cuin a ple fure men whoeandele thbis bay con. tathe werth the disease elvexere qustikn illong fevr.Pitastes h the onl esuent Cofelog the sTate olydsafe bealie, fortesed ofr eltlo tenaiona theat ocurreceofi tieas roti and iepertanot toig te Ceor aaidntin temporatufre movi all tossibfenhi pruevailf bheur cert oer ocuremic. Folan ich tnl Ulnet-.d i~ts arine hospioal beric~ae rea tie fabi ma y cor: tainhgen of C., dSeae t. a9 ve7. Dr James ans, secetary f Sa. Bt wird of rHealth, ha thoe, S.rC. csof datesnf nilege thcli:: that hestate board ofea reltecd abe pleased to the l st heialt ar teso Getdi nst vi~snitarieaso tolo to Clmndedrd the orios ke ofne moprvious aletpr fom cths ofthe.r I caeto vi edyou~ thatowing is the pida eic o yelio.d feve in e outh.r~ ti w i a ~te si forn hos Gad notithe d t te to me nfect By dirs ~s ectfs'reiting ofusen ge'rl f reace hosp rlervce . di:R echilyt yours,~'roLr ~cc~ Gedu Su geoni .eo K S. The ucte cditons edtionte abov ettero aete fromnt ofce Ir GSddino acil itrveingt xpee of living wbf at~~ fectr imh ouege Govewllror Eerbsi e has DsrdGthe board that it woul b~e aidea. D Gedim.s1i. an experta bhcterioloi nCd a~toary sninerm e is nowt I seeral month beoire heia can go to Clemson. heSfcllo nM reoion diticiferedb Dr.Si to n tdop Rooesoledt Tart te inspet of rep reseivngie t Uncite Statema rioevervice erbe bys Sur'irn Genea Weymaelo fuvristedrith an itopy of eerad rmorthsdbupoe the anr gon-o Cdeton ofhCemo colleigesointine lastiard, That o the setor of p teseaivomte of the tdstates boa ofyhathe aismwtpanoy of reet tihe ofUitedf thes mie thatsital edvc and hsporoponsedesaitao con diin Ceson Collegei Jn Tlst as thn cor-ene of themer re tha e sa committee of tedsngta boar oifthealfthebdt accompany the peet Uied f anted expatt mariemsuinas frmed in his pratter, vand was Cun neess io cor te sae ogsornd Trale bad bynsd:.ee, wh apovead Lht a bpodi n fosegistr aion o wil be preste ad to acoegisanture Lits ne t -s eon. Cms-uins Fac tal ea E~c ad, Colreaon. r A trrle hsateand waisonocun-e eare Helea, consther Geogd approla barma~ datroa ueday E lgeer w Jc D.l Youe psad is firea ere atle Coduto G.a R. Bod was badly. ,: ~ ~ i "'il. . C'1i-, t swi;sand U. i .i i e i. i C< : 2 , "hitters e a i i ::lborate r: he r on d tye popular r(ach. erasi n we!!s a:ec emp,r tive y scare * :: -'Iher orce' of wattsis certain y av: aupic::' What is wantuld is :vimas t;:h11 c.. b q iickly apt) el any whe:e and tihat 'T'i ad.nd posit i -e assuiance of i.s < if Cti'etS far th difrne! i any gernus of dis ae whui may b' pr"'sent in the water to aluich it is i lied. Tae Literary Di "-st Sttefs. O: the au hority of the lc N s, t:at such rmeir,s hate b-i. n funrd a d tested ..t. r 'ul:s wh,", 1 Pre co clus iv:e Of i.. t i .cy. 1. of. i k, it rep ris. y out water r::y b- steril:zCd in Snue' b d br.u:'ia to it, :d t. the bro-nia m:a; b mien reu trl z by sd 'in ammonia. "Tne rie-r watr of , s':m his hen tested S:oh 1 di edim-. a dafvr beig r a-d' with bm-nir amonia i wa fe- a rs of disea-:c were in -inihdog? thcse ofcbo!cra (d ty uod." A la 1n oft water, it eis .ined, may be sterli -d by this Senev as :o1lTs: ' First add to it t- rca drops of the fallowing solution: Waeer 1.000 parts, brynia 2) pirts, p:.ta-si brotnid 20 parts; and then, ter tive minu'es, adi three drops of a 9 per cent. solution of ammonia." Tne process, it is adde L. "is recom a ended as a rapid, cheap and effec tip: way to ster:lFze "drinking water for armies. o0 board of ship, in un ht athy localities and for medical and .u.ieti purposes." The so'u tiaus, as will be noted, are used most s parurly --en drops of the two to a aniIn o! water to be treated. A q tart 'vouid list a year. Tne device is "-heaf enough, cart-iinly. It takes e1 ct in ax few minutes, th-re is no lun. dzlsy to dikcxurage its use or to s-;rd an excase fr not using it. Curious Pension Statistica. The Richmond Dispatch, after study ing the pension rolls of the United S:ates d:scovers that 4,000 of these veterans live abroad, in Earop3 and Asia, drawing $600,000 annually from Uncle Sam's treasury. Taere are 12 American pension ers in Belgium, Sin Holland, 665 in Great B:itain, 601 in Germany, 85 in Mexico,. 61 in France and 79 in Switzerland. 'There is one American pensioner in Ely pt, and he gets ,120 a year from the United dtates government. There are two in the kingdom of Siam, six in Tur key and one in the Az ores. There is one American pensioner in Finland. Another resides in E:uidor. ., o.her resides on the Island of Madeira: The country which contributes the larger number of pensioners to the govern ment list is Canada, with a total of 1.SS9. There are 29 in Italy, 1S in Denmark, 37 in Nor way, and 44 in Sweden. In Russia 1# 1-number of pensioners is only six. Tnere is one pensioner of the Uaitel States in Vcn ezuela. but, he cannot be said to rank very high on the scale of Ic >gnition, for he receives on $42 a year. There are three American pensioners in the Argentine. Tnere is one in Roumania. There are nine in Chili and t wenty four in British Columbia. Alaska contains twenty-eight. The Augusta Chronicle truly says the north drew upon almost every nationality to ir. vade and cornquer the south, tne most purely and distinctively American section of the Union. We were ex hausted b7 avoirdupois-weight of meat agaiast us-purchased in every market. Hessianism in the old revo lution was immensely discounted in the war of 1861 65, by our northern brethren. Having, ,by sucha levies, freed the negro, the contest is now on for the emancipation of the white man from a far worse bondage. Tne true history of the late war will not be written until the twentieth century. Even distinguished Union veterans are now admitting that the impending conifict for liberty of the white man at the north will vastly overshado w that of the comb'at ending with abol ishment of negro slavery. The next war will be a peaceful o: e. Ballots will be used instead of bullets, and pensioners will not be one of its re suts. Th Colored College. At a treating' of the trustees of the Sate colored college at O0:angeborg held recently in the G-vernor's office at Columbia it ?'as d~cidad to estab listh departments of printing, dress mnuing ar. coolsing. Miss C. Davis, Oi Clambia, who for the last two C.ears ?as ben instructor of sewing i2 he L -en Presbyteri-an ?chool of Au gutwas elected ie?structor. Tue in tstmtOr in printing will be elected on t-e 29 th oi the month. It is the pur pose cf the board to elect the most :netent nan av-ailable. A corn mittee consisting of Sheritf Bradbamn, Dr. Lowman and Mr. Kortjohn was appointed to make the selection. A ourse of study was adopted mak-ing the entire collegiat-', preparatory and indsrial coutses cw'er a pericd of :eht years. Rales for the govern w-nt of the school and faculty were adopted. Professor Tno-inas, in charge f the music depirtmnent, has resigned his position. Tne position will be dldat the meting on the 29.h of the conth. Practically a new course of tudy was arranged by the board. atin, Greek, French, German, in act, all the languages were dropped rom the curriculum. Forty People Kiilhd, A c3 clone swept over Sava, Ocia ad Latiano, Italy,all in the province f Lecce, Wednesday evening. Forty ersons were killed, seventy people were wounded, t wenty houses were estroyed and telegraphic communi ation with the scene of the disaster was cut aif. At Oria the railway de pot was demolished and all the rail way men engaged there were killed. wo chateaux and thirty houses were estroyed in a neighboring village, where t wenty were killed an d t wenty four injured. At Mesagne, a province f Lacce, fifteen were killed and nye injured._________ shot and Kilk d. A dispatch from Tuscaloosa, Ala., as: J. G. Lellande was shot and in tntly killed by A. Stoneking, a railroad c ntractor, Fri&.2y af ternoon. toneking invited Lellande to take a rik. The latter refused, saying he only drank with gentlemen, wbereu2 n Stoneking drew a revolver and not Lellande in the abdomen. Let lande was a member of Dunee & DL lande Brothers, one of the most exten sive railroad contracting firms in this State. The killing causld intense ex ~itment. Both parities have many friends in Tusetslocsai and the State at lare. Tho Pupe's Hiosehold. A r-ccnt visitor to the Vatican says be Court of Pope Leo XtII comprises .00 persons. There are 20 valets, 20 chambermaids. 300O honorary :amberm aids, 13k) supernumerary :hambemaids, 30 oficers or the noble uard, and 60u guardsmen; 14 cotlicers1 of the Swiss guard, and Palace guard,1 honorary chaplains, 20 priv ate sec-1 retaries. 10 stewards and masters of th horse and 60 doorkeepers_. -H'PPie' V A SEABOARD AIR LINE ORDER NOTIFY." rh. S:ace Au: irt.1-r Cla'm 7h t tht-, Sh'pment W : N.. It Ur uformity With :ht vaudei.cck D cii 'n The c-ostablt-s seized sixty jugs of whinker Thursds v which were con sign'-d to "W. B ~Mie'ze, agent, order notify, Columbia, S. C." Toe sezure was made in arcardar.ce with orders from Governor E ler be after legal ad vic had been obtained from the at torr.ey general's clfic=. Tae sluff arrived here' Wtdneslay nigh': vi t tin Sabard Air Line. and the shipment was revdy for delivery Thuwi iay morning. The corstables m.-.de an exariAa'ion of the shipment, a:.d noti:. that ti l'qu)r had been s'nt "orde-- rotify," at ozee made k o.-n ti at fact to the state authori tie;. As is perhap; known, "order rotify" means ttat the consignee is not in im med iate possession of the bill of lad ing, but that the dealer has sent the bill to some bank or banking institu tion to be given to the cor.signe when the amount of the gcods has been paid. In this event, it was clearly evident that if the delivery of the sixty gal lens was made a sale of the stuff would have been made in South Caro lir and of course, in direct violation of tae dispensary Jaw. Consequently, the only question to have been de cidei was whether an agency existed between the dealer and the consignee. The legal cnstruction on the ship ment c nsigned "order notifv" was that no azen~y existed, and a sale, pure and s'mple, was about to be con samated. The I q for was ordered seized, and (u -Ing tue afternoon t'-.e sixty gallons were sent to the state dispensary. Mr. Metze, the consignee, was seen by a Regis:er reporter, and he said that he knew nothing about the shin inent: that perhaps some mistake bad ccourred for he had never had any dealings with a Paducah, Kentucky, firm from whom the stuff came. Mr. Mee'z i said that he had never received the bill of lading for the stuff, and did not know of its arrival until he heard of the seizure. The state autherities will hold the whiskey subject to further investiga tion. The house that shipped the li q aor may take some action, but it is claimed that the shipment was in vio lation of Ju ige Simontor's decision in the Vandercook case. E tch gallon jug was in a ",eater bucket" packed in strap, the vessel being partly exposed. "O:der notify" means about the same as "C. 0. D.," and the state au thorities contend that the shipment was an open violation of the law. "The authorities concede," said a prominent official Thursday, "that a citizen can ship whiskey for personal use, but inasmuch as this shipment was out of the 'personal use' q'uestion the right on the part of the state to se'z; tne s:uff can hardly be q'ies tioned." Continuing on a different line he said: "My idea is to subordinate all these miner cases to the main issue. I trust that a case involving the ques tion as to whether a non resident has the right to establish agencies in South Carolina for the purpose of selling 'original packages' may be soon pre pared for the su'preme court ct the Ujnitei States in order to settle the question once and for all. So far as 1 am concerned. I wouid like t > see the main case before the highest court in the land before the convening of the legislature so that there will ba no doubt as to which side is right. The decision of Judge Simonton on what is an 'original package' can be carried to the court of appeals. Bat it is quite likely that very soon the facts lin a case involving the main question' will be agreed on, and it may ne that, the case cin be docketed and heard before January 1st. All these subsi diary cases are annoying and result in expensive litigation, and it seems that instead of getting the matter finally adjudicated too much time is being spent on cases which do not touc'1 the material issue." It is q'uite likely that efforts will soon be made by the state authorites to get up a case involving the essential points ab aut non-residents establishing agencies in the state and selling 'ori inals,' ar d carry it at once to the hignest court in the land in order to set at rest so much litigation -olum bia R:gister. A Borrible Deed. A dispatch from Kingstree to The state says what came near beinga fratricide occurred in this vicinity Friday. Theodore McKenzie, a deaf mute of abo-ut 30 years of age, shot is brother, Walker McKenzie, in the face with a shotgun, which, it is said, will c iuse the loss of both eyes and disfiaurement for life. Theodore Mc Ken.-e is said to have been drunk or rinking when he did the shooting and was not over five or six feet away from his brother when he shot him. The gun was only load:d with pow er or instant death would have been he result, as theentire contents of the un was blown into the flesh of the face, tearing and mutilating it in a orrible manner. The wounded man s suffering intense pain and while it s not thought that it will kill him yet he will be of little use t o himself or family the remainder of his life. Trained Sparrows. A barber in Kensington, E 2gland, as trained common sparro ws from he street to fly in and out of his shop. The birds are never molested by the >arber's customers, who have grown s fon 1 of them as the barber himself. Someuimes, when the room is pretty ell filled with the chirping little fellows, the barber will make a s weep ith his hand and pretend to catch a iy. Immediately all the birds will ltter over to him, and perch upon is arms, shoulders, or knees, and atch the hand in which the fly is upposed to be imprisoned. The bar ber pens his hand gradaally, one finger t a time, while the birds sit with eads cocked to one side, expectantly aiting for the priz s. IV there should buppen to be a fiy there, there is a rand rush and a scramble of chirp ng rivals. nyo no w, says a London cablegram, Silver is armer on account of Indian urchases;" and "there are ramors ~hat the India council is buying for ~oinage, and the price has risen sharp y in India." Tne Colu-nbia S:ate ays "the rise of 15 per cent. in the rice of bullion on the rumor that the ndian mints are to be openEd will ~ive cur mo nometalic contemporaries n opportunity which they will doubt ess eagerly grasp, of proving their ~ontention that free cinage itself, nuch iess the expectation of it, cannot aise the price of silver. THE New York Sun belie ves in the old standard and co'nsequently it ralked straight into the Repuiican arty and it is no v a favorite hobby f the Sun to ridicule such papers as he Courier Journal which think like he Sun but had not the courage to go o the only party capable of ernfore'ng hat policy. Tne Sun is not demo ~ratic in its beliefs and now makes1 r Vc, I ai:-' r.o: f . a ? . or The North' ir ps t en as T n ct the thieoi y. tt l y cauld prr Vt by the -ra btte S U h1 is rr ovine for xvrd ir, tie mit er of iur. i-T the ra - mtriA of thissf e ion i r1 1I:h Fr nriced mai u'acu -td j o:ds. The Mail atd Expreis, which has of late been more liberal in tietirg S .u'hern questions, sa3s: "A, no tine sicce the States of the South, casting off the lethargy that folloxed the awful re suits of the civil war, be n to c 'n pete with th North and E ist in man uracture. have the statistics of te mills of Dixie been so elcquent as at present of progress and p:uwis . As cottoo is the great s1aple in pruduc tion. so must cotton manufacture by come and remain the great fe.tere cf industrial sctivity, its depression or prosperity indicaticg larg-ly the gen eral condition of the people. Statistics iow at hand show, for instance, such comparisons as the following for Ala bama, North and South Carolina. Ge~rgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Ten nessee and Virginia combined: In 189:), number of spindles. 1 533,250. in' 1)7, 3,451 631 Approximate increase, 120 per cent. The in fience of rail road development in this increase is shown by the fact that on the line of the Southern Railway are lccated 243 cotton mills out of a total of 434. rep resenting 52 per cent. more spindles than ex sted in 1S90 throughout the entire South. Well may the ante bellum visitor to the South gaz ; in wonder upon what he fi ids there to day, and cease to marvel at the steady conversion of DIxeland from the heresy of free trade to the doctrine of protection for the American manafac tuier." Dr Whitsitt in Hot Water. There is little doubt now that the attempt to force the resignation of Dr. Wbitsitt, president of the South ern Baptist Theological. Seminary of Louisville, Ky., and the boycotting of that institution will result ins divis ion of the Scuthern church into two organizations. Toe developments in the controversy, which has raged for some time, and during the last three weeks has assumed a more sinister aspect, render such a result almost in evitable. The B aptist associations have been holding their sessions in differ ent parts of Kentucky and the s'rong est resolutions condemning Dr. Watt sitt, demanding his resignation, and withdrawing all support from the in stitution unless he leaves it,have been passed in all of them. In nearly every case such resolutions have been ad opt ed almost unanimously, but in the Long R n Asscciation,which has just concluded its sessions, which were at tended by several thousand persons each day, tht Whitsitt minority was stronger, and the proceedings were characteriz ed by a degree of tur bu lence and rancor unexampled in the history of the church. Delegates stood on benches and roared themselves hoarse, using language which might have been expected only in a red not political convention. The resolutions were passed, however, by a decided majority. In a speech made the next day, the Rev. Francis W. Taylor characterized the methods of their adoption as "disgraceful" and said he had "sat with bowed head, ashamed that his brethren and professed fol lowers of Christ should lend them selves to such an exhibitioa of tem per-" D.:ath of Officer Wolfe. Offi er J. D. Wolfe, who was shot sometime ago crv~r in the Fork, by a negro despdrado he was trying to ar rest, died on Tuesday night of last week. Mr. Wolfe was getting on very nicely and it was hoped that he was on the road to recovery, when "secondary hemorrhage" fro-n the wound took place and he died in a few minutes. It will be remembered that Mr. Wolfe was .shot by a negro known as John Washington, alias John Butler, while attempting to ar rest the negro, armed~vith a warrant and being an officer of the la w. Mr. Wolfe was a man past 5) years of age and leaves a widow and a number of children. He was very popualar in Orangeburg and has been considered the bravest and most trustworthy po liceman on the fonrce. He has held his position for about fifteen years, which fact will prove that the city of 0:ange burg has lcst a faithful and valuable polica officer. The negro who did the shooting has not yet been capturEd, although every effort has been made to find the man. The night of the shooting a posse was sent into the country to search for him, bat he could not te found. Since that time rotice has been sent out to various placies for the autniorities to be on the lookout for nim. and now there stands a re ward of $l00 hanging over hrs head. It is to be hoped that the p01cc will realize their expecta tions and the negro wilt be appre hended and made to pay the lull pen alty &. his crime-Times and Damno crat. A Ronaway 15 y. The News and Courier, of last Tuursday, says: "Mr. Edward Lee, of O:angeburg, is very anxious indeed to learn something of the whereabouts of his son Justice, who lef t home in the early rart of last J ane. About the 4 h of June, Justice, a lad of some 16 years of age, iesolved to give up home and friends and see what pro gress he could make battling with thae world. For weeks and weeks his family knew nothing whatever of the whereabouts of the lad They made diligent irqiiries from all parts of the country, bu' Justice was on to the ways of the world far better than his father ever dreamel of an-i meceeded in keeping his identity a orumund se cret wherever he hanpentd to go. Sev eral days ago the Orange burg citizen learned that Justice had been seen~ in Charleston. He immediately seo- a long communication to Chief of Pui~e - Martin, begging the chief to keep oni the loout for the young runaway and if possible arrest him and ho1 - him until he could be restored to his family. Justice is 16 years old. He has blue eyes and rather dark hair, He is small for his age and wore a straw hat the day he left home. Chiet Martin will do all he can to find young Lee. and if the ladi is i-u Charles ton the police will lik..) rua across him" Died la J ,1i. The Danmark Times of the 21 in stant, says: "Early on Friday . '-n ing last Brakeman Metts, in t. le freight service on the Charleston Jide, liscovered a negro stowed a w ty on bis train, wh'o gave the r-an of harles CIhip-nv, and i ea tt he lived "beyond Blackvi-ie." He car ried a bundle, which, upon investiza tion, was found to contain the uni ~orm of a private in tie Blackville 3uards and a box of ci:ars. Chap nan could give no sauisfac'.ory ex :lanation of how these articles came nto his possession, and Mr. Metts took aim into custody. When the train rrived at Denmark, lie started with. 2i prisoner to the guardhouse. Oa he way Cnapman mtde a savage at-: ack upon his captor, and started to V >reak away. To protect himse-lf the - rakeman drew his pistol and fired at Jhapman, the ball takiag ecf ect in his: ung. In the morning he was taken!1 o jail at Brrnwell, where he died Sat-I aday morning." Ruyal maike.- the food pure, whIlesome und <kclicijus. F OYA kKIN POWDER Absolutely Pure ' AL SAKNC 'OER CO., EW YORK. The Free sliver a gitation. The gcld bug advocates of high and lcw degree are eternally in a state of terror lest "confiderce" be destroyed and the hoped for era of prosperity indefinitely postponed. If a man who believes in silver opens his mouth in defecce of the white metal he is charged with being a "repudiator and r dis'urber of public confidence." All goid bugs are awfully opposed to "ag. iPa-ion," unless they are allowed to do it all, and every time one of their prcpicies fail, as all of them do soon er cr later, they attribute the failure to somo r e:rid thing said by sore sI1 v -rite. But when has a gold bug fail ed to agitate when be could gain any thing thereby. Perhaps our esteemed gold bug cotemporaries in this State o'uld tell us. "The truth is," as the N .:ional Bimetallist puts it, "the gold min got- in th -ir work secretly and ce nonetized silver without h iting. anybody know it but themselves. Of course silver could not be restored without discussion and argument, or, as they choose to term it, "agitation." Ncr can any reform be inaugura'ed without "agitation." Those who are the beneficiaries of a wrong are near ly always opposed to its undoing and any effort to that end is character'z d opprobriously as an "agitation." Blt when they make an effort to increase their advantages that is more elegant ly designated a "m-vement for re form." The silver men have "agita ted" and will continue to do so. The go'd men have "agitated" and will probably never cease until they are overwhelmingly beaten. B it there has always been a marked difference between the methods of the two class es. The silverites have fought openly and fairly. They know what they want, why they want it, and honestly give their reasons. The gold-bugs on the other hand, have invariably fought under cover. There is not a leading advocate of the gold standard in the United States whe dares to pub licly give his true reason for demand ing that gold should be retained as the sole metallic base of our monetary system. We hope the advocates of free silver will not allow theniselves sidetracked. Keep the matter before the people, and silver will win after awhile, and then, and not before, will general prosperity bless our now pros trated industries. Right for Once It is a pleasure, says the National Bimetallist, to be able to note that for once, just to break the monotony, the gold mnen are partially right. After shouting for years that lovr prices, cheap things, were a "G~dsend," "an unmistakable evidence of advancing civihization," etc , they at last recog n'zn the correctness of the silver men's position that falling pric s are an evil ard rising markets essential for pros perity. They are gleefully proclaim ing tnat the Ameri::an farmer will realize so and sO many millions by the rise of wheat, and that with the .d vance '-prosperity has da vned." Dir ing twenty-four years of generally falling prices they constantly insisted hat despite that fa'ct the farmer was better otr than he had ever be be fore, No v be has reached a still high er grade of prosperity because his wheat hss gone up and other thiags are going. Toe funny part of is is that they actually seem to to think that they and tne g~ld stand ard are entitied to all the credit for it. Of course, they don'L say that they and the gold staudard, aidea and abet ted by the Diogley lan, blighted the erops of India, Argentine and E trope, and t eva the first named into the armfs of a famine which it is estim tted has carri d 8.000,.000 of Deople-in pre mature graves. Tois last claim they might make, but they don't. Still, if ttie.y had in fact done it all, they could not strut art~u ad with more of Fal statfi ia p ide a'ud self assuraence. Bit our purpose no v is un~t to p>Ant out the groteig te in their 9:28.., ou. to admit that they are right in claiming that the farmer is the gainer by thie rise of wheat. Beate KiLrdik-s. A farmer of South Santa Fe coua ty, New Mexico, while sinking a tu> utar well struck a gold q iartz rock at a depth of 350 feet, wmtch was fi y feet thick and every foot was rich witn free gold. Some of the nug;gets were as large as grains of wheat, SECRETARY Hester, of the New' Or leans cotton exchange, rec >gn?'z d as the best authority on the ctt~n busi ness in the south, tells us that the nuu-ber of mills and the number of spindles in this sectija bave t. crad, ih it the visible supply of the~ etap'e i< I~S this year than lt and ttba: tb e home cnsu:np~ioa is ling; to bi greater. Thi;, coupiad wi--h thi rcught in Iadiaua cu:ting off tus crop there, and the prosperity of the Western wheat prod ucers e larg i g the demand here, ought to give ou r prod ucers a good price for their crop. WarrT Oua FARMERS LosE -Che Augusta Garon-le s sys: '-*f cotton is S 50 a bale c if, cmpare d with 1ast year's prices, at this time, that mea~as the planters have $76,500,000 less t> s end than they had in the year 183M, based on a 9.000,000 bale crop and a :ntinuance of present rates." And u ur gold cotemporaries claim tha: our farmers are more prosperouis no w :an they have been in years. They :now such talk is silly and only in iulge in it as an excuse for their cap >rt of the gold standard. A GooD REsmursos -I2 answger o0 a call issued by Johast()ie .lianc e, meeting was held in Neavberry oa c'iday to consider the prics of c~ttoa, ~tc. More than 100 farmers attended t, and a na-naar of maants ani nea of ot.ier professions A resolu :on was ad ypte~I that if every farmer siln pradau:e oa his farai the su.2plies aeded and use p-oper econo21y, in he course of time this method would >econe a great iuduxence in ragulat