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THE NEWS AKD HERALD, WTXNSBORO, S. (J. WEDNESDAY. APKH, 8. : : : 1885. JSO. S. REYXOZVS. ) S- Editohjc. W. L. XcDOXALD. ) The Southern Press Association met ] in Jacksonville, Fla., on the 1st inst.,! and continued in session for :wo days. Ancrusta. Ga.. was selected as the next place of meeting. The Exchange National Bank, of Norfolk, Ya., has suspended. In try* ing to carry a private bank it failed itself and will be put in the hands of a receiver. It was the severest financial shock in the history of the city. General Grant is still lingering, but his life is slowly but surely ebbing away, liis pnysicians say mai uc may die at any time, and certainly can last only a few days longer. His death will not be unexpected at any time. The gold-hilted sword of President Barrios has been found broken on the battle-field of Ohaliehnapa, and according to the latest intelligence he was killed. The report was confirmed by a cablegram from the Preident of San Salvador to the minister of Costa Rica at Washington. The deadlock in me Illinois j^egisjature continues unbroken. Speaker Haines, on account of some dissatisfaction in some of his appointments, rose, after the reading of the minutes on the 1st inst., and dismissed them. Resolutions were offered declaring that the Speaker had no right to discharge employes. It was declared by some that the Speaker was an unsafe person to conduct the affairs of the House and should be deposed, but before there had been any discussion the Senate entered to take a joint ballol for United States Senator. Tee nomination of Genera! Lawtoi: to be envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of the United States to Russia has been withdrawn by the President. It wa*? adversely reportec on by the committee ou foreign rela tions, the majority of the committer being of the opinion that he was ineli glDie oecause nis pouucai ui?avmu? had never been removed by Congress he being connected and figuring prom inently in the late war. General Law ton has been assured by a number o prominent lawyers in Washington tlia President Johnson's pardon was com plete and that he is eligible for the posi tion. All of the leading New York paper approve the re-appointment of Mr Pearson's postmastership in that city The Philadelphia Times, in comment ? *1 ? ..K.? mg diwii lus uijpwiuwunrrwwww izt^^Has^gg^^ij^^of reform in th Jg Ebiuf Mgtn wsm. elf -T 01 Sat ion, Repa oiSMBBBBWW^hc profit will largely overbalance the loss. It is an unmistakable Cleveland landmark of perfect faith with ti*e country to which he gave the open pledge <>t business administration and honest government. The Colombia Register well says: If the civil service reform implies snubbing the men who have borne the heat and brnnt of the Democratic fight in the sorest hoars of adversity, then it is quite time to know how such ?ivit service can honestly serve the beat interests of the Democracy. It is equally pertinent to inquire oni?h sp>rvif?#? rofnrin nan heln **V<" WUVM V?f 4. V%" - ? ?-r the country- About the only issue on which the national campaign of 18S4 was fought by the Democracy was that of administaative reform. If, now, that reform is to be accomplished at the hands of Republican agents, it is well that .the people know it at once. More especially do the good people of South Carolina desire lo know how far the Federal administration, from lio hiot'nacf tft lnwcsf nffi.-l'il. 1? fn be made respectable by the substitntion of reputable men for the miserable placemen who now "run the machine." UOXSIDERABLE aissausiacuon exisiea iu social circles in Washington city when it was announced tliat the army pets who have been kept in that city for so long a time would have to leave and try it iu the far West for a time. Secretary Endicott, says a Washington letter, is finding a strong pressure being brought to bear upon him from the society circles to keep these pets in the city instead of sending them ont West to take their turn and let those who have borne the heat of the day so long have a little rest. Delegations of ladies call on hi in at his office, and efforts are being made to reach him through his family relations. We think it nothing bat right that those who have endured the hardships of the "West for so long be given some leisure and their places filled by those who for so many years have been the ]>ets of society in Washington with little or nothing to do. Some of the unreconstructed Republican newspapers are making a considerable howl over the appointment of so many ex-Confederate soldiers to important positions by the President. They forget that there is no North, no South, but that we are all citizens of a common country. They seem to delight in resurrecting old issues which were buried twenty years ago. Com menting upon this subject the Philadelphia Telegraph says: President Cleveland, it is to be assumed, in appointing a few Southern men to office^ as well as many Northern men to office, is simply doing what Presidents Grant, Hayes, Garfield and Arthur did, viz., recognizing that the war was over; that ]>eace is twenty years old; that the North and South are simply geographical terms; that! ??a?mi Southerners are as loyal to the Union as Northerners; that ft is one country; I that we are all countrymen, united by j D?mn?or rtf frutprmfA* than ever . __ before; that this is a time of good-will and common interest in North and South, and that the more good feeling and interest are cultivated the better it j will be for the whole people. The 'Telegraph recognizes the fact that the war is over and that wc are an undivided people. How much better would it be for the country if this were the sentiment of the whole Northern press. Industrial Education. The following appears in an editorial of the News and Courier of Satnrdav. which shows that other couu-s tries are far ahead of our own in the way of industrial education. It might be well for our own country to pay a little more attention *o this branch of education if it does not appear to interfere with the public school system of the State. We are of the opinion that in the schools and colleges of to-day they do not give that attention to engineering", physics and the practical arts that the subjects themselves J J3 . ueiuaim. Mr. Thomas Hardeman, of Georgia, has given much tine and investigation to one branch of the educational prob1 lem, and has succeeded in collecting much interesting information. In his view, the defect in the public school system is the neglect of instruction and training for useful occupations, Mr. Hardeman is not an enemy of the public school system, and his array ol statistics and opinions is intended tc display its defects, and not as an impeachment of the system as a hole He advocates industrial or mechanical tuition in the public schools, so thai bv practical handiwork pupils o: , every condition may be taught tht secrets of handicraft, and obtain som< ! knowledge of engineering, physic; i and the practical arts. > England has eight hundred pnbli< , schools with thirty-five thousand pupils In France there are trade schools, ii [ eighty cities, with thirty thousam 1 pupils, besides two hundred smalle technical schools. Prussia has tw< hundred schools, and Bavaria one huu i dred and fiftv. In the United State . there were only seventy-five tradi . schools in 1876 with abont seven thon ' sand five hundred pupils. There i ! evidently a great room for develop I mp.nt therefore, in the direction point . ed out by Mr. Hardeman, but it i , always questionable how far it is pro ' per or necessary that the free school should give more than a strictly ele 5 meutary education. The industria schools" which are advocated ought no ' to be made an additional charge upoi the public. f Pearson Appointed. ' The telegraph brings the intelligenc that Mr. Henry ii. rearson nas oee appointed postmaster at New Yorii It is also stated that ua gentleman ver s near the President, and undoubtedl 1- W . SpCUKIllg irum au(uai Ewnuniiugv I ?v . ports that the re-appointment of Mi Pearson was made after a most patier - examination of all the facts connecte e with the charges against him and hi answer to the same, which was snt a mitted to and read by the President. r The telegraphic account of the-ip*" 7 view goes on to say: fche postmaster. It is farther stated mat tnat ine re-appomcment 01 rearson will constitnte a notable exception tolhe coarse which the President may W?* expected to pursue. The New Yosk postofEce is the largest and most important in the country and is of interest to all the people, and especially to the vast business enterprise centred in the metropolis. It is to-day considered a complete illustration of the successful application of civil service reform principles to an immense governmental establishment. "This condition," added the gentleman above referred to, "has been brought about very largely by the intelligent effort ol Mr." Pearson, and he is thus identified in the closest manner with this examDie of success of civil service reform. To retain him insures faith and confidence in the movement, which would receive a shock from his remoral. His retention was earnestly requested by a large number of business men of that city, both Democrats and Republicans, and very generally by the Independent Republicans, who did such good service in sapport of the Democratic candidates in the last campaign." It is further authoritatively learned that this act of the Presdent mnst not be regarded as indicating that in other cases those opposed to the party of the Pres iaent win eiuier oe appointed or retained after the expiration of their terms of office. In answer to a suggestion that the re-appointment of Mr. Pearson might cause great dissatisfaction in the ranks of. Ms-party, the President is represented as saying: <'Thn nnrtv 5s neither hypocritical, unpatriotic nor ungrateful." About the only justification of this appointment is to be found in the statement that in the divided condition of the Democratic party in New York it was impossible for the President tc make a safe choice from among that ns.?-fcv. The fact that Mr. Pearson was the incumbent can make no difference. His term havhig expired, there was a vacancy, which the President had to fill. In appointing Mr. Pearson, the President, must therefore be considered as having selected that gentleman for the position in question. In making that selection he must be regarded as determining that Mr. Pearson's claims, without reference to his incumbency, are superior io those of any other applicant. The Convict Labor Question. The Columbia Register, of the 2nd inst., has a lengthy and interesting editorial upon tbe convict labor question in the Southern States. This subject has attracted considerable attention for a number of years past, and the question how shall it be made most beneficial to the State is one which has been answered by different men In HiffprAiif wove Sn lr?nor oc crime continues we are bound to have convicts, and their labor must be used for the benefit of the State. Can all of this labor be utilized within the prison walls? If not, then in what way can it be utilized for the best interests of the State? Should tbey then be thrown out, as our worthy exchange says, to compete with the l honest laboring classes of our coun tr$y<*ntainly this would be degrading to bonest labor, and in titce would be bound to have a detrimental effect upon it. This cannot afford to do. After discussing the question at some length ' onr exchange presents (he following # ' - - - x 1,1 plan uv wmca convict, jaour cuutu uu made a source of revenue to the otate: i What, then, are we going' to do about it? Manifestly in South Carolina, for instance, we cannot afford to j support eight hundred convicts in idle- j ness year in and year out. Be- j sides this, as the old rhythm runs: I "Satan finds some mischief still for idle hands to do." What shall be done, then? To hire these convicts out within the walls to certain employers brings these employers to the penitentiary for craftsmen and laborers, who otherwise would give employment to honest, skilled and unskilled labor outside of the penal walls. Well, we do not know how they may accommadc this question elsewhere; hut here at the South we insist upon it the establishment of penal farms, where all but the most criminal classes would be employed, would relieve the situation. These penal farms would furnish all necessary for the whole eatablismert. And the criminals kept within the walls should be put to making clothing and other conveniences for those convicts engaged on the penal farms. If some ten per cent, of the convicts of the Southern States should consist of such desperate criminals as should not be allowed beyond the walls, this wonld show one thousand permanently immured convicts. The farm convicts, well handled, could furnish all the food necessary consist iug of grain and flesh, for tlie wnoie [ force, besides an average of five bales of cotton to the hand?say 55,000 bales 1 annually or the equivalent. Such a 1 production would by uo means be felt 1 in a crop of six or seven million bales. | At $50 to the bale, we find $2,750,000, i. o- in round numbers $3,000,000, be1 yond the food and raiment otherwise > produced. This would allow to twelve penal establishments $250,000 each. | We can see no reason m our case ucrc in Sonth Carolina, under thoroughgoing first class discipline, why a penal 1 farm might not be made not only pro*' fitable, but absolutely a training school I for agricultural labor. By inaugurate * ing along with this farming a system of rewards, wherein so much would 5 be carried to account of meritorious * conduct and labor, at the expiration ol | such a convict's durance a fund woulc \ be paid to him by which he would be r encouraged to begin a new life as ai 3 honest man, if he had it in him. * This plan seems to work eleganth e on paper and bring in a good rounc - sum to the State annually. How i 5 would work practically we are unable " to say, but are rather inclined to be s lieve that the plan is a good one, am - its adoption would result beneficially s t) the State. il ,t NOTES FROJf A EKA XSA S. 0 Pine Bluff, Ark., April l.--Pini Bluff, the present home of the writer is the county seat of Jefferson county It is an old town, and was original!; n built in a scattering manner right alon< , the bank of the Arkansas Iliver. Fo a long time it seemed destined ever t< *. remain a place of little importance 1 the country around was thinly settles [ and there were no means of transpoi ^ tation except the irregular and uncei , tain passing of boats on the :-r?-'"? But after awhile the tide -"'gration commenced to-**~v~1,1 s direction, tctllu- ina^e ou^ the then attracted by the richness of the soil along the river audits numerous tributarvJmyous, they soon corn inenced to tfn^alhe gnats, mosquitoes and the many other dreadful inhabitants of these low lands and began the work of converting the swampy and heavily timbered wilderness into fields of "waving corn and blooming cot*/v,% " ^ wWlo i?ccnnt?/?6c /\f fha LUU? XX.IiU u Ullt 1/llV icovutvuo VI vuv surrounding country were thus bein<r developed the town steadily grew in proportion, and for the last three or four years it has been on a regular ! "boom", and now has a rapidiv ini ? creasing pu^uiauuu ui vwi cj^in. thousand There is 110 longer a lack of shipping facilities here, a> there are ' now three railroads centering here and ; a regular line of sleamboats on the river, connecting with boats on the ' Mississippi going north and south. The city is well supplied with gas, and there are" telephone wires, not ' only connecting all the principal business houses in the city, but extending 1 to farms ten miles cut in the country. ; There is a great deal of manufac' turing going on here; from 12 o'clock on Sunday night until 12 o'clock Saturday night the blowing of engines and : the continuous motion of machinery is heard. So much for this part of the 1 State; but this is not the onlv place where improvements are being made; they arc going 011 all over the State. As one will see by a visit to the New Orleans Exposition, Arkansas is fast taking her stand as one of the most enterprising and progressive States in the Union. Now, lest I make this article too lengthy, I will say in conclusion that The News axd Herald in its weekly | VI81LS 10 cms owce is quuu a suurcc ' ] of interest and pleasure to me. Lou? ' I may it prosper, and great be {he suc~ cess and happiness of its many readers i both in old Fairfield and elsewhere. J E. J. CAJIAK. . I An Awful Fall. 1 During the Moses and Chamberlain ; carpet-bag and scalawag misrule in i Foutli Carolina, an adventurer named Hiram Kitnpton became a very considerable person. He was financial agent of the State in New York and a Wall street broker. He was a Yale graduate, of the class of 1863, and at one time employed many clerks and possessed $2,000,000. While Kiinptou's old Gubernatorial friend has gone from bad to worse, finally descending to petty larceny and the work-house, the financial agent has come to the same grief and nearly the same abyss. The South Carolina bonds proved his curse at last, involving fraud, degraWliAn Kit? fmulo I UttUUll UUU Ullliawftj. it ugu jwouuiuo departed, his wife and friends also vanished. He took to opinra and whiskey. On Tuesday last, the poor . wretchj ragged, imbecile, tilt by, his malodorous raiment kept - upon his body with a yellow rope around the waist, was hauled up before the Yorkville Police Court on a charge of vagrancy. He still fancies that he is rich, but really has not a cent. A more melancholy wreck, at48 years of age, can hardly be found, and yet there are worse men who will probably never share his doom of squalor and Itmacv. Such Works at the Near Approach of Spring. The readers of the papers everywhere are, no doubt, acquainted by this time with the fact that the worldrenowned Louisiana State Lottery draws on the second Tuesday of every mnnfh /'the next on Anril 14. will be the 179th Grand Monthly Drawing1), si New Orleans, La., but they should also take note that $265,500 will be scattered among those who buy tickets at $5.00 each, or $1.00 fractional parts, of which they can learu fally on application to Ml A. Danphin, * New Orleans, La. * 1 I The Mangrove and Oyster in West- ! ern Florida. I am inclined to believe, in the economy of nature, so far as constructive process goes, the mangrove, in combination with the oyster, has had much to do with the building up of this western fringe of Florida. There is that factor of resistant e or obstruction to a passage which rende s a mangrove imnnssihle to traverse save bv i raccoons, snakes, or birds. Starting ' in a delicate way, with a single thin, ! pliant stalk right in the salt-water, afi ter a while, when the mangrove grows j to some four or five feet hi<rh, it throws down suckers from its trun&or branches, which meet the waters again. In time, the suckers being all around, the ' * ' I main irunK suems iu uuuu jioch uivai I out of the water, and to stand upon its 1 lower branches like a chevat-de-Jrisc. I Now suppose a manufacturer of gas fixtures had made a hundred big candelabra, and had stacked them in a disorderly way in a large room, the main pipes upward, and the crooks *and querls of the branches on the floors. If you were requested to walk across that room you never could do it. -You can fight through an alder thicket, but never through a growth of mangroves. I do not think sufficient importance has been given to the role the oyster plays in conjuncuou witu uicac un9. When the mangrove grows on the outer edge of the water-line, and drops its aerial roots, no sooner are these at the surface than at once the spat of the raccoon oyster finds a lodgment, for there can be no waters so charged with life as those in these warm seas. Qstrca parasitica nature originated to weight down the mangrove and anchor it in place.' These oysters accumulate, ??-? etc* Kirr oc o mnnVs growing in uiiu\jiiK;z> uo bead. In time these run through the cycle of oyster life, die, and drop from tlieir branch, and fall in the shallow water. The calcareous portions of the shells dissolve in part, but some of the debris, with the silicious matter, remains. A little more soil under water is made, and here will sprout another mangrove, ccrtain in time to have oys1 ter appendages. It looks to me as* if the trees on the very outer edge of the 1 clump show greater activity in this ^ double vegetable and molluscan life ?. than the trees in the inside. Growth, j then, seems to be arrested at certain ' points in this dual system, and to be ' advanced at others. One, two, or three 1 of these thickets arc separated, and may remain apart for years: then a seed falls, finds its proper depth, 1 sprouts, a new mangrove rises, anc k another and another, and the many islands become one. Ma groves are al ?? mvtoiv tlint wajs flowing. >_>i?ri, - | ensiling. the shells dropping, and s< 1 nature's laws of life and death are bal , aneed, ^nd make up that grand ever lasting harmony.?Barnct l'hi/lips, ii Harper's Magazine for January. ? m ? To Restore Paded Photographs. e To accomplish this, according to th British Journal of Photography, tha ' which there can be no belter authorit ' on such a subject, one has only to in: y merse the yellow print in a dilute soli y tion of bichloride of mercury until a r the yellowness disappears. It is the well washed in waU-r to remove th 3 mercurial salt. If the print be a uKiut? ed one. it is by jio-mcan4' T tc d unmount it prb^p'. -r t.? ^^ment. I All that-is t'1's case is to keep if- ?ntimto?*?V>wct ior a time .tf.v\i~ blotting pnperctnrr^^ the - bichlorate; indeed, tliis is the plan originally suggested by Mr. Barnes. By the bichloride treatment no lost detail is actual!}* restored,as some have imagined. It i-simply that the sickly yellow color, which, as it were, buried the delicate halfliuts, or what remains of them, is removed, and thus renders the picture bri^ljt and cftar. Pictures which navu ucc 11 treutuu tvitu iuu iucn,uir oiways.possefes a much 'warmer tone win they did originally; as the purple or the black tones give way to a reddish brown or reddish purple, more or less bright, according, probably, as gold or sulphur had been the principal toning agent Hi-re a qnestio very naturally arises with regard to the future performance of pictures which have been thus ! "restored," seeing that negatives intensified u ith mercury, or transparencies toned by it. are so prone to change. In answer to this,- we may mention that they appear to be permanent; at least that is our experience with soi.c that have been done for many year . There appears to be no further loss of detail, and the whites retain the r purity; indeed, since undergoing the treatment with mercury, no alteration is yet perceptible. Endurance in the "Water. Man and animals are able to sustain themselves for long distances in the water, and would do so of toner were they not incapacitated, in regard to the former at least, by sheer terror, as well as complete ignorance of their real power . Webb's wonderful en urance will never be forgotten. But there are other instances only less remarkable. .? < /? 1?<\ TYI ofo nf o OUILIC JVtXIO \ iitJ OV/VVUU luutv v/i u ship fell overboard while in the act of hoisting a sail. It was blowing fresh; the time was night, and the place was some miles out on the stormy German ocean. The hardy fellow, nevertheless, managed to gain the English coast. Brock, with a dozen other pilots, was plying for fare ^ by Yarmouth, and as the main sheet was belayed, a sudden puff of wind upset the boat, when pres ently all per shed except Brock himself, who, from 4 in the afternoon of an October evening till 1 the next morning, swam thirteen miles before he was r.hle to hail a vessel at anchor in tho offing. Animals themselves are capable of swimming immense distances, although unable to rest by the way. A dog recently swam thirteen miles in America to rejom nis master, a mma and a dog, washed overboard in the Bay of Biscay, have been known to make their way to shore. A dog swam ashore at the Cape of Good Hope with a letter in his mouth. The c ew of the ship to which the dog belonged all perished, wliich they need not have done had thev onlv ventured to tread water as the dog did. As a certain ship was laboring heavily in the trough of the sea it was found needful, in order to lighten the vessel, to throw some troop horses overboard. The poor things, my informant, a staff surgeon, told me, vrhen they found the:v.selves abandoned, faced round and swam for miles aftei the vessel. "I have formed a settled conviction that the world is fed too much. Pastries, cakes, hot bread, rich gravies, pickles and pepper sauces are all discarded from my bill of fare, and I firmly believe they will be from the recipes of the twentieth century. Entire wheattlour bread, vegetables, fruit, fish (with r> r\\r\n+\ orwl mill* o e + V? /-? 1 a 11LLISJ CLULVi. iUAin. 00 ti-lU tUiCl drink, will distil in the alembic of the digestic organs, into pure, rich, feverles.s blood, electric but steady nerves, and brains that can think God's thoughts after H m, as they have never, yet been thought. This is my recipe: I Pl-iin livin<r nnr? hicrh t.hinVirxr ?nH this my warning: Witli high living you will get exceedingly plain thinking. '? Frances E. Willnrd. iiie tot.il number of cigars produced in the United States is 3,000,000,000 annually. It makrs a fellow awfnl sad to think that he can't smoke them all? or ltwouiu.maKe mm sad were lie not aware that there are some 2,999,999,000, more or less, that he wouldn't smoke under any circumstanccs. ?Boston Transcript. V ?auea??b?ca?OMPB?S FROJt LUXURY TO A CELL. A Trio of Bank Cashiers in State Prison. | HaRTFOKD, Conn., April 4.?Tlie three Norwich bank cashiers, Meech, Roath and Webb, weo lived in luxury on tiie proceeds of their crimes, now sleep in dreary cells and labor daily in the prison workshop, forbidden to converse with any one. or even to '\ii>e their eyes when visitors are present. ! Meech is haggard and hollow-eyed ana j his clean-shaven face and close-cropj ped hair give him the appearance of a man tnanv years beyond his age. fie works at a bench, cutting out the thin leather gussets used to line the heels of shoes. Roath is in the same shop, confined to the irksome lask of burnishing the soles of shoes. Ills luxuriant black hair and heavy black mustache have disappeared and few would ! recognize in the tall, thin, white-faced i ! man, with large dark eyes strangely ! contrasting with the pailor, the pre! possessing "William JUoath, cashier of I the Shetucket National Bank. Webb, j porilv and with some lingering traces of dignity even m ms rougn prison suit, has for his daily work ibe setting of nails into shoe heels preparatory to placing them under the nailing machine. His white hair and mustache are no more. Many old friends call on tiiern from lime to time, but the trio receive no favors beyond those accorded other well-behaved prisoners. The wife and family of Mecch have removed from Norwich to a residence near the prison that they may see him more frequenllv. The prisoners are permitted to sidokc in incir run.-, ?uu the three cashiers :i;e kept well .supplied with cigars. The Tenure of Office. Although the Republicans in caucus failed to agree upon a party policy regarding the proposition to make an issue with the Administration upon the question of removals without cause from offices which arc not covered by tlic tcnure-of-offioc Act, they seem to have been unanimously op? l,> anoli nmiivolc fill' wllPll tl)P j;udcu iw 9uv^ii iviuv..*.-, . nomination of McGraw to bo Interna) Revenue Collector of the West Viri ginia district was reached, the point t was made that the incumbent was an ex-Union soldier, and 1 hut lie had not l served four years. It was argued that ! though the office had no fixed term, ! the principles of the tennre-of-office 1 Act were, nevertheless, applicacle, and i the Republicans expressed themselves , as opposed to making removals of the I kind proposed upon political grounds - alone. A motion to postpone action - until after the list of pending nomina tions had gone over, and upon yea and ) nay vote, was carried by a strict party - vote. Several others of the non-con firmed nominations were temporarily i laid aside upon the same ground, and when the list had been completed the subject was further discussed. There being no prospect of agreement without a long debate, ii was concluded tc e postpone action until December. The d Senate adjourned without electing s j President pro tempore. I- Chinese Earned in San Francj^c-? - ? 1 Sax Fuancisco.JWrtf'4.- Earl v this ii morinnij^y^UTCiI remains of three e ufcfrffese were found in the ruins of a fire which last night partially destroyed a building and its contents, hi the heart of. Chinatown. The loss was about $20,000, fully insured. The throat of one corpse was found to be "cat, and it.is believed that the deceased preferred"suicide to suffocation. The Cotton Supply. New York, April 4.?The total visible supply of cotton for the world is 2,637,783 bales, of which 2,097,383 bales are American, against 2,944,201 bales, and 2,235,001 bales respectively last year. The stock at all interior towns are 13,J&3 bales; receipts from 1; pfcntatk&s l^Jfe-i bales. The crop in sight is 5,^80,2.^5 bales. I " * C|> ?Harry M. Bradley, son of a well ! known Philadelphia merchant, had a ! tooth filled, three weeks a<ro, and soon j afterward an nicer formeo near it. I The phvsiciars decided to lance the ulcer. The filling was removed and the operation performed. A second ulcer formed in the roof of I lie mouth. Symptoms of blood poisoning were observed, and the patient, growing suddenly worse, died on Saturday. The young man was only seventeen years old. ?The JVeics and Courier says it is difficult to estimate the number of un employed men in the whole city or Charleston to-day. Cm of a voting population of 10,000 it is safe to say that full) 4,000 have no regular employment. | KING'S EVIL j Was the name formerly gives to Scrofula because of a superstition that it could b? cured by a king's touch. The world Is j wiser now, and knows that SCROFULA can only be cured by a thorough purification of the blood. If this is neglected, the disease perpetuates its taint through generation after generation. Among its earlier symptomatic developments are Eczema, Cutaneous Eruptions, Tui mors. Boils. Carbuncles, Erysipelas, Purulent iflcers, Nervous and Physical Collapse, etc. If allowed to continue, Rheumatism, Scrofulous Catarrh, Kidney and Liver Diseases, Tubercular Consumption, and various other dangerous or fatal maladies, arc produced by it. A/er's Sarsaparilla Is the only poicerful and always reliable blood-purifying medicine. Itfssocffect- j unl an alterative that it eradicates from ! the system Hereditary Scrofula, and j the kindred poisons of contagious diseases I nvi<-1 TriprrMirv- At the same time it en- I riches and ^'talizes the blood, restoring i healthful action to the vital organs and I rejuvenating the entire system. This great I Regenerative Medicine Is composed of the genuine Honduras SarsapariUa, with yellow Dock, St idling ia, the Iodides of Potassium and Iron, and other ingredients of great potency, carefully and scientifically compounded. Its formula is generally known ** ae>yr\n Kocf IV IUC IXl^UiUtl piUi^OClVU; uuv4 www MV^M Ehysicians constantly prescribe Ayer's arsapaeilla as an Absolute Cure For all diseases caused by the vitiation of the blood. It is concentrated to the high* est practicable degree, far beyond any other preparation for which like effects are claimed, and is therefore the cheapest, as well as the best blood purifying mcdi | cine, In the world. | Ayer's Sarsaparilla PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., LowellMass. [Analytical Chemists.] j Sold by all Druggists: price ?1; six bottles for $5. I I COLUMBIA BOY. THE very fast trotting stallion COLUMBIA BOY will stand the season of 1885 at Kock City. Columbia Boy is a very handsome bay sixteen hands high, six years old, and is of exceedingly kind disposition. For terms and information adHroco .T A TWES M A "RT-v. At Granite Quarries. Po. t-office?Winnsboro, >S. C. Max24fx2m Z3TCAPITAL PBIZE, S75.000._*j Tickets only S5 00. Shares in Proportion. ' rmeww Louisiana State Lottery Company*. "TVerio hereby certify that we svpercUe the arrangements for ml the Monthly and Semi-Annual Drawings of The Louisana 1 r s*\.s7 />->*>> on r> ftr.nn_ Siaie lA/lltry y^uiui/'iny. u?-.t m y., . age and control the Drawing* themselves, and that the same are conducted with hon- j esty, fairness and in good faith toward all j partie*, and ire authorise the Company to ' use this certificate, with the facsimile* of our i signatures attached, in its advertisements." J S7 . <3 ! Commissioners. Incorporated in 18GS for 25 years by the Legislature for Educational and Charitable purposes?with a capital of $1,000,000?to which a reserve fund of over $5">0,000 lias I since been added. By an overwhelming popular vote its I franchise was made a part of the present . State Constitution adopted December 2ud, I A. D. 1X79. | The only Lottery ecer cotcd on and en. j dor zed by the people of any State. It never scales or postpones. Its Grand Single \ umber I>ra wings take place monthly. A^'LEXDID OPPORTIXIT1 TO XV I X A FOKTLXIL FOURTH GRAND DRAWING. CLASS IK IN THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC. NEW ORLEANS, TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1885?179th Monthly DrawlDg. CAPITAli PRIZE, $75,000. 100,000 Tickets at Five Dollars Kach. Fractions, in Fifth?, in Proportion. LIST OF PRIZES. 1 CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000 1 flo 25.000 1 do do lo.ooo 2 PKIZES OF $6000 12,ooo 5 do 2000 10,000 10 do 10"o lo.ooo 20 do 500 10.000 100 do 200 20,000 300 do loo 30.000 500 do 50 25,000 lOoO do 25 25,000 AWitOXIMVTI iN FRIZES. 9 Approximation Prizes of $750 c,75o ' In 51)0 4.500 UU V.w t> do do 250 2,250 196T Prizes, amounting to $263.50(1 Application for rates to clubs should be made only to the office or the Company In New For furilier Information write clearly, giving full address. POSTAL .NOTES, Express Money Oraers. or New York Exchange in ordinary letter. Currency by Express (uil sums ol $5 and upwards at our expense^dre^d^ New Orleans, La., or M. A DAUPHIN. _ _ 607 Seventh St, Washington, D. C. Make P. O. Money Orders payable and address Registered letters co . NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, New Orleans. La. | STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA I j COLAT* UP r Ainr ! COURT OF COMMON PfcEAS Andrew M. Wallace, Plaintiff, agains ' Washington Thompson. Defendant.! Summons for Relief.--Complaint no\ i Hemd. TO THK DEFEND V>'Tr 1? j.^ AKlTHEREBY summoned and reX quired to answer the complaint!?? this action, which is filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Ple&s for said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscribers at their office, Xo. 2, Law Kange, Winnsboro, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time afoj-esaid, tin plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated March the 3rd, A. D. 1885. KAGSDALE & KAGSDALE, Plaintiff's Attorneys. TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVE-JN A.M.JCJJ: Take notice that the Summons in this action (of which the foregoing is a copy) and the Complaint were filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Picas for Fairfield County, at Winnsborowgh, in tlie County of Fairfield in the State of South Carolina, on the 21st dav of Slarch, A. D. 1885. RAGSDALE & RAGSDAlE, Plaintiff's Attorneys. Apll-x()t STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF FAIRFtE^y. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Martha Herrinpton and Patsv Thompson, Plaintiffs, againat William llolmes. Lucy Baylor, Richard Baylor, as Administrator of the Estate of Jerry Baylor, Deceased, and the Unknown Children of Elizabeth Crunier, Deceased, Defendants. Summon* for Relief.?Complaint not Served. To the Defendants Above-named: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, which is tiled in the office of tlie Clerk of Common Pleas for the said County, ami to serve a cony of your answer to the said complaint on the subscribers, at their office, No. 2, Law Range, Winnsboro, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the .day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiffs in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated <>th dav of January*, A. D. 1885, RAGSDALE & RAGS DALE, Plaintiffs' Attorneys. To the Unknown Defendants, the Children of Elizabeth Crunier: TAKE notice that the summons in this action, of which the foregoing is a copy, and the complaint was filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, -4. it-:.?^,+T at Yf 11IU9UUU/, ill VUilllUJ VI, X (Hiiiviu, in the State of i>outh Carolina, on the Ctli dav of January. A. I). issr>. rtAGSDALE <fc KAGSDALE, Plaintiffs' Attorneys. Mch'23-x(i if fineries I IX T?Trr>vTv*vn a roMPl.F.TE stock of FRESH groceries, consisting of FLOUIt. MEAL, SUGAR, COFFEE, TEA, IIA MS. BACON. And everything usually kept in a FIRST CLASS GROCERY. SAUSAGE. FRESH PORK SAUSAGE, always on hand at FIFTEEN CENTS per pound. McCARLEY CQ, JUST ARRIVED ! A FRESH STOCK OF GROCERIES, consisting of SUGARS, COFFEES, TEAS, &C. I A FIXE LOT EARLY ROSE POTATOES CANNED GOODS. Salmon, Sardines, Tomatoes, Peaches, Com, Pears, Pineapple, etc. TXTrt ^ ncf VArtni O TltAA llMA A/ It C JiO-VC j XCtCl?C\l CU 1111*5 VJL Ciga's and Tobacco?Chewing and Smokinjj. Call and tiv them. In these, as wel as all other goods, we guarantee to give satisfaction, both in qnality and price. PEOPST BROS. DON'T READ THIS.. m \ At?* Never lias my unusually select stock of Men's, Boys' and Children's Clothing and Furnishing Goods been so extensive, never so low in price (quality and workmanship considered) as now. 3iy beautifully fitting and custom-like clothing is wont by the best dressed men and boys in the city, and visitors to Columbia who" may contemplate purchasing clothing will find at this store the most correct styles and the latest novelties, all garments fitted to your form before delivery, and every articic sold is warranted to be just exactly as represented. The well-dressed voung man who de j man^s something in "accordance with his j own ideas of raiment, can always be sure j of finding the latest and most correct j styles of garments at this establishment. I make a special feature of suits for young ! men in four-button Cutaways, in Worsted I and Whipcord; also in Prince Alberts. No oth- r house has so complete a stock of Gents' Underwear a* I am offering to my trade. Perhaps I should not know j this ii those useful people, the shoppers, (who go around comparing goods ana buying where they find the nest) were not continually telling me so, One very important feature is that my stock is large and new, another is that my prices are the lowest anywhere. The proper way to find this out is"to call and see for yourselves. 1 NOTICE.?I have just added to my 1 stock of Shoes a line of Dancing Pumps I and Gents' Slippers, l am aiso prepared , to wholesale goods to merchants in the State. I guarantee prices, and you can save in your freights by purchasing from ; the Emporium. I can sell cheaper than > any jobbing house, as I purchase from i Manufacturers. M. L. KIXARD. , SlCEBIES AT COST ; TO CLOSE iiUT. T IIAVE determined to close out all my on/1 will till fill an* solu^ - i put them atcos^o^^' " CASH OXLY. Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Canned Peaches, Apples, Pears, Pineapples. Grated Pineapple, \ \ Bo**BC'(;oTt>c?W^cW?*-\ \ \ \ JUST OPENED. A tub of Gilt Edge Butter, :30c.?co*t. Lard, Molasses, liice, Salt, Spices, Extracts, etc. Stoves, Tin and Woodenware, and House Furnishing G^>ds?a nice line at reasonable prices. J. H. CUilMlNGS. iron! to Comer. FRESH OYSrEHS THREE TIMES EVERY WEEK. FRESH FISH l ' - I SEMI-WEEKLY. m . JUST RECEIVED, a fresh supply of Oyster Crackers, Soda Biscuits, Ginger and Fancy Cakes, Tomato Catsup, Bradsaw Sauce, French Mustard, Pig's Feet, Barrel Pickles, Barrel Saur Kraut, Appicn, VlllUiiA UiiU Peanuts, Chestnuts, lemons, Oranges, Banannas, Cocoanuts, Irish Potatoes, Chickens, i Eggs and butter. ALSO, The CELEBRATED KANGAROO FIVECENT CIGAR. J5T Meals at all hours through the day at my Restaurant. Novas F. W. DABENICQT. ATLANTIC COAST LINE.! PASSESGER DEPARTMENT. WILMINGTON, N. C, OCT. 6, 1884 NEV7 ZL.HsTS ?BETWEEN? I Charleston and Columbia and Upper Sontli Carolina. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. GOING NORTH. Leave Charleston 7.00 a. m Leave Lanes 8.40 a. m. j Leave Sumter 0.48 a. m. i Leave Columbia .11.00 a. m. Leave Winnsboro. 2.31 p. m. I Leave Chester 3.45 p. m. ; Leave Yorkville 5.35 p. m. i Leave Lancaster 0.25 p. m. ! Leave Hock Hill 5,00 p. j I Leave Charlotte ,,, .6 15 p. m. GOING SOUTH. i Arrive at Charlotte 1.00 p. ni. j Arrive at Kock Ilill 2.00 p. m. Arrive at Lancaster... 9.00p.m. I Arrive at Yorkville 1.00 p m. I arrive at . ~.t-t p. m. j ' Arrive at Winnsboro 3.48 p. in. j Arrive at Columbia 5.30 p. m. ; Arrive at Sumter 6.55 p. m. j Arrive at Lanes. 8.05 p. m. j Arrive at Charleston .'. .9.45 p. m. j j Solid trains between Charleston and Co-; j lumbia. ! J. F. TIVINE, T. M. EMERSON, j j Gen'l Sup't. Gen'l Pass. Agent i _ . I ! HIGH GRADE FERTILIZER. j ! I^ECOGXIZING the importance, in a I | late season, .'of fanners usizg HIGHLY j | A1DIONIATED FERTILIZERS, we have j | arranged to supply the wants of our j: patrons in this line and can offer them, until the 1st of May, a HIGH GRADE ; FERTILIZER, ammoniated with the best , quality of DRIED BLOOD, the highest < and best smmoniated kno**n to the trade, i Shipments made promptly. DOMESTIC FERTILIZING CO., Colnmbta. St C. fcnn?BMB3?B3MWMI v Jt.sa W 05 Tgf * J? <.0 ~?rf ? * : isgss 14 r ! 1 < \> . , . -..a: O O ^ Pi^i 5*1 HH W-J -. < i-j >-3 k?t o w ^ ^ r~? i a | 5 h El? g U? > w s^ss w g> ! e > ?2 j O Sf ^ ? ^ - | U z 25 S? gsa 8 figi* ft ' z <Z 5 B? : -? ^ r-t CO WJ ^ hrl L> ^ ~ ? ! o 50 , _ ^ ^ CO js r1!^ i 1?1 )?1 in O T"1 l_ # cc ; In! 35 ' > a h? ? s r J{ I > ^ ^ 3 ^ : ir ^2 % I ? w ' Ji3 I ^ i?? vV t~* s* c > m H i> ~ ^ l| ^ : ^ _ s| ?g ?. X ml ~ 02 gj P3 ?<39 h-3 S-<3S FRESH GROCERIES! "| ^ *1 FRESH GROC ERIES ! I - . <r* MOLAJ and Sugafl CHH MOIR'S cnow.cuott'. Mixed Pickle. and a fresh and well assorted lotof Canned ^j&j GoodJ FOR THE LAUNDRY?French Starch, enameled. Try it. Poll orwl rtv->nnna Kuf/im Knvincc a1?.n. ^ where, ?. ft. FlE^iKEV. C B ART & C0~ | ^55* t ! 57 I 1 AND | I r>9 I MARKET STREET, CHARLESTON, SO. CA., The Largest Fruit and Produce House in the South. Impoit and keep constantly on haud Bananas, Cocoa nuts, Oranges, Pineapples, Apples, Lemons,Nuts, Raisins, Potato's, Cabbages, Onions, X. C. .and Va. Peanuts. ORDERS SOLICITED, AND PROMPTLY FILLED. N ov2SxGm PAVILION HOTEL, CHARLESTON, S. C. E. T. GAILLARD, - - Proprietor. STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS, OTIS' PASSENGER ELEVATOR, ELECTRIC BELLS, HEATED ROTrXDA Kates, S-\o:> to $'Ux\ Marl8xly THE MANNING TIMES, A PUBLISHED BY V H. Xj. ZDiLIRIR,, OHR,, | ?AT? n A N I XG, S. \ Only $1.50 per annum In advance. Cheap advertising median). S. C- MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. -g|Jj THE Thirtv-fiftli Annual ileetinc of the SOUTH CAROLINA MEDICAL 1 ASSOCIATION will be held in Charleston on Tuesday, April 21.1SS.*>. Railway tickets at excursion rates. JOHN FORREST. M. D., Mar24flx3 Recording Secretary. fnTTP m?n<3TJV T-NremrmrrmT? Gives m< -del courses of its own in all the Common School and Collegiate Branches, including bookkeeping and vocal and instrumental music, Fhe to ei^ht elaborate recitations, with reports uaiiy. lcatuv-is, cjtyei'ieucea; UUUQingS, handsome; location, beautiful and salubrious church facilities, good. School fully supplied with charts, maps, globes, blackboard surface, patent desks, etc., etc. The Reading Room, always open and free to all, has a choice selection of currant literature. Rates of TUITION and BOARD to suit the stringeut times. The conditions of a mind and proper application being eiven. Satisfaction safely guaranteed. For further particulars send for o, ... circular to T) "R TCTTSRV K \T ?' ?? JL llUV/lUUi Octl6 Halsellville, C '-'i 4 H