University of South Carolina Libraries
T?E LABOS WOELD use a anion ^Bootos gftrrofiat'Workerj C?OM*nsmerg in Bocemia<=arn about $132 a }?r. ** : . Spouse filing employs ijOOO men in the ' "THBBo?B4Krbers' Katiooal Union will stait ;-;r| a labor bureau. ?; ^. iLcHTDO* (England) carpenters have been ^?cut sevtn months. ; Fsahce -street railway employes will hoM , ; a nafkna! convention. -i/ ' ' ' I* Virginia City, Va., a school teacher^ union has been or^aatz^J. I Xkw York ha3 a Hotel and Restaurant , ^ Xtaployws' Association. i Nxw Yokk car-drivers have left of y&Tand formed an open onion. / ? Is wan apolb find.) working girls a few > jdays ago held a mass meeting. < * " Thb Atlanta (Oa.> Federation of Trades j lias taken steps to organize tbe surface rail road ea^ployfei. ? The eifcnpositors of Crakow and Lemberv. .; 5? Poland, are on a strike for ten hour? per V day cad 43.50 per week . Tb? Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen has donated *500 towards erecting a Labor i r Temple in Indianapolis, Ind. P. ? * - on the buildings of the Columbian ? ^xHbition, at Chicago, III., is being carried f <??t night by tbe aid of electric lights, i A bill for the supervision and regulation t of shops and factortfen has been introduced |* into the Parliament TSeW South Wales. . Th* labor organizations of Rhode Isiani ; ' . lave commenced an agitation for a legal \ . I; tagkt-boor day to be instituted by tbe State .? <efermnent. . Th* first labor ever instituted in Europe was decreed by the Paris Municipal ?j jagfc Jniy. Henri Reville has been a3pr6tessor. He will lecture at th j dsViile. j . ! ? \t is estimated that there are now about 3JOO,C0O women workers in the United j. fytttfces, of whom 300,000 ar? eaiptoyed 'in <* ? , Hew York. Of all these fewer than 50 'JO belong to labor organizations . ; Tes Polish Count Grabarki is a fireman <ma Pan Handle locomotive. He is a manly ! and well educated young fellow, with an ' lent record of service in the Garman ; bid he ia thoroughly content with hi3 fcton. ! f The Centra] Labor Union of Nashville ! i Ten*., has called a Congress of the labor organizations of Tennessee to be held at tbat not later than January 15th, 1892, to " " the -convict labor and other vital snow agitating tha population of Btate. . . 4 *nr fraternal organization has been ^ fan? I in San Fraaciseo, Cal. . compose- 1 of r engineers of the Southern Pac? ?. lis name is the Mrs. Leland Auxiliary, No. 106, and .it w to the Brotherhood of Locomotive Whose entire order has over twen rs, and more than a hun the first workingmen's i in this country by. the shipwrights of New York, to i miaous were merely mutual benefit !?. Ttttn they derfioped into trade demanding higher wages and less Bhaee 3830 tk* tendency has b^n I national and international federa cantrainatioc.; but the latest de being in "1880^ was towards Bftfnrr ,^-Xl ' j-. ?^!m- ; Idqnor Question in Charleston. " AlLH?*b?, S. C., .^SpecfatLj? -Tire ibillon question is revivednfcit, and ifce tegjalatare will bear from Chartea^op ,wktnit meets. The advocates of prom"5 IfcitioHists have prepared a petition, which Im#* quite * number of signatures. The l.sg&Ut fflty, however, that they are mostlj signatures oi women and children, and ^?n the otber hand. the wholesale 'Equcr i^eafers ami the re?aH ixrocer^ssociatioo ami tto German Turn Yerein ari*^Eepar er petition, and have a joint one charged with the man the campaign in -Columbia fie Has Taken His Last Degree. M H vlij?*::, Kova 8?otia, [Special.}? Tbja Hon. Samuel Chipman, who eelebrat . . ed his 101st birthday on October 18, died L ; ? tb?ajorBKiigittOoniwallis. Kings count v-. iid; w* \ beHeved to have been tbe oldest Rile Mason in the world, - taking his de -grwnn 1W8. ' ; > ^ $ . It Florence Bank Fails. v Y : A FSo?eace, Ah , special sajs : The r. . bask ctf-Florida failed -to open its doors, ?j j 3^ officers 'refold to make a statement ? j and tbe assets'and H^bii it;e? casnot be as ? ccrtniaeJ. ? Xi-t > : . T ?. The actual sength of tbe new St. Clair - .I fTumtolit ?636 feet.\ It cost $1,460. 000. Catarrh '? Being tt Con wtUutimnnl itemed** Readily I Memehern ??4 cures it. of jjratltnd* ao<Hk^iie<iiT t? brdettt tbnm "? Acted. prompt mo to wcont*?*'ad Hood's' Sar?? Iftilfci to all! who k re ratarrb. Xj" or man y year* I jfrw lUufcii* wHb catarrh anil ^?3lsrsjVm aad gm /ft Sgijl iftiWHy. Igotao.low I eojfitf not y*t anMMt tbe ; k: liMaft . I trfc*t aboufeterythin* I saw recommended 5 : , ^foroatacrtt, tatfadlatg ia every instance of being Very Much Discouraged. iflMtldtdiM to take Hood's Sarsaparilla and be ? . y: gPNy^at relief, lhaee acn* u#si. witbla two v^rt, ta? twtha bottle* ami I fori better tbfQti have ' Iter JKMIL' t attribute my to pro foment wholly to a. a. of Hood's Sarsaparilla >1.CWmi Ksutx*.Corner York and Pleasant Street HMHBPiiPlPifVfn Jt^To rilU-dTor tb? IHer and bowels, art |aillij*j<< proaa?Uy and *ad*q tly. Prlceac. 11 ? 1 ? I Taking batter from milk wts known in the earliest times. It was left for our time to make a m3k of cod liver oil. V"'1 | Milk, the emulsion of but f'X, *#f is an easier food than * butter. Scott's Emulsion of tod-liver oil is an easier food than cod-liver oil. It rs rest ? ? A and, at the same time, sup *r - plies the body a kind of ?' nourishment it caxi get in no other way. I " fc?tT 4 BOWK*. Oieauti. 13a Saath yh A ??aoe, T?af ifrliBT-* 1 r?? I S-4A Ul W* cmybat da. $u \ m -WoXZS V. rotect yourself v rofose, Scanty, Suppressed ^kregubr Men Jtruation you must me BRADFlEUTSl FEMALE REGULATOR THE FARM AND GARDEN". BE KCTD TO YOrK HORSE. Don't start your hone off with a cat j J of t&e whip. Speak to him, and th en ii j he in slow touch him lightly as a re- ! j minder. A few lessons of this kind and he will be prompt about getting away, j but uot too hasty, as is apt to be the ; utse if he started with a severe , cut. ? Itidtr and baiter. TO KES^P A SILO FROM ROTTISG. ilow to/ keep a silo from rotting is ! whai the Wisconaia professors hare been studying. The best remedy seem* to 1?? ventilation. It is well known that a [ pl tTsk mu^t. be kept either constantly soared with water or else free from w; iter, to prevent it from rotting. It i? ; the act Of wetting and drying that doe? | the damage. As it is not practical to keep the planks of a silo always wet, the | next thin# to do is to keep them dry by ventilation, such as dead air spaces, with a slight opening for a current of air to more in. ? Arnerican. Dairynitn. PASTURE TREES. There are more pastures in this country ( without trees than those that are pro vided with these blessings to livestock. There need not l>e many, but a few tre23 scattered over a farm not only add to the * beauty of the landscape bat carry with them the idea that the owner is merciful to his beast. The ?h*d?-t-ree may b? pro* ductive of more than a shelter from the (yarning sun in midsummer, for is autu na it may bear a load of nuts that will glad den the hearts of the boys who have none too many things to cheer them in their life upon the farm. Chestnuts, batter - ! nuts, shagWrk walnuts all furnish tooth some nuts for the winter evening, while I protecting the 6heep or kine in summer. A farm with trees sells better than one vritheut shade. We have noticed -thai I the treeless farm is most-apLto -hi in the r market. The firmer Wlio plan Li or pro tect? no shade-trees 'eta other important ' thiugs escape through his fingers. ? American Agricultural. . ^ PL.i5TWO AH ORCHARD. j" In planting an orchard for profit the varieties should not be many, ilt will I coirnnoaly be found that the pro tit is i mainly derived from one or two thor ' oughly truaBflftwthy.ltintfs best adapte I to the soil and climate, and whooe well koown excellencies and good-keeping qualities always insure them a demand. ; There are a few varieties, and only a few, i that seem to succeed fairly wett under j greatly varying conditions. In general, j however, each one of widely se;>arake<i | sections seems to have its own frtorite j varieties of the apple. Consequently the ' orchardist who is npon the ground ca i ! best determine the kinds he shoa&l plant, i but there arc a few points that may b^ considered as of general application High elevation or the vicinity of large ! bodies of water are especially'- desirable ^ legations on account of their greater iin r>*itfity from frosts. Apple trees should 4not be crowded. A distance of forty } feet between the trees will seem great when first planted, but when full grown, "in most sections, not too much. Soil only moderately fertile is to be preferro i ? to a rich loam, and that from which an old orchard has just been clcarecf should be avoided. Cultivation between the trees for a few years will be beneath! rather than hurtful, pro: tded the origin il fertility is maintained by manuring. After an orchard begins to bear other crop-bearing on the same ground shoal- 1 tease. As l>etween planting in the. fa!! or spring, either one is likely to succeed if' carefully done. In a mild climatc fall planting is- thought the best. Spring planting should be a* early as the groaa i will admit. ? ISeva York World. STIMULATING FOWLS. We beiieve in stimulating fowls, but ! we want the Atimuianta to consist of sue a articles as will bxjld up rather than tear ; -down the constitrition. AVc believe ic rusty iron in the drinking water durin ; dutfip weather or changing of season-;. We likewise believe ra a piece of as>i fcetida, about the size of a hazsiuut, ; wrapped up in .musiin (a regular su^ar teat>, and placed in the drinking water when theta-are signs of colds in th'j fo.fls. v We believe in an occasional fe?d of chopped raw onions at vhrht.to main- , tain health. We believe in a varied diet of good, eound grain and greenwood for egg production. Gjrit ? good sharp grit ? is the article that gives good health. | Look at the number "of case3 of in digestion, allowing to the fact that tat fowls have not tho proper material to ! m isti&?c the foo3. Indigestion is often taken for cholera: Lime makes <egg i- shells. Along with the material t<_ I manufacture the egg, lime nmt be given | to make the shells. A certain per cent, i of lime is found in the grains, "but we I liperally feed oyster shells to Supply the t??b?nce. ILeepithe birds in a good condition ? neither too fat nor too lean ? anththere will be less sickness and more eggs. Half-starred hens can neither remain healthy cor lay eggs. It is false econo- j mf\ o cut down the rations. Less coru j and more wheat is better policy. Th^ i science of feeding is not in stinting the j fowK bo* ?n getting them as; much as ! they can eat of the proper feed. Ir ; or \wf words, for eggs, stimulate the hen-, Irfui ?uch grains as wheat and oats? is much as they-, will eat up clean. Fo; growing flesh give them all the coru they wisij. Stimulation in the right w av . is the proper tuin? to do. ? / FEEDING T3E HOUSSS. The following hints on horse-fee lin; are conJensed for tie N#o York Vvicf from an article by Veterinary Surgeon C. fl. Michener, published in a special report i?r the United States Deparment o! Agriculture : In horse digestion takes place principally in th?/ Intestines, and here, a> ia^ali other animals, and with all foods. ' w*. find a eertain part only of the prov cader baa been digested; another portion is un tigeped. I f the horse receive; toe fooid a large portion of di^estiii'.c food parses out unacted upon, entv'i-j not >diy the loss of this unused fo>i, buVcallidg for an unnecessary expend t . arc cf t:Ul force on the part of the h'>rse, anil keeping him poor in 3?h. Foods selected for the horse must b? i wholesome, clean and .iweet; the hoir> t ot fecdiag regular,/ aad the mode o' i preparation found by experience to b> ? ?*?i for toe aaim\i must be adhered to. ^Cleanliness in preparation and - adminU i trafion must be ooserred. ! 'Che iefegth of time occupied by sto ja j acb digestion varies with different food-, i 3ay and i straw pass out of stomac'i m-jre rapidly than oats. Oatfc should :v?r; :ore .afzer tiay, -lasted i >?i -i ; f <*c ill t ij hty w>u: 1 ?viu&thc eac> t v be swat 01* ir 1 to tae bei>ws -?ci? * aote 1 o>? by tae *t<xuach, aa I. as a re suit pcocfaao iadi * ? ?? ^ *i~- I fcli .r-f- 1 1 -m ' ?' rjpge jc give? Rapid or severe labor cannot be per formed by the horse on a full stomach. For such horses iood must be give a in small quantity aod, if possible, abcet two hours before going to their work. The disproportion between the size nf the stomach and the amount of water drank tells us plainly that the horse should aiways be watered before feeding. Never feed too soon after a hard day's work. A small quantity of hay may be given but grain shoal! be withheld for an hour or two. Do not feed 'concentrated fool entire - i JV. Baity food must be. given to detain thegraiisia their passage through the inteitmai tract; bulk also favor? de tention ?.nd thus mechanically aids*~aH^ sorption-. j Fof horse? that do slo~v work for the L'reater pari: of the time, chopped or j cat hay fed with crushed oats, ground corn, ecc.. is the bsst kind of feed, as it : ^ives the required bulk, sa7?? tim-? aad ! half the labor of feeding. Sudden changes of diet ar? always dangerous. Change the foo 1 graltlillvi A lutl m -al of corn fed to a horse ac customed to oits? wdl almost always sicken him. . -v , If a hor-e is to do less work or to re>t see that he receives less food. If this was observed e/en Saturday night and j Sunday there would be fewer case3 of '?Monday morning sickness." Food should bo more of a laxative nature when a horse is to stand for some days. - A'jove all things avoid feeding m istf or moldy fooder These aro freq ieat causes of lung troubles and othor dis eises. Tae digestive organs also suf&r. Mustv hay is generally considered to nruduce disorder of the kidneys, and all kaow of the danger to pregnant animals from feeding from ergotizei grasses or grains. FARM A>"D GARDES NOTES. V . A fence being a necessary evil, ccon* j o;ny in its construction has always b-iea considered important. Never feed rat* corameal to every young Chicks. Crumbled stale breai is always good for them. It is important to have'Cbrifty, vigor ous breeding birds if you expcct thriftv, vigorous chickens. Now is the time to be making the selections. The cost of wintering poultry can yearly always be greatly reduced by pi opei care now in securing and storing away a sufficient supply of food to last until spring. . * With proper care in salecting out aa.l keeping the best of the fowls each year fot breeding, they can be gradually im proved a', a very low cost. Get a stand ard breed at the start. Providing warm, dt Y quarters is one i of the essentials necessary to induce the j Ileus to lay eggs during the winter; eggs 1 pay a better profit during the winter | thau at any other season. \ When the hens are kept separate froTi | tlve roosters not only will they lay bet ter, but the eggs will keep better. When\ egijs are stored away those from hens I whtecer there are no roosters aro the j best.. While in many localities it is best to ! close up the poultry house at night dur ing the day the door* aQ^ windows ! should be opened every d*y that the I weather will admit, so as to secure a good ventilation. Because you have no bone mill is no | reason you should not get scraps fro n ; the butcher's bone box and give the hens a chance to have some fre^h meat I during the moulting season. You might crack the bones some with an old ax or l hatchet and help the heos to a little of j them too. A ditch here and a loal of dirt thcra j may prevent lot; of mud and filth in t.ie stable yards during the co;i''?^ winter. Youcac not?ut in an extra hour or two to better advantage than to see what im provements you can make in or about your stables. Devote a half day to this i purpose alone and you will not regret it. "What is worth deiag at all is worth doing well." This proverb will nowhere apply betfer than to tho care of poultry. Without constant attention and thorougn ? ness, success is not expected. Some kindj of business may be occasionally slighted without serious harm, but in this occu pation one mishao may blast the hope3 of a whole season. ? A Missouri farmer is saM to%ave hung his seed corn in his smoke house and smoked it as long as he did his hams. It is alleged that every kernel grew and that it was not troubled by ground squir rels, gophers, mice or blackbirds, while some corn, not smoke*!, that was plante 1 beside it -was entirely destroyed. As the smoking would probably not injure tha corn it be well to try the experi ment on a small scale. Building Macadamized Brottd* in the South. Jefferson county, Ala., is takiog the lead of all other Southern counties, if not of every county in the United States, in the vigor which it is displaying in ma cadamizing its roads. It has already 110 miies of macadamized roads, 30 more now under construction, and contracts are soon to be let for seven miles addi tional, which will give that county a to tal of 150 miles of first-class roads. The |K-ople of that c unty are to be congratu lated upon this splendid illustration of their broad-minded business judgement, and it is to be hoped t> at their example will be followed by every county in the South. Gocd roads are essential to agri cultural prosperity, and they are just as important to the South as new railroads; in fact, it is a question whether the county eubscrip' ion to new railroad en terprises would not in the long run yield still better jcturns if invested in good macadamized county roads. Every mile of good roads instructed would enhance lLa is4us.ju?*?fT adjacent farm property increase the profits of farmers, attract the best ciass of settlers, and help to increase the prosperity of the whole State. The Birmingham Age tells the story when it says: "The best of it is, wherever these roads lead out from Birmingham, the cotton patch is disappearing and diversi fied farming is taking its place" It is time for the iouth to inaugurate a road building period, nnd nothing that it couid do would have a greater effeet up<>n its general prosjverily. THE ALABAMA CAMPAIGN. Governor Jones Enters the Active Canvass Personally. Birmingham. Ala., (Special. j ?The primary election lor delegates to the next State onveption tai^s place in this coun ty on December 21 stN^Govcrnor Jones has arrived and will week in. speakiog among the mi nipyscafeps.'1 He addressed a meeting at mines. Captain Kolb. alliance candidaSfejrill be REV. DR. IAjlMAGE ? -> .] i? j The Brooklyn Divine's Sunday Sermon Text : " Great is Diana of the Ephesians." ?Acts xix., 34. ? this morning at Smyrna, 5 * Turkey. One of the seven ccurcbes of Asia once stood here. Yoi read i"1? T if' , ^ *s ? city that has often been shaken by earthquake, swept by conflagra tion, blasted I y plagues and butchered bv war, and here Bishop Polycarp stood" in a ^rr.wced amphitheater and when he wa? asked to give up the advocacy of the Chris* tian religion and save himself from martyr dom, the proconsul aying, llSwear and I SCS.4*? Christ." replied, t ghty and si* yeais have I served Sim. and fife never did me wrong; bow then can I revile my King and Saviour 1M ^u-leu hw brought to the flr^ into wb.ch be was about to be thrust, and the of. flc ia.a were about to fasten him to the stake lie said-: Let me remain as I am, for He who giveth me strength to sustain the fire will enable me also without your securing mew.th .,.1!, to remain fire. History W thejires refused to con sume him, and under the wind the fiaai? bent outward so that they did not touch his person, and therefore be was slain by e words OnecypFais bending over his ^ ^ moQumeat to Bishop Poly But w%?TB otf the way to the city of Ephe su*, ttboat fifty miles from Smyrna; We ^ to Ephesus. The bandita in that; region have had an u*ly pnjctici bf cutting off the eara of travelers and tending these specimens of ears down to Kmyrna, demanding a ransom. The ban dits suggest to the friends of the persons ears bare been subtracted Ifc1 k!S u W011!? ,liJie b**6 the rest of the body they will please send an appropriate ?f ?oney' ? tke money is not sent the 1 *iU J* ^ssinated. carried offtotha. robber's den. wd $7500 was paid for Us rescue. The rSSlS, , an<* rbeheaded, and ghastJy hea^? are on sale in shops of Smyrna lor aoj person who may desire to have something t* look at on their way to Ephesus. There have been cases when* ten and twenty and thirty and forty thousand dollars have oeen demanded by these brigands. We ?d not feel jflse putting our friends to su^h expense, and it was suggested that we had better omit Ephesus. But that would have been a disappointment from which we would never recover. - We must see Ephesus a ssocia ted with the most wonderful apostolic scenes, We hire a ipocittl railway train, and "a boot an hoar and a fvalf we arrive at the crtyof Ephesus, which v&t called "The Great Metropolis ofAjda," and "One of the Eyes of AsV? and "The Empress of Ionia," the cal tal of all learning and magnificence. HeiV as I said, was one of the seven churches or Asia, and first of jUl.we visit the ruins of th*t church where once an ecumenical council of two thousand ministers of religion was held. Mark the fulfillment of the prophecy Of the seven churches of Asia four were com mended in the Book of Revelation and three were doomed. The cities having the four f commended churches still stand; the cities having the three doomed churches are wipe ! out. It occurred just as the Bible said it would occur. Drive on and you come to the theatre, which was 660 feet from wall to wall capable of hiding 56,700 spectators. Her* and there the walls arise almost unbroken tut for the most part the building is down! As I took^my place at the cefifre of this theatre and looked around at its broken lay ers of stone, gallery upou gallery, gallerv upon gallery, and piled up into the bleax skies of that winter day, and thought that every hand that swung a trowel on those walla, and every foot that trod tho3e stairs and every eye ttyit gazed on that amphi theatre, and. every\ voice that greeted the combatants in that arena had gone out of heering and sightfrrr ages on ages, I felt a thrill of interest that almost penetrated rne amid the ruin?.,' Standing tht*e we could not forget that in that building once tsseinhled u riotou? throne for Poui's condemnation/ becau-e wh$t be preached collided wita the idoialrv of their national goddess. Paul tried to gjt into that theatre and address the excite 1 | multitude, but his friends held him back, lest he t>e torn to pieces bv ihe mob, and the re corder of the city had to road ths riot act among the people who had shrink.'.! for two mortal hours till their thrc,it> v/c-re sore and , tlify were black in the fac.\ "Great is Diana i of the Ephesians/' Now we step into the Stadiu-n. Enough or its walls and appointments are left to , show what a stupendous place it must have ;^.usef for foot-ra.-s and for fights T r i!?61' Xt wai a ^u'?<iiug 630 foet long by 300 feet wide. Paul refers to what transpired there in the way of soe'taele *?? h^e b*? m,d1 as^ i V ^ PanI ^7?. "I have fought ! at Ephesus," an expression usual y taken as figurative, but 1 suppose it was literally true, for one of the amuse ments m that Sta ium was to put a disliked I man in the arena with a hungry lion or tiger . or panther, and let the fight go until either the man or tfae beast or both wera slain. wl mH?oJ?av5 been ?reat fun for these ; haters of Christianity to hear teat on the , morrow in the Stadium in Ephesus the mis sion- ry Paul would, in the presence of the | crowc e i galleries, fight a hungry lion. The peop.e were early there to get the best s?at=. and a more alert and enthusiastic crowd ! assembled. They took their dinner with them. And wa* there ever a more un eqiwl combat proposed? Pau1, according to tradition, suaall, crooked backed and weak ' wit the grandest man in sixty cen turies, is led to the center as the people shout : There he comes, the preacoer who has nearly ruined our religion . Th3 l;on will | make but a brief mouthfof of hirn." i It is plain that all the sympathies of that crowd are with the lion. In onj) of the underground rooms I bear the gTowLof the wild leasts. They have been kept for several days without food or water in order that thev ' ^-v ^ specially ravenous and bloodthirsty. What chance is there for Paul? But you cannot teil by a man's size or looks how stout a blow he can strike or bow keen a blade he can thrust. Witness, heaven and earth and hell, this struggle of Paul with a wild beast' The coolest man in the Stadium is Paul. What has he to fear? He has defied all the ! powers, earthly and infernal, and if his body ; tumble under the f dot and tooth of the wild* ; beast, his soul will ou\y the sooner find dis ; enthrallment. But it Is his duty, as far as possible, to preserve his, life. xow, I hear the bolt of the wild b2ast's I door shoved back, apd the whole audience ; rise to their feet as the fierce brute springs for the arena and toward its small occupant. I think the* first 'plunge that was made by the wild bea^-at the apostle was made on the point of a sharp blade, and the snarlin^ monster, with a howl of pain and reeking I with gore, turns back. But now the !i;Ue j missionary has his turn of m aking attack, I and with a few well directed thrusts the monster lies died in the dust of the arena, and the apostle puts his right foot on the ion and shakes him, an I then puts bis Je!t ''?ot on him and shakes him ? a scene which ^aui afterward uses foi' an illustration wLien he wants to show hy w Christ will triumph over death? "He must rei^n till He hath nut all enemies under His feet"? Ua ler His feet. i Paul told ths literal trnth w"> ?-j he said ? "I have fought with beasts at Ephemss "and ! as the plural is use 1 1 think he bad nure i than one such fight, or several l^jasts were ? let loose upon him at on j tini<\ As we sf<?i ! ? hat day in the middle of the Staii?m" aud | joorced around at the jpvat structure, t ie ! wbole seen? cum bac\- uo>a u-\ Put we pass out of tbeSUdimj, for weare i in haste for other olac?s of interest in E ^he : vu . To add to the excit?.nent of the da v "l,a of our pcrty W31* missmr. No man is j -iff 7n rhnf region alone u^!es^ n- :>?? ar.nel t l Itr.o'.T ho t to take snr- a :m ?nd no; .ui-< r>n\ %Mir c.Knpan?oii. Dr. !?>?> j now the publisher of ths finWm i He'. i'd, | gone out on some ezpiorstioas of his j own. and through the gite "rii^re Ptui had , valkeii azainand again, yet wiur, no man >?RCCOD)panie1 shoe Id adveutore nor.! Bat ?. a f ua* some time had paosad and every min ute Seemed mx long ks as hour, and we had time to imagine everylflking borriUa in the j *ay of robbery and awissnatioo. the lost rrave'ei- ii^ogpi^d. to receive from oar entire parry a volley oz exposti^ation tor the arousal of so rnanv anxieties. In the nii ist or this city of Ephesus oace floated an artsfic'al lake, brilliant with T'amr^l boat*, an 1 thr->?igh th 3 river Carster i It With the sea. shiz>? fro n ^?p<irtsof the knDwn earth floate-i'in an i j C-irrvinz on a commerce which made [ ?Ph?us the envy of the world. Great was "f. "8-: its hipoodro.ne, its <fJeon? *tb?c?3s, its forum. it? aque aoctR (wftose skeletons are stHl drawn along the city), it* towers, its Castle of Hadrian, ret qoarries, whi^h were th- gra^e cradle of crt *e?; its temples, baQt to ApoSo. to Min ^S,to5p5[% toXaary,* o Bacciws, SoBmkn, toOesar. to Fortune, to Jopst Wkat history and ?oetrv and ' i I ?' as celebrated than all else besides? the of the goddess Diana, called the sixth wonder of the world, and in 1889 wo stood amid the rains of that temple, measuring it* pillars, transfixed by its sculpture and confounded atwhat was the greatest temple of idolatry iajUltim*. . ! \ 7 Ai 1 sat on a piece of one of Its fillac ool urnns I said, "What earthquake rooked down, or what hurricane pushed It to the earth, or under what strong wine of. centur ies did the giant stagger and fafif ' There have been seven temples of Diana; the ruins of each contributing roipething for the i splendor of its architectural successors. 1 wo hundred and twen'j years was this last temple in construction. Twice as long as the United States have stood was that tem ple in building. It was nearly twice as large as St, Paul's Cathedral, London. Lest it should be disturbed by eartbquakeefWfcich have alwavs been fond of mafcinr those re gions their plavground, the teihpie was built on a nlefsh, which was made flrui by layers of charcoal, aorered by fleeces of wool. The stone came from the quarry near by. After it Was decread to build th* temple it was thought it would be necessary to bring the building stone from other lands, but one -iay a shepherd by the name of Pixodorus, while watching his flock*, saw two rams fighting, and as they missed the interlocking of their horns "and one fell his horn knocked a splinter from the rock and showed by that splinter the lastrsus whiteness of the rock. The shepherd ran to the city with a piece of that stone, which revealed a quarry from which place the temple was built) and every month in all ages Since tho Mavor of Ephesus goes to that quarry to offer sacri fices to toe memory of that shepherd who discovered this source of splendor wealth of the cities of Asia Minor. in removing the great Stones from the quarry to their destined places in the temple it was necessary, ih^rterto keep the wheels, which were twelve feat in diameter, from sinking deep iuto tho earth under the un paralleled heft, that a fram.i of timbers ba arranged over which the wheelB rolled. To put the immense block of marhle iu its p'ac? over the doorway of on? of thss j temples was so vast and difficult an undertaking that the architect at one time gave it up, and .in his chagrin attempted suicide^ but one night :a bis sleep he dreamed that the stoae had settled to the right plac?, and thd next day ^ found that the great block of marble hid by its own weighty settled to the right clace. : t . The temple of Diana was four hundre 1 and twenty-five feet long by tWo hundred nnd twenty -five feet wide. All Asia was taxed - to pay for it. It bad one huodred and Wrenty-seven pillars, each sixty feet high, and each the gift of a king, and inscribed with the name of the don^r. u sei the meaning of that passage iu Revelation just as a king presenting one of th?$e pillari to the 1 emple of D*ana had his oivn name chiseled on it- and the name of bis own country, so says Christ. ' Him that ovei cometh will I make a pillar io thj temple of My God, and I .will write upon him the name of My God and the name of the city of Ify God, which is New Jerusalem, and 1 vnM w rite upon Him My new name." How sug gestive and beautifull In addition to those p.Hlars that I climbed over while amid the ruins of Diana's temnle Isaw afterward ei.^fafc of toosa pillars* at Constantinople, to which city they bad been removed, an i ore now a part of the Mosque of St. Sophia. Those flight columns are all green jasper, but some of those which stood in Diana's temple at EpheStn- "ware fairly drenched with brilliant colors. Costly mat als stood up in various parts of the tempi? where they could catch "the fullest flush of the sun. A flight of stairs was carved out of one grapeviue. Doors of cypress wool which had been kept in glue for years and bordered with bronae in bas rebef, swung against pillars of brass and resounded with echo upon echo, caught up and sent on and hurled back through the corridors. In that building stood an image of Diana, the godtiesf. The impression was abroad as the Bible records, that that image had dropped plumb out of heaven into that lemple, and the sculptors who really made the image were put to death, eo that they could not testify of its human manufacture and so denv its celestial origin. It was thought by intelligent people that the ma terial from which this idol was formed might have dropped out of heaven as an aero??. \V e have seen in the British museum, an 1 in universities of our own west, blocks of stone hurV^. off from other worlds. These aero lites wfcre seen to fall, and witnesses have gone to the landing places, and scientists have pronounced them to be the product of other world-*. Lut the mater ial cut ci which the image of Diana was lashioned contradicts that noti on. This image was carved out of ebony an J punctured here aui there with openings kept full of spikeuar d eo as to hinder the statue from, decaying and niaka it aromatic, but this ebony was co vered with bronze and alabaster. A neckiacj of acorns coiled grace fully around her. There were four lions on tech arm. tyulcal rj Hfcp?n?th. Her heal wa* coroneted. Around this figure stood i statues which by wonderful invention shed ! tears. The air by strange machinery was ! damp with descending perfumes. The walls ! multiplied the scene by concaved mirrors, j Fountains tossed in sheaves of light and fell I in showers of diamonds. Praxiteles, the sculptor, and Apelles, the j painter, fiiled the place 'with their triumph*." I Crcesus, the wealthiest of the ancients, put j jrre and there in the temple golden heifers i rhf, paintings were so viyid and lifelike that j Alexander, who was moved at nothing of j terror, shuddered at one battle scene on these j walls, and so true to life was a painting of a . horse that when Alexander's horse was le 1 | up to it be began to neigh, as one horse is ac customed to greet another. One painting in that temple cost $193,7*). The treasures of all nations and the spoils of kingdoms were kept here for safe deprtttt. Criminals from all lands fled to the shelter of this temple, and the law could.not touch them . It seemed almost strange that this mountain oC archi tectural -snow outside did not malt with the fires of color within. The temple was surrounded with groves, ; 'n which roamed for the temptation of ; hunters, stags and hares and wild boar*, and all styles of game, whether winged or four ! JooteJ. There was a cave with statue so ! intensely briihant that it extinguished the i eye of those who looked upon it, unlea* at the command of the priest, the hand of the spectator somewhat shaded the eve. No wonaer that even Anthony and Alex ander and Darius cried ont in the words of my text, "Great is Diana of the Epb* ax rms.n > ? I One whole month of each year, the month of May, was devote! to her wp~ship. j Pro cessions in garbs of purple and violet and scarlet moved through ft, aod thera we re torches and anthems, and caoirs in whit?, and timbrels and triangles in tnoric, sacri fices and dances. JTations voted largp amounts to meet t?e expense of theVorship. Fisheries of vast resource*, were devoted to the support of thisT resplendence. Horace and Virgil aiii Homer went into rhapsodies while de3cribing.this worsb|p* _ All artists, all archaeologis&^ll centuries, agr-ed ;n sajjag^'Great is -Diana of the E'pbe>ian3.*' Paul, in the presence of this Twuj^e of Diana, incorporates ifcin his fig ures of speech whiie speakin; of the 'Spiritual temple, "Now; if any man build upoa this foundation, gold, silver, precious stone?, etc.," and no doubt with reference to one of the previous temples which had been set on lire by Kerostratus just for the lame of de strovmeit. Paui saya. "If any man's worif shall be burned, he shall suffer loir-, etc.,"' and all up and down Paul's writing yot: rea iiz i that he had not only seen, bu; bad been mightily impressed with what be ha i seen of ta^Teaipie of Diana. In this city the mother of Jesus was paid to have been buried. Here dwelt Aquilla and PriSfcilla of Bible mention, wha " wer* professors in an extemporized theological seminary, and they taught the eloquent Apollos" bow to be eloquent for Cn*i>?r. Here John preached, and :rom here be;iu?" of his fidelity be was exiled to Pathos. H?rr* Paul warred a^a.nit the magical ::rt< for which Epbe^u? was famous The sorcerer < of citv orutenieJ that thiV ou. 1 c di?ea.9??, end perform almost any mri.-f, by pronouncing tue^e senseie-j-i worda, " ( ataski Lix Tetrax DamntoMoeaa A. .xion." But, aii tLe giory ?^Kr;hesus I havo de scribed has tone now. AC so ne eeasocs of the year awful, malarias sweep ov<r the place and put upon mattreis or in graves j & large portion jofnhe population. In th* ! approximate marshes scorpion;, c<;ntip-rd?s? ! and all forms ol repttlian life orawi an t hiss and 6t?ng, while byer,it 211 1 jackal* at night slink in and out of ti?e ru ns of build ings which once start-ed tae n -.ti # u witj*- ; their almost supernatural grindea-*. But here is a lesson wain h* - n-'/e.* yst ] been drawn out. Do you not he- in 1 ?* temple of D ana an ? rp-rr * iv.. v. ?. ..sc ij ? world Doids. It wau'-sa Goi wa > c-t:i ;? vide food. lAan* was n L-li r-t*? in 1 pictures on many of the coins ?he brJd a sta^ bv the horn with one ftand and a bundle ot arrows in the other. Oh. this is a haagry world ! Diana coa Id not give one pounrt of meat or one mouthful flU fool to the millions of her worshiper?,' She was a dead = divinity, an imaginary ^god, and so in idolatnms lands t&e vaat coftjority of people never hare enough to eat. It is only in the countries where the God of h&aveu ani earth is worshiped that the vast majority have enough to eat Let Diana tuve her arrows and her bounds. Our God has the sunshine and tbe showers and the harvests, ani in proportion as fie is worshiped does plenty rmpL _ _ _ jjttat*: ' I;#1*? ?Rock Let mi oeration. Bat she shelter*! tb#rn only ? little while, and while she kept them from arrest she ooukl not change their hearts, and thejjuilty remained guilty. Bu b, our God in Jesus Christ it a refuge into which we may fly from ail our sins and ajl our pur suer*, and ndt only be safe far time, but safe for eternity, and the guilt is pardoned and the nature is transformed. What Diana could not do for her worihiperv oar Christ accomplishes f or us. of Sf?i deft for ?e, ( tee bids myself In tbefc Then, in that tempta were deposited treasures from all the earth for safekeeping. Cbrysostom says it was the treasure house oftoations; they brought gold and diver and precious stones and coronets from across the sea, and put them under the care of Diana of /] the ?pbesians. But again and jagafa} were those treasures ransacked,* Captured or de stroyed. NerO robbed them, th^ Scythians scattered them, the Goths bunted them. Diana failed those who trusted her with treasures, but our God, to whom we may in trust all our treasures for this world and the next, and fail any one who puts j confidence in Him He never will. After the last jax^r column has fallen, and the last temple ou earth has {{one into rulfls, and; the world iteelfhss suffered demolition, the Lord will keep for us our best treasures, j But nofctoe what killed Ephesus and what has killed most of the cities that lie burlsl in the cemetery of nations. Luxury! The costly bath* which had been the! means of health to the city became its rulnj Instead of the oold baths that bai been the invigora tion of the people, the hot baths, which aro only intended for the lnflrm or tqe invalid, W7ra substituted. In these hot bjths * many lay most of the time; Authors Wrote bodes while in these baths. Business was nezlected and a hot bath taken four or ttvf* tunes a day. When the keeper of the baty* wasxep rinaaarisrt for not havlngthem warm enough- , one of the rulers said, 'Y ou blame him for; | making the bath warm enoygb; I; blame you because you hare it warm at all/ But that warm bath which -Snertated Epbesus, snd which Is always enef rating ex cept when followed by cold^baths j (no refer ence; of course, to delicate constitutions), ' was only a type of what went od in all de partments of Ephesian life, and in luxuriout indulgence Epheeos fell, and thel^st triangle of music was tinkled in Diana's tipple, snd the last wrestler disappeared from haAgym nasiums, and the last racer took Us gfrland irr'the Stadium, and the last plea was heard in her Forum, and even tha seat as if to 'withdraw the last commercial opportunity from that metropolis, retreated down tlw beach, leaving her without the harbor in which had floated a thousand ?n"p\ > Brook lyp, New York, London and all modern citr ifl^ cisatlantic and transatlantic, take wamr ing! "What luxury unguarded did for Epbc ra?, luxury unguarded may do for all. Op?? lence and splendor God grant to all the peo? pie, to all the cities, to ail the land but at the same time, may He grant tna righteous use of them. Gymnasiums? Yes, but see that the rigor gained in them be consecrated to God. Mag nificeut temples of worship? Yea, but see that in them instead of conmtionaHtiiM and cold pomp of service there be warmth of devotion and the pure Gospel preached. Imposing court houses? Ye*, but in them lef-justic? and me rev rule. Palaces of Journalism? Yes. but let all the printing presses be marshaled for happiness and truth. Gnat pott office buildings? Yes, but through theai day by day, may correspondence helpful, elevating and moral pass. Ornate dwelling houses? Yes, but in them let there be altars of de votion, and conjusa', filial, paternal and Christian fidelity rule. London for magni tude, BerKriP' for universities Paris for fashions, Rome for cathedrals, Athens for clasmcs, Thebes for hieroglyphics] Memphis for tombf. Babylon for garden*, Effhesus for idolatry, but what shall ba tie characteris tics of our American citietfwhen they shall have attained their full stature? Would that "holiness to tha Lord" mijrit be in scribed upon all our iB?t*icipalitios. One thing is certain, and th4fc-trt5atad idolatry rnno oome down. W hen \the greatest god dess of the earth, Diana, enshrined in the greatest temple that era r IstooJ, was pros trated at Ephesus, it was a prophecy of the overthrow of all the idolatries that have cursed the earth, and anything we llr* more than God ban ido*, and thera inasmuch, idolatry in the Nineteenth centary as in the First, and in America as in Asia. As our trahi pulled out from the station at Ephesus, the cars surrounded by the worst looking group of villain" I evacgasid on, all of them seeming in a wrasgle with esch other and trying to get into ai wrangle with us.and we movid along the columns of ancient aqueduct*, each column crowned with storks, having built their nests ther^. and we rolled on down toward Smyrna, and that night in a sailor's bethel as we spoke of the Const whom the world mu?t know or perish, we felt that betwesn cradle aod grave there could not be anything much more enthralling for body, rnin i aud soul tlian our visit to Eohesu?. "A Ya^d el Kesea." One of the foju!a.r jarhitings at the New York Academy of Dtffen wm a yard-long panel of Hoses. A' crowd ww always before it. One art critic exclaimed, ".Such a bit of nature should beloagtoa.il tin people, it it too beautiful for one mm to hid? a.vay." The Youth;* Corapa.'iio/i, of Boston, aeizil the idea, and spe at twenty thousand dullir* to reprodue the painting. Vhe result ha* been a triumph of artistic delicacy an l color. The Gimpanlnn makes an autumn, gift of this copy of. the paintlnx to ea?h of its Ave hundred thousand kubscrib^rs. Any-other* who may subscribe now for the .1rst ti m*. an l request it, will receive "The Yard of Roses," without extra charge while the edition lasts. Besides the gift of this baiuttf tl jwet ir* a'.i new subscribers will rec-iive The Compintori free from the time the ?nb?eription is receive l till January frirjf, including the Thanksgiving and Christmas Double Numt>ers,and for a full year from that date, 'ibe price of Tke Com panion is $1.75 a year. i Kvery family should take this brightest :.n I ? best of ill astral ed 1 iterary papers In addition to its local paper. j Ccc yrTKZV.HT 2 w ei;sh money is made in ! th;-c?m;rr*. Oim ENJOYS Beth the method and mult* when 6yrap of Figs if taken ; it is pleasant and refreshing to thetaate, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidnej-s, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispell colds, held achec and feVera and cores habitual constipation. Srnip of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste-ana ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its ejects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend tt to all and here made it the most popular remedy known. Srnjpof Figs is fbrada In SOo ted $1 bottles by all lawttnpdrng gistx Any reliable dnyst who mir net hare it on hand wffl pro- j cure it promptly for any one wbo wishes to try it Do sot accept airy substitutei CALIFORNIA FtO SYRUP CO. BAM FEAMOitOtL OAL *?wr at rr ~ arwrttct *r. Ely's Cream Eatmj WILL CU UK Children OF CATAKRH. Ipplj E*lau tatoMck vmrH. XL Y BBOCw 90 Warm it, &T. TNENUltEST PILL IN TKEVQ&U)! . TUTT'S ' \ ' ? * ; lor Camden's Winter Visitors. > The Richmond & Danville Railroad Co. has placed on sale at ita Northern of fieea thitjOffe Heists to Cattdeo, 8. C. Passen geh can now ride frottt Washing ton to Ho;* Hfll, via Charlotte^. ou tbe ChArlotte & Augusta division of the sys tem, aod there make close connection with the pasicqger train of tho Three C't Railroad. This scwes tbem the tedious roundabout router heretofore followed via Chat'eaton and Coluinb'a respective ly. The tfavcling jutlic will sppreciatr litis nrra'ge e>'. flow's This t We off?e On? Hundred Dollars ifcWnrd for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cora. <it F. J. ClUCTKY Ac Co.. Props.. Toledo, O. We?, 4be undersigned, Lav? known F. J. Cbene* tor the Iahi 15 yuan, and bclie-re bim perfectly honorable In all taurine*!* tranaac Hons, sad financially able to ca rry out any ob ligations made by their firm. W bt4 T*cax, Wholesale DrucglaU, Toledo. Waldcto, KlWT',* 4 t Mum, Wholesale Druggi?t? .ule<lo. <V Hall's <*r*rrn Curs Is taken Internally, act ing directly apoa the blntxl and mucous su*? facesof the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75c. pe^ bottle. Hold by all druggists. Tons are $9,061,6? acres at public lands still vacant. fte fttraek It Klefc. ^ What would you think If some one that yon knew to be responsible would offer to give you* well atorked general store for one year's work? Yon would, no doubt, consider it btx i*y and Jump at ihe rhance. Wel>. sorb things have been done an i are being done re It a" crag. Mmkts. H. F. Johnson ?fc to., of Richmond, Ta^ number arnriax their em ployee rrany men who e?ra tie vain* of a first cla^s etc re every year. W, F. Davte worked for them awhile, tben o: ened a *nu* fen*ral More at Hick's wharf, Matthews County.Va., and wrote this firm as follows: "lean only i siy that 1 give four busmrea credit for wb*t 1/ an. If I were to meet with auy bad lock, or' lose whit i have made, I am proud io say ih*t " I could go to you for employment *nd mm make another store." They can chow h?>m how to double and treble yoer Incot-e. if you are In any business emuiecing a capital of leas than and it you iro no- in any business at all* they will enable you to be In a short tlme? if you will t ike the r s.lvjce. They w*nt a g'?ed h*>nest man or woman in every coun fr in < he Union to manage a btislr noes that will yield nand?<>m* tetuina. Write them at onos tor in formation. FITS stopped fres bv Da. Kuxe's Gxe*t 5kbvs KtsJoaia. No fits sfter first <Uy t ose. Msrrsleus cures. Trtatl e an ? fx tritil bo'.cle free. Dr. Kline, HI Arc^t., Phi's ,Pa Horss flesh In G?rm :?y l* u'>w nearly as c^tty as beef. If afflicted With sore eyes use l?r. I*aiy:T)io:np son's Eye-water.I)rusihst-? sel i ar 25c. per bot 1 1? opvmofrnwi - . . , I { ? ; j ' jfiwM | ! You cmt'ttf{t9$ \ tjfj fome dealer! always. They vittt fe> { i fell the medicine that pays tftijfl tb# ' larjfest profit. Wl?i yojrwtai to j j boy is the one that do* you thft i ttOBt good. I .'1 Which one is itf / Sometimes, it mny tts ft matte? < | of doubt. But, in tte ca*e of Dr. Pierte's Favorite rrescription, if there's no room for <ty"bt, It's * matter that can be proved. With the facta before yoo, 1t'? j an insult to your intelligence to fcavo something else offered if ?jtiit as good." And here1# 'the proof: Among all the medicines that claim to cm woman's peculiar weaknesses, Irreg ularities, and diseases, the M Favor it* Pret Iption " is tie only , out ;j that's guatanUal. ' ;f ' :*? '! 'v If it doist^i do all that's etaimfti? ' for it, if it doesn't give satisfaotSli in every case, yon!! hkve year sioaey back. .. j v . r<1 . There's (strength and vigor ; for every tired and' feeble wooUm, health, and It new life for evefrw i'J delicate and ailing worn* ~ an* 'fit thers'i no h^p, tt?re,t*o>ty,n m not h?r<?. axfertme*. To ? ntmcaipi '?k^t'-hofmrrH 'LTotfc A.H.UJM4 Wll WHICH IS JHE BEST' , v AND MOST POPULAR MOST POWERFUL AND SAFEST; BLOOD MEDICINE. 4 Swift's Specific S. S. S. l>K&T-f-4*c???9 It i? tfco only permanent euro for conugtous Hloood fOttf6fl[s Skin C..ac?r and mhcr t? I Scrofula. |N i \ . ; . / POPULAR- b:onuge It does all that U clalrai>d tor Ifl ( POWrR?TJI<r? btcanxe ft p^rj^ea tbe blood ol all imijaritlca. /? i 5XYl\#T? i?< c iv* It ccotaiB* no mercury or poUon pf any klnjf 1? ptmaly ?o?ecabU *af c n le taken by the ai<>?t delleato child. "German i Syrup" Here is an incident from the South ? Mississippi, written in April, i $90, just after roe Grippe had visited that country. " I arn a farmer, one ot those who have to rise early and ? work late. At the beginning of last Winter I was on a trip to the City of Vicksburg, Miss., where I got well* drendred in a shower of rain. I went home and was soon after seized with a dry, hacking cough. This grew worse every day, until I had to seek relief. I consulted Dr. Dixon who has since died, and he told me to*get a bottle of Boschee's German Syrup. Meantime my con^h grew worse and worse and then theGrippe came along and I caught that also very severely. M/\ condition then compelled me to do something. I got two bottles of German Syrup. I began using them, ajid before taking much of tlie second bett!i?r-i*axas entirely clear 4f thefcCough that hljd hung to me sofongythe Grippe, aritf ail its bad effects. I felt tip-top an^V i;ave felt that way ever since." Pethr J.IiaiAi^s, jr., Cayuga, Hines C?v. Mhs. $s FREE CURE For Weak Men tNM l?min I h*T.. fci L?j: ? umiu rrw*. j wiu r**Hj nmd u>r . ?. ?fp? ' MftJ i rl i f BIB to fttiy nlff'f No kojnbflC. tart ft radftbtft, wonivrt rr r*. T. ?? um *m u, iXftiun, lien. PFNSTON *? fm\w. Kt Pea illilDlUIl JOWEP1J II. m.ATtK, mmmmmmrnwmm WAMIISU iov, p. im Olflll ?*'*?* Ifuvoca. Wfcrfcue b morva!*' *?? \|l|l W#ll vaA tP*! p weiL >/-w/rA Hrh~T* %#? w 1% tfctti bow. SDcu. k j ear. oampi* cup, fre*. Or. Jf. H. DYE. *dlwr. Paffa'o. N. \ MWtjttW MONTH. man > r w ome n In rr?rjr ronatj !? th* V. ?..LoU>tro4u'? taarti HtwMTtf:4t?kkML AfSaprfK edto Low* ?f-ro-infc'7 Sop** ? t n? >itl rl n ? rf r r nn Uwo'm WwrfM ofenlaf Vt ?b? right p*r?ce. Am4 >fc* mmvm a) Wl nk U*| Iw E**a I' ? u ?Umn ft ft* W?r> a w?k. ?ri# ?.t oar* 'oft F I JO^LSftOX ?fc 00, RMwmII Vi. itst ?Vwt I)m ti)|i 1 (Mag mm tbil ? Li ?vpan y?cr#<?? fce*r ?t>^a tipgn. Ladies can Snake BIG OASH I by iu*-trr'op f ><r th* *i.?: FI'Tn* vt< 1 F otitic* in An ?Tlrau A. .tt^l ;.l?>a*?nr on-u^jvn, that fcuv |??1y <-?b .n. Jrr.'HrfciisfaJn feT'llcnKr. H't f'jit "T.'? ti* J rtT pjyw ju.d *Airmm <>n a l? i??J '-arl. )f rrn want & fui! omCi and t. j r, '"-rid 15 f 'r ?*"* W"*'1 k'.-'l T * i I or 25 '????I*, tli*t }^j CJ>.? tww m?4 ?piT^t?te [ lt? ejrctij<nrt?. AJwajr* *>ttrrs? I OI>EV*S LAUY'S BOOK. B?x^ X. 1.'^"#. Pk.?H?l*lpUI?. Pa. WpODBrarS FACIAL SOAP. ?r w w, tt./5 i K*. ?? T<^rt ?s^?xvtv? 'f- mc?* tt Imtcdau flrtj BMiiJ. U?. ?** >?? U?fc? ?*M W p. >>??* ->'. Urm?t ?"?VT m4 Umntf, (ICo*.' on ftta. % a.tv, *crr<?? ??< *io?y3 ?>???,? ??*? ;>#<* IfutMit, ?c.: m*)*3 fir IV.: umi Iwiii? l IT* rtkfKirra *?ax?, ?*-'-- V>M>. h fl !vk alto! r ? -W y into, *? ??. ntiiiii, tihiu mf n? Wflxi IWr. n>??i. *?.. t?t> ?<???< ?mi n. ?o4Hrti. usTrriTt m ?!?**?*, ?. f. 0*7. c.?n>i? <* tr?e. at tM*? ?r 1?t Mv. J Mian ?uM to Md r?ua? Hart Remedy for CaUfrti to tm H*< to IV, and Cb*tf^ hold by druggbte or vent to f OMll. IOc. E.T. JUlelttoe, Wtrno, fib PAPER CUTTERS! ik Tins MHn> in:: or. ok any . v Printer, Bookbinder, L'thograiher, Paper Mikqr cr Paper Tex Kak er. who may v.y. its v.'aj.i ok 'A.fuuiT-ctaw PAPER CUTTER, HJC WOULD HAVE Mi^yfir BY V/ntTL-CV to Tin Howard iicov uukm, in tr a u>. a*, r.. S FOK ILLUSTRATED CATALOiUd AND KRICM. Iw. L. DOUGLAS i S3 SHOE THE BE8T SHOfc * iHt r?uJ HI f* MP OENtLEMb'S raC LAx?i?.h. care |0?tM ' Lvi by wcarttp V> t,. lK*jxlu tthoe*. nMV j meet tl>?w?o*.i oi nil cs&s*-* una *re tfc* Mi i eeonvtnlnni toot we *r srt-r >ff#re<t?or the <WMf> - ItccxT" of dealer* who -fccr utuer icftket, (0 V Inf jo< ut 700c, ?.na *wre mo n*r? w. I*. ULrvt, rritft !^r.c :n?: t/tinc rfcatp*4 M , boucm. W. L iK?j?ii2 uxiJctoa. l(ut Or TAKE KU fcLi t'lll/TV. Jfl I Mir? on lor*l & ^.W? _ SURRY - OF ? Eagle's lest ? IT- % John Etfea Cook*. * This tbsUfiftf M?toric rtory l? tii?? battel mm l ^?ODMiAf k?T*? ?*rs??r?| KbC<th#t'bfll urn e? Itmia, C**i? t? d$&i| B-jWtar, Mttt? M toi*rc?t,fcy?r wha /Hltht junoy, MTu.rt, Jobr.tUm, !>,*?. n pu J ? Jerks* ?cl L<v. in the for rbi:b. tb?7 a* iwy r*M;r *Dd brvrdy Uitifi!, vflt xh*?t grow UM. 5o '.a* cooH writ* t u h * ?y>.k It r*th Of iUt\aj*. Tb<t of bttila OT*T0TC?fef% wd tbi r:.th of tic c^ryt* ttrnlrr nwp? throats Me"- A? ft ?plc of U>? M cmii St <f ?* a In tbr library #f *11 ?&? wouM not forget i/.e j?orto*?a pwt ^t-ACENTS WANTED!. TirsLtOne Aget.tl' vf< rT<o*x?lxJpcfc*?alp; B3TAPJ p<r**A. nli lb>? b'-oi, ru maJc. Um tf <???>* ropt'i i 1 i T it wl!! t'.li wok ! For ) to /. j-r\U, Q. W. ;nx *. PubU?i?r. 5*w T?d Tfcortu ?late4u mil rtytkal rk<tr^ctioa. Cnfaiuau tojMiuou. CaUio^B* frrTwrttTlJ^ minumjimacem LOUISVILLE, KYi ' . ALL AFFECTIONS OF THE THROAT .\>D tU? TAYLOR'S CHEROKEE REMEJ ii.Ot .. '? ' N REl tt,au<t|taka