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- 14WB182P PRIE $1.50 A YEAR NEWBRR,S- X EIEDY ETME 4 O.MsIti uWith the LeadUin from New York Sun, Sth.3 dinner given by the Hon. Wil . Whitney at his home, 2 West = -nth street, on Tuesday even to number of Democrats asso v wIth him In the inagemenlt of .feveiaud's campi n was the fore -, topic of discussion at National headquarters yesterday. Scovers werelaid, and among sat at the board were-Henry nrC" Stewart Brice, ~pia.eter-general- Don Manuel f n nyn, apd Herrman Bidder, pub - bbr f theStansZeitunig.and several embe of tthe National Committee. 3aRitationswere sent out last week, vere-si by M. Whitney. softhe6dinner, amid the 'ng loudletfrom some of the ex 8 sa fattest.cigars, tbe main ob ' tof the dinner were exlaustively red. In the first place Mr. eyt Mr. Dickinson, and others that money was-needed for Up to date the ,nhave not been iberaL The zt. ry: g was elicited that this was gely to the belief that:Mr. Cleve had-not become altogether cordial r oselaton with a number of the Demoeratic leaders in New kState: and elsewhere. In ot'f :' therehad been a noticeable dis to fill Brother Harrity'9 = = euntil all of the Democraticlead s ere in full aecord as to the man of the campaign. --,he subject next discussed by Mr. toeY and his friends was the rela ;of tr. Cleveland toward some o s _erfuDemocraticleaders,amonl tte :Senator David B. HiiL. Mr and-several of his guests hat =recent guests of Mr. Cleveland al 6 Fay Gables. Their -testimony -waU by no communication of any kin( Cleveland expressed a desirl tpeet Senator Hill, Senator Qorman n the When this subject ha broched to the ex-President hi . x iUg response has been that h "-. ::nominated in opposition to th ofthese and other Democrati and that he believed he coal along without their services. I - bvea did not wish to take - hieb,-i his estimation, woul hisfriends in the indepeno a, cmp was- learned that. Mr. Whitne. andSenator Carl red to influence the e t.on this feature of the situ It was pointed outthat if Pres 4uHrilsS ecould afford to prai in his letter of acceptant ex-Senator Thosas C. Pratt 1 4bhsnd, to sit at the same dinn ~4bewith Gen. James S. Clarkson,.a .io~ope ordial relations with oth4 4~wh4ittelP~Pos:his renomninatit ..,A*Ineaplisex.Presdent Cevela: imenotb averse to consulting w ~".SentorHill, Senator Gorman, a Sothers. Their conspicuous services ~ homemecratie party, It was inii - by some of Mr. Whitney's guel eatitled them to this distinctit It was also brought'- out tl )fr Clveland's .attitude on t.h ma~tas had: greatly embarras Edward Murphy, Jr., Chairman of Democtatic State Committee. Lie SGoveror Sheehan, Chairman of StateCampaignCommiti - Iehard Croker, Hugh McLaugh and other leaders. The friends of. GOveland at Mr. Whitney's table equmsd the unpleasant situation In atfeatures. It was finally decided to send Dicknson Immediately to Mr. Cl land at Buzzard's Bay and to -; qest his presence in New York. Dickinson departed from Mr. W awfa homie ina rush. He hurrie aI hotel, changed isa evenMng d - d took the midnight train Tuel - for Boston. He was commissioni ask Mr. Cleveland to return with and put up at the Victoria I where Mr. Whitney and others ( have freaccess to him to-day. BUzzABS BAY, Mass., Sept. ~ ,Dickinson arrived at Buzz skDy -this morning. He was, -? at the new Gray Gables station on ~ ood's Holl branch railroad b3 4+evelanld carriage and driven ra: S to Gray Gables. He remained ir owne~ne with the e:r-President thr< esrg~t the day. When Mr. Dickinson left tow> plght Mr. Cleveland went with b CLEVELA ND IN NEW YORK. Ng~w YoRK, September 8.-I (and drove to the Victoria Hotel, - e engagedl rans for to-day Oprow. He will retlirn tc lard's Bay on Saturday. Hi! esller to-day was Senator Browi S tter was soon after joined by's ?.BIssenl and D. Cady Herrick three had a long conference wit ~x-Fresident. senator Brown said to-day t< prter; "I have rao doubt that 8 ~llwill come around all right, all who were opposed to Clev< nomination. Hill may be coni peuliar, but he will be found right place when the campaig1 Te Democrats are getting t< everywhere, and the outlook bright" William C. Whitney had a lo versationi this morning with:] Murphy, Jr., in the Hoffman .nd afterward went over and ws ~i with Chairman Sheehan Democratic committee. At 7.30 p. in., Lieutenant (G Sheehan, Richard Croker and. M py Were the distinguisl )O. who, as far as could be learned, made the first call on Cleveland since his ar rival. Whitney's messenger had been around the hotel from early in the eve ning. He was non-committal as to whether Whitney was up-stairs. He said, however, that he had been with the Ex-President since 2 o'clock. There were six distinguished Demo erats who sat down to dinner at 7.45 o'clock to what all orthodoc Demo crats hoped would be a love feast. One of the latest arrivals at dinner wasWil son Russell, of Buffalo,Cleveland's old time law partner. He reached the hotel at 9.05 and proceeded at once to the dining hall. Senator Brice sent up b's card and received a reply that Cleveland was at dinner-and .hat the card would be pre sented in a few minutes. He did not wait. He said, however, that he did not attach any special significance to the dinner. "Of course," he added,"where big fish splash in the water there will always be more or less ripple. I see, however, no cause at the pr.sebt tim for any fireworks." Those present at the dinner were Cleveland, Richard Croker, Lieuten ant Governor Sheehan, Edward Mur phy, Jr., Don M. Dickinson and Wm C. Whitney. A still later arrival wa Richard W. Gilder. Dinner was not concluded until 11.31 o'clock. Whitney said they had very pleasant dinner, and that Cleve land and all were well pleased wit] the outlook. From all that could be gathered frot various sources the result of the con ference that lasted until midnight'rw that a treaty of peace was signed bE tween the two factions of the Der 'ocracy in the State and it is sal that Senator Hill and his represent tives have been placated and the Sei ator will speak in the coming can paign. Cleveland's plans are not se ted. ~ He will probably remain at U hotel until to-morrow night aad pe haps later. I FUBLICANs TRYLNG TO NOVE B 5 A State Convention to be Caned-Talk e Johnson for Governor and Now e he is to be Elected. c d [Special to Greenville News.] a CHARLESTON, S. C., Sept. 8.-Il a learned from reliable sources here ti d a call will be issed in a few days I- the assembling of a State Republic convention at Columbia on Septem1 r, 29th. It is also learned that a seri< i effort will be-iiade there to nomin -a Stateticket and it is said the pa - has pretty well settled upon Thon - B. Johnson, the collector of this p se as an available candidate for goverr e, Those who are engineering the Jol )y son boom say there are 65,000 ne er voters registered and that if these id be brought to the polls they will el ra Johnson owing to the lack of inte >n which usually prevails among ad whites at a general election. They th John'son has popularity with all cia ad and is wealthy and willing to sp to his money. ed _ _ _ _ its, he Cheap Excursion to Washingt4 st [Wilmington Messenger, Sept.2d me The cheap excursions to Wash ,ed ton, D. C., by way of the Atlantic(C the Line, are creating a great deal c mt. terest, and the indications are tl the big crowd of people in and art se, Wilmington. and elsewhere on l, line, will take advantage of the M*r. rates to take a trip to the Nati ds- Capital and to Baltimore, Phil all phia, New York and other North. It has already been annou Nir. that the cheap rates are offered c ave- count of the encampment. of re- Grand Army of the Republic at V Mr. ton but, of course, the excursion hit- are-offered to the general publ d to well as G. A. R. men. Tickets y ress on sale from September 18th t( day inclusive, and will be good retu d to until and including the 10th of him ber. [otel The rate for the round trip ha: ould xed at onpfare, and as there has some inquiry in regard to the ii -on we are authori&ed to state that ard's sengers will have the priv' ege ti met over at all points beyon Veldc the proceed on their journey at an; the until the limit of the ticket e: pidly This wi give a splendid oppor con- to those who desire to stop ovi ugh- visit the battlefields along the -including the battlefields arouni a to- mond and at Stoney Creek,]1 m. Station, Five Forks, Hatchers' Graveley Run, Lee's Mill, M lv-Hill, Seven Pines, Fredil .e-ChancellorayDile, the Wilderne where other historic spots. nd The cheap rates by the Coas Busi which is the shortest and ~ he route North, will afford a gi . Thn portunity to the Northern n eThe service will be double dail T he through. Pullman palace bufte he ing cars, and the trip will b ~omrfotable as one could desire, enator -rh Irs Decuining. iland's The last Irish census shows a sideed$ of population since1881I0f 470,( tin the number of foreigners has i a ends. hiefly owing to the large imir >gether of Russiani Jews. The MF is very have increased about 13 per.e Roman Catholics have deer og con- per cent., the Episcopalianis61 Edward and the Presbyterians 5 per ce House, the Roman Catholic clergy scloset- creased. The Irish language of the dying out. Ten years aigo 64 iple spoke Irish only. In 1~ Edward who could speak Irish and red trio and last year there were onl3 AN( EXCITIN(G TEXAS CAMIPAIGN. A Ri Five State Tickets Now in the Field and ce Another to be Nomiaated. [New York World.] Texas is in the throes of the most t exciting political campaign in all ta cl her history, not excepting the one e following the Davis carpet-bag re- c giue or the well remembered cam paign of 1867, when prohibition was the foremost issue and so many d old-time Texans were unable to tell "where they were at." There are now five complete State tinkets in the field-two Democrats, each claiming to be regular, a people's party ticket, a prohibition ticket and a ticket known as the Lily White, rep-0 resenting, when it was put in the field, the majority of the white Republicans of Texas, who think it is not in good form for them to be subject to the iron clad orders of a negro boss. On the 12th instant another State convention will be held-that of the regular Repub licans, whose organization is controlled by Boss Cuney, colored, who is Mr. Harrison's distributor of patronage in Texas, and who cast the thirty votes at Minneapolis for Mr. Harrison that practically secured his nomination. 3 The Democratic row in Texas is purely a family affair in which the 3 World does not take sides as far as the I State issues involved are concerned, and it is good to know from excellent authority that it will not have the effect of reducing the Democratic pres idential vote, as both Clark and Hogg men are to a man zealous and true sup s porters of the national ticket. It is '- quite likely, in fact, that the bitter con - test between these two factions will d serve a good purpose so far as the - national ticket is concerned, in that - it will draw to the polls every straight democrat in the State entitled to vote, t- and thus in large measure offset and ie very likely over-balance the vote here - tofore democratic that the people's party will secure. The lowest estimate of Cleveland's plurality that has been made by any man whose judgment is worth anything is 100,000, and that is of enough for all practical purposes. Much interest is taken in the action of the forthcoming straightout Repub lican convention. As before said, both Democratic factions are united in the at earnest support of Cleveland and Ste a venson, and no trades will be made or with Boss Cuney or any other leader of any party or faction that will be cal culated to cause the Democratic na tional ticket the loss of a single vote. .te But all Texas are interested in Cuney's n convention because of the bearing itt action will have on State politics Irt, The St. Louis Globe Democrat, whict nr. is really the organ of the Texas Repub n- licans, urges the convention to indorsc gro George Clark, one of the Democrati An -candidates for governor, while man! Texas Republicans favor the nomina tetion of a straightouit republican ticket eand others still, notably the negro poli ayticians, would prefer that Governc nd Hogg should be endorsed. ndBut it really matters little wha newspaper organs or individuals ma desire, because the long and short of: ' will be that this convention will simpJ registe rthe will of Boss Cuney andi ildowhatever in his judgment wl nK most tend to increase the bitterness ax widen the breach in the Democrat in-ks. iat a The outcome of the State election and problematical. The Hogg men insi the that their favorite will be re-elected low a large plurality, the Clark men ma] moal a similar claim for their candidal .e-while the people's party claims t: iids earth and incidentally the election need their ticket headed by Judge Nuges na- Each supports the claimi by an imp the igarray of figures, ash - The campaign, although intens' ats-bitter, is not without humor. Jud dIlbeClark, who is a dignified gent il man and a lawyer both brilliant a 7 profound, is pictured by Hogg orat rnin to rural audiences as a great corpo 3co- tion shark and as "the attorney of the railroads in Texas but one." been is declared to be the arch enemy of been "dear people." The Clark orators attr', the country people that Hogg pas worked enormous injury to the Si stotopby organizing and fathering legislai andndthat has driven capital from it and v timetailed Immigration, notably the. a pies land law, and the radical railroad c unit d missinlw which has recently 1 rad declared unconstitutional by the 1 rout, ted States circuit court as the a [Rich- land law was not long ago by the Te Run, supreme court. aivenIn the large tcw as and cities ven Clark orators add to their tale of sbbug' the charges that Hogg eats with ss aandknife, and that at a mass meetin Dla, the metropolis of the State cine drank out of a pitcher when he n tickest have used a tumbler that was p1 od op-op beside the pitcher. arkrets.The Lily Whites have for a ci iy with date for governor, Colonel Houst stepslep-on of the immortal hero of the Al juust as He was nominated some months as a protest against negro domina and stands on a platform one plai which denojinees the force bill, deecline vote will be very light, as the 3. ThTpoliticians look upon him with 'reedeasd ring contempt and declare that tio ionmerely the figure head of "de odiststswhite trash" of the G. 0. P., wh t.t.Theesore because Boss Cuney has not assed 10 them the offices they wanted. nt cet,thermore, many who enrolled1 er . But selves under the Lily White b haveveiin-lready show an inclination to' isisaalsoand follow the lead of Boss Cune )0() peo- negro pap distributor and only 11 therherecognized by Mr. Harrison as a re 885,000 lieutenant. English,Colonel Houston has also lost 642,000.by showing himself a poor marl t the recent encampment of State ilitia the colonel shot at a fellow offi r and hit a tree. The Lily Whites turn the compliments showered upon iem by the straightouts by calling iem "niggers," and at their conven on a delegate, who had previuusly tended the Cuney eonvettion to boose delegates to the Minneapolis )nvention, arose and apologized for ppearing in the Lily White assem age without having bad his clothes isinfected. The Spirit of Iutolerace. LAbbeville Press and Banner.) There is abroad in the laud a spirit f Intolerance which is unprecedented this~eountry. As a rule the people of the country eem solidly arrayed against the peopli f the town, and especially againt ll persons who do no hold tc he political views of the majority o he people of this State. No matter what the merit of the in ividual, his merit, his ability and hi: rustworthiness goes for naught if hi does not pronouce the shibboleth, an no matter what his purposes or wha his claims may be, he is regarded as public enemy if he does not fall dow: and worship their idol. Although the National Bank of At beville has yearly loaned the farmer of this county sums of money abe equal to their capital stock, yet the e: istence of that institution is regarded a public calamity, and asa consequen the demand is made that its doors I closed. Although there is not a merchant i this town who has not aavanced to ti farmers money and goods far in ezce of his own estate, yet the merchan are regarded as public enemies deser ing of no consideration. Although hundreds of unfortuna debtors have been, in the past, ula to meet their bills and pay their he and mortgages, yet, as far as we kno not a single debtor has been pressed the wall by any merchant. On I contrary, the merchants of the difi ent towns have renewed the obligatic and "carried" the farmers in some stances, for years, thus inconvenienc themselves and imperilling their o credit and their own estates. Best this there is scarcely a merchant w has not loaned out his goods on insa cient security, trusting more to the h or and integrity of his customer ti to the security, and there is not a m chant in our acquaintance-who has had reason to regret such act in tri ing some individuals, yet, as a r those who have failed do pay their; and honest debts and sometimes n pronounced in their intolerance of f chants and bankers. In cases of misfortune, the unlc individual or his friends, have ofter pealed to the citizens of the towns pecuniary aid to make good lossea fire or dpiain by the deaths of rIn many cases, and perhaps a hem, the unfortunate individual not been sent away empty, and ye t ay we do not know of the recipie y such favor, who is not solidly arr: a gainst his benefactors. The people of the towns have< d helped to build churches In the cou: - and in return for this, there is sem ac amember of any church in the cot ws ho has not joined the crusade ag at the people of the towns. Hundreds of persons in ne me oney have been accommodate te, citizens of the towns, and while have paid interest, yet it is ofi of great accommodation to get was w ant, even when paying for it. t.These are only a few of the fact ccur to us. The town people never been otherwise than friend Lge tcountry people. They have a d esired the respect and good i n their neighbors, and they are i a scious of having done anything rasould excite the enmity and illi alteir neighbors. They are so: Hee rcognize the existence of the p thsirit of intolerance, and they are ben beto account for the action of h ho are indebted to them. War hate the town people by their debtor! not always be profitable, and sec aon- nagging may finally awaken a ur-enssonding spirit ou the part of enm-who are indulging their adversa een While all sorts of warfare ha . - ade on the people of the tow len are glad that we know of no slin sta stnce of retaliation on the part citizen in town. the Tr=th. hisi LDr. Cuyler.) g at The wbl-built Christian is h: , he ous in all his parts. No one trait bight another. He is not a jumble o aced sistencies-toay devout, to frivolous; to-day liberal to onJ mndi- to-morrow niggardly toward on, a to-day fuent in polite ifalseho amo' does not keep the fourth coi aggo ment on Sunday and break ti ~tion, commandment on Monday. uk of not shirk an honest debt to ~His donation. He is niot in favor of negro ance for other folks and a glae with- ror imself. He does not exnor heheiisaat' eh of the few meetings hi pooor to uaake up arrearages for i o araremmetings which he neglects. given not consume his spiritual ful Fur-- revival seasons and be as cold them- Zembla during all the rest of anner nor do his spiritual favors ou desert well ordered conversation. man T an ris in the morning w Tastaste in the mouth and no Texasinnicates that the stomac strengthening. For this purp vots sote snthing better than .anc - an an do f Aver's Pills taken at TAxse MORTGAGE RETURNS- are it Valuable Statistics From the Census Offce cot --Most of the Encumbrances for Far chase Honey and not Indications un of Distress. ~~ fac (Washington Star.) fa The census office investigation of ft, mortgages and farm and home proprie torship, under the supervision of George de K. Holmes, is, so far as the collection an of statistics is concerned, nearly com pleted, and a great deal of the statisti cal work of the inquiry has been tabu lated. An examination and analysis of st the statistics already obtained and of the bulletins put out by the census office leads to and warrants some in teresting deductions and conclusions respecting the subject of home and farm ownership and mortgage encuni brance in this country. The labor in volved in this inquiry will never be comprehended outside of the census office itself. Many hundreds of special t agents have been employed in every county in the United States, hundreds e upon hundreds of clerks have been employed in the office and many mil lions of schedules and slips containing the returns have been received and n filed away. It has been found that during the ten years, 1880 to 1890, the real estate mortgages made in the Un inted States inumbered 9,000,000, but these are not all existing mortgages, it as has been erroneously stated. In re gard to every one of these mortgages a 5 report was obtained covering a variety 0 of particulars and in the aggregate re quiring an incalculable amount of labor. n It has also been ascertained for near ie ly all of the 12,690,152 families of the United States whether each one owned or hired the farm or home It occupies, v- and, if owned, whether it Is subject to encumbrance; and if so, report has been te received in a principal proportion of e cases as to the amount of encumbrance, the rate of interest borne by it, the reason why it was -incurred, and also o the value of the farm or home. There e are also many details of information in * regard to the head of each hiring s family. When tabulated this descrip in- tion will disclose, among other things, to what extent the colored people have become owners of farms and homes; h how far ownership is -invested in o wives; at what age ownership has more generally been acquired; whether the on- circumstances of unmarried persons are in such as to lead considerably to owner r ship; whether the Irish or Germans have been more successful in becoming st owners, and so with the Italians, the e, Swedes, etc.; whether the Germans have acquired a longer or shorter resi st dence in the country than the Irishman er- has before owning his farm or his home, and so with people of other nativities. The tabulation will disclose to what ap- extent the citizenship of the foreign for born is related to their ownership, and by establish a comparison, between the -sexes in the ownership of farms and: 1fhomes and the dependence of owner as ship upon the various occupations 01 asthe people. o- This is the richest field for statistics citof work in social scienee thai any governJ yed ment has ever before entered. It call for as much labor as was involved n tten any United States census prevliius ti try, that of 1850, and in this respect Is ne eely exceeded by any census previous t ity that of 1870. The units, for whic1 inst prescripti has been obtained,.area numerous that the printing of aboi Iof 70,000,000 blanks has been neessa by alof thm to behanded atlat a f they times and a large proportion of the: ena any times. wHighly interesting and unusual r htsults will come from this investigatic have in regard to the affairs -of the pe baewithin a domain never before entera yy to by the census office. There has bet lways much assumption that mortgage i 1l of debtedness is forced upon debtors, at ncon- that they have had a sort of Hobsol which choice with the terrors of the mortga will of as one alternative and some misfortu y to otherwise to be suffered as the oth< resent The census office investigated this uua- all parts of the country and enon those has already been published complete fareon to dispel these popular notions. Il m ay now demonstrated that the making nstnt a real estate mortgage is just as voli crre- tary an act in almost all cases asi those act of a man who begins a busin ries undertaking, the result depeno; bben chiefly upon his judgment and fc ns -we sight, as well as upon his equipm3 gle in- for success. Reference to the bullet of ny that have been issued by the en office shows that, generally speaki - from two-thirds to nine tenths ofi estate mortgage indebtedness was curred to secure the purchase mo: . rol of real estate and to pay for real es shaes improvements, the chief item of wi con onsists of new buildings. Even in ooorolder parts of the country these prol e as,tions hold good. When to these oerposes of indebtedness are added 11 ds e ness purposes and the purchase maand- various articles of personal prop4 eihigt such as farm stock and machines, He does of trade, etc., almost the entire make a estate mortgage Indebtedness is m-conted for. The percentage of debt incurred for these purposi rrygenerally from 85 to 95 per cent. at.nsreal necessities that are discover< bmoethese statistics are expenses ic He does for sickness and food, to replace1 lduiincurred in farming and various< asin iioaitems which are included in th~ ashov tmcriptioni of farm and family expe trnhThe proportion of the indebtednless to these cases is rarely as great as cent., and generally ranges from:I hthabd per cent. ppepetie, Having established the volua nees arcter of mortgage indebtednes asaonl ensus statistics next establish tb for the most parr, egiLua, -L A is incurred for the purpose of ac nplishing undertakings and promot enterprises which are generally dertaken by sensible men endeavor to support themselves and their nilies and to accumulate property a rainy day; that is to say, these Ltisties warrant the conclusion that y debtedness, if entered into with mo ration and judgment, is a good thing, b d that the development of the United s ates has been promoted beyond cal- 1 lation by means of it. Take the Y arvelous growth of Chicago, for in- t ince. From 1880 to 1889 the real tate mortgage debt incurred yearly Cook County, in which Chicago is tuated, increased about five times, itil in 1889 a mortgage debt of $86, 3,365 was incurred. The existing ortgage indebtedness in that county $161 per capita, while in the State of inois outside of Cook County it is r3. The increase in the population in iat county during the last decade was 19. per cent. against a general in rease of 24 86 for the whole country. t. Louis presents the contrast of a city rhose growth in population has been nly slightly greater than that of the rhole country, the percentage for the lecade being 2S 89. In this city the zisting debt per capita is $91, or not nore than half of what it is in Cook ounty, Illinois. Alumni of South Carolina College. The Alumni Association of the South Carolina College, at its last an aal meeting, commissioned the un ersigned committee to prepare an ad dress to the alumni. For nearly one hundred years the South Carolina College has been the educational centre of this State. Much that is grand, many glorious lives are recalled by its name. No village or hamlet in South Carolina, however ob scure, has been beyond its influence ; its graduates have done much to make the history of the State great and to keep it so ; around its past cling many tender memories. Its ancient reputation must be maintained, and this support should come with all the strength and influence of two thousand alumni, who are useful citizens of thii State. From the r any changes in Souti Carolina sinee reconstruction the Souti CarolinaCollege has not escaped, and re cently the report hap gone abroad tha it has been permanently injured by it last reorgaization. To correct-this pis apprehension is the purpose of thi address, the solemn and no less sacre obligation of her Alumni. Lukewarn friendship and support may do mox harm than open warfare, and man old students of the South Carolin College are lukewarm in love and char of work in her behalf, because the have been told that this is no longi the South Caroliria College of the pas We, who have at various times sat:i the feet of her instructors-some rus yet young and but shortly depart' fromher care, some of us of an old Sgeneration, whom she cherished aa-befum days-wish in all sinceril and earnestness to assure you that b Scapacity for public service has not be< Simpaired. Solicitude for her welfs has induced us to examine for 01 selves her courses and her metho< 0At no time has her organization Sthorough collegiate education, ra 0thorough training of mind and hei it been better. The gentlemen of ~Faculty maintain a high standard honor and scholarship, a heritage fr their illustrious predecessors ; her s dents are earnest and diligent; -young graduates are cultured and nlgosinfluences are all that anxi le parents may wish. Physical devel -ment of the strong and tender car n- the sick are amply provided for. The last General Assembly has fi l y established the College ; theri 's now in no quarter a dispositian to ge termeddle with the Trustees in ne management, and all reason: er.requests foi-financial support, Inare assured, will be liberally gran gh To -renew her former prosperity, .Ione thing is lacking, to regain for 5 sCleethe loyalty, the love, the ofbition of.its Alumni. There is no e 31- for alam; the South Carolina Col te is too firmly implanted in the hi of the people of this State everi og gin danger of destruction ; but foi re- perfect fruition of. her work shez1 n students-students from every Coi .is every township of the State. To se su these students must be your ng alum.i. Send your children, send i-friends, and rest assured that thi nn vice, rendered the College, wi' neye equally a service to the young tate themseves and to the State. te Francis H. Weston, President te C. Alumni Association. por- August Kohn, Secretary S. pur- Alumni Association and others. of Dollars sad Dollars. oos When you are young, how wel ac- A little money makes great show, the Just fifty cents will cause you bi ~ss'Tis tben a dollar looks like this: Thee 0sses But when you're old and bills con >ther And creditors are dunnmng you, de-And every cent you spend you n de- 'Tis then a dollar looks like this: dduee 5per - t 2 People who live in new countr liable to be prostrated by n aayfevers. Inhabitants of cities, by May of bad drainage and unwho a,the odors, suffer from, similar di e at Ayer's Ague Cure is warranlted d-. es. cfcfor all malarial poisons. o Goes to Take Charge of SRinarae Ei4 Island. [New York Tribune.1 A well-known physician of New 'ork city went into voluntary exile a esterday to remain for no one knows a ow long in the best hospitals at Swin- al urne Island. He is Dr. Byron, the m eientist and bacteriological expert and st ecturer at the Loomis laboratory. He c ias given up his large practice for the C ime being, and will remain on Swin- he urne island to fight the cholera. He P vill be forced to quarantine himself as fi trictly as any of the patients are quar- e Lntined, and he does not expect to set e oot on shore again till the danger is & ver. He made light of the risk he d was running and was not desirous of b 3aying much about his action, but be 0 acknowledged that it would involve a 8 financial sacrifice, as the salary paid ' him by the State would not nearly equal the income which he derives r from his regular practice. Dr. Byron went to quarantine at first only as a bacteriological expert to do anything except make examinations and micro- : scopical analyses. But he was request' ed to remain and take charge of the pest station at Swinburne Island, and he decided that it was his duty as a physician to accept the call. He, how ever, is inclined to take a favorable view of the situation and thinks that the trouble at quarantine will be over in probably five or six weeks. "Frost will kill the disease," he said, "but if it does not develop now and the proper sanitary precautions are not taken, and if the vigilance of the board of health of the city should be relaxed in the slightest degree, the cholera might break out in the spring and that would be a bad matter." "What result did your bacteriologi cal examination of the cholera dis charges from the Normannia and Ru gia have?" "Well I don't wish to say officially and positively, but I have no doubt whatever that the cases are those of true Asiatic cholera. The symptoms of the patients of the Normannia and Rugia are too violent for anything else, and they are those of cholera Asiatic. The term cholerine which has been used on the ships is a most elastic term. The word means a mild case of . cholera Asiatic. These case were not mild." "Do the patients suffer any pain?" '"No -there is no pain connected with Asiatic cholera. That is a popular 3 fallacy. This is one of the things which distinguish cholera Asiatic froi e cholera morbus. In the latter the pain comes at once. In true cholers a the patient becomes apathetic and suf fers hardly any pain. It is really at easy death to die. Cholera patients dic from asbpyxiation. The terrible vom iting and discharges thin the blood sc ttgreatly that what material is left i Sthe blood coagulates and refuses to cir Sculate. This produces an excess er carbonic acid gas in the system whic1 nn causes asphyxiation. This same cai bonic acid gas is What numbs the pal rn a manner and renders the patieni ~to a large extent insensible to pail re The only pain during the progress Sthe disease consists in cramps intit Scalves of the legs, which are duseore for flex action. The cramps in the bowe al do not begin unlil the end, when deal r"We are treating the patients no ofwith the salt and water remedy di mm covered by the Italian physician, 1 tu- Catani, known as hypodermfocys tier We inject a weak solution of salt al e- water, warmed up to the temperati Sof the human body. As fast as -fluid matter leaves the .patient we ofnew It by injecting this solution un the skin. We use enormous qual m-ties of it, sometimes giving a pati< s2toStms a day. This keepsi in- blood going. Then, to check the di the rhsa, injections of a solution of tin1 r.ble are put Into the stomach. We weabout two or three quarts a day te,each patient. It not only checks but diarrhces, but also produces a coma te the bacteria and kills them. -"The vomiting, which is so marl ause a feature of the disease, Is particul: Leedistressing to the physicians, becs a atsit precludes the possibilty of lntroi o bing medicines through the mouth, te the stomach, therefore, will rel eed nothing. The general treatment, t sides the Injections, is to give cuedrugs as can give relief, with bra cuand water to keep up the vital yourthe system. The patients are kept q ras rasmuch as possible, and their a i b mens arekept warmand dry. n"The symptoms of the patients mn those of Asiatic cholera," said Dr. s. .ron. "The dead people had all thn pearance of cholera dead. Their C c.were sunken deeply in the soc their skin was dry and like parcht --so that it could be pulled froml thet and so inelastic it would stay that and their frames were of course wa ouyouaway so that they looked like s tons with the skin stretched over "That blui,h black hue is due or the fact that what is left of the ve blood has become coagulated, and is so little left of it that the ar blood shows through the blue art which produces a peculiar l1ii ee due, and makes cholera dead look par ary awful." autloelemedd He: "I ahe' have decided to asli alear fathr consent by letter, Pauline, reaonwhat sort of a letter would you lesomeme meto make it!" sesses- She: "1 think, Horace, tat I' cctrieity will supersede Steam as a Mo tive Power. {From the Electric Magazine.] Recent statistics tell us that there e now running, in the United States ne, nearly 4,000 electric street cam on 2,000 miles of track, with as much ore similar plant in course of con ruction. These cars run faster, more teaply and under far more perfect introl than do their predecessors,:the >rse cars. In America this system of ropulsion Is commercially but four or ye years old, and is barely out of its cperimental stage; yet it is a magnifi- - 6nt practical success-with more than 50,000,000 invested in it-and this in er some of the worst conditions possi- - le for railway work. Some of these Dnditions consist of verynarrow wheel anges, rough tracks, obstructed with rater, snow, mud, gravel- and foreign ,ehicles; curves as sharp as thirty feet adius, grades as steep as 12 per cent., to. A service more nearly resembling hat of our present steam roads is that )erformed by the City and South Lon !on Railway, which is practically the irst underground electrin road in the orld, and is already a great success, oaving during the eighteen months of ts existence carried more than 7,000,000 people, with a run of over 500,000 tra miles. Although not entirely perfected, a road like this forms one of the nota ble objeet lesson by which we are lirn ing to travel. In the light of such experience there - is no question whatever about the suc cess of either a subterranean or an ele vated electric road if properly designed to meet the new conditions involved and the running may be at any speed ; which can be made safe. We may, therefore, in our further study of the ideal railway, positively leave out of the qnestion the steam locomotive. Great as have been the performances : of this woiderful and beautiful mon ster, he not only refuses to climb very steep grades, but he has utterly.failed, in the matter of speed, to keep pace with his Improved behavior in other respects. In proof of this we have" records of English engines goingat the rate of seventy-five miles anhourforty years ago, and that is the maximum work of our present machines, although they-may have occasionally touched a ninety-mile rate as a phenomenon. TE.DOr EjsAXIsT. He Writes.on the Seea and Unseen, tbe Enoan and Unknowbie. . ON BBEATH. Our breath is made of air. If it ' were not. for breath we would die. -., The breath keeps going thro' ouraiver, our lights, and our lungs.- Boys shut up in a room- -all day should not -- breathe; thejshould wait till they get i out of doors. Air in a room has scar - bonocide in it, and carbonocide Is f poisoner than mad dogs. Once some i men was shut up in a. black hole in j - India, a carbonocide got intothaf there n hole, and afore morning 'every one of j a them was dead. z. Girls wear corseta which- squeeze >f their diagrams too much. Girls can~ me not run and holler like boys, cause - their diagrams ares qezed If I was a grl I wouldijust run and holler so hh my diagram would grow. That's all on breath. w-ON "RUBDs." - i- LCincinnt Commecal-Gazette4 p. Burds is alwaff y. A manW kngo ir- erlong an' heer a burd singan' be hapy . ad to unless wen he glts homebhe has to teeet old pertaters fer dinner. he Men what.eets cold pertaters kant to e hapy. If burds had ter eet cold perts ler ters thay koden't be hapy ethar. Li- Lots of potry has ben writ erboit mt burds, but they'er as hapy as thay kin - sh e be, jetthe sam. - a Gurls liss burds, but burds dosn' 'in seem to kare ennything speshul erboot se grls. Burds halotserces somwaL or Burds kin set gren appels without the gittin' sick. It wood be nis to e Sin burd som timz. HOW TO FLEASE--Y A BOY. ird.[From the Detroit Tribune.] Erly. Itz.ritch boiz that ketches theguris. Luc-Tha kin by cande and sody watter ir and the grns an thats what guris wants. If a boi kant be .ritch an wants to be-pleese the gurla the best thing fur hin uc to doolis to be a solger or omti an ndy ware a yuneform. Yuneforms gitz yof grs. jtIfsaboi kant be rich or haysa yune bd-form lied better be tuff. Thats the - cheepest way too ketch gurls. re y- In ne Larr. pp eyes The boy was sitting lazily in the stern. kets, of a boat dangling his feet in the water, nent when a mnan from the dock called ' ody, sharply to him: way, "What are you doing there?"- be ised said. kele- "Nothing," responded the boy. ."Do you get any pay for it?" iy to "None," and be drew one foot out oa ns the water to run if need were. there "Why don't you go to work?"~ terl1 "Will you give me a job?" eries, "yes," hueu "Steady?" "Pay anything?" "Wel, o,"hestatd te m no the first week." "How about the secend?" you r "Then IwilL Nw "All right; ni come around thes udvis e cond week. This Is good enouhfr ?' no, n h o tc the fo would In the water and winked at te n the dock. -