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>- OIX STORM-SWEPT SEAPORT. CHAELTGTOX suffers the ravages OF A FEARFUL cyctene. k'."'. ? - Great Loss of I'ro^erty-No Loss of Life ?Wli'arvcB. Vessels, Churclion atul Ktsit]?-iK:eg I)t!itroye<l or It>jure<l--Th?; Storm / - , ojj Miiiiv.m s isianu. The. daily papers of Wednesday, August 20, contained accounisofa fearful siorm that visited Charleston during' tlie day previous. The sign-; were unfajroi-aTjJe on the Monday previous, and tHfe wind continued to increase in .vetnrcafv and violence, till it developed fiilo isi- veritable cyclone. At two O"*clock fon Tuesday afternoon this cyeiofee/>track Charleston. The wind b!e\V-? stitt\ northeaster, and the work of damage commenced. Uool's were twisted away, fencing was levelled and trees were stripped and lorn. The gale must have reached sixty miles an hour, and at ten o'clock it seemed to lull for half an lionr. Then with the return tide a violent south wester turned in and completed the wreck in the path of the storm. Roots of slate and tin that had been unsettled before were blown bodily into the streets. Scarcely a tree stands symmetric ;n the city. One-fourth of t lie houses .verc unroofed. Paris of the spires of the St. Michael's and St- Matliew's churches were blown down, ami the spire of the Citadel Square Baptist church was demolished. The wharves and warehouses were badly damaged. On Sullivan's Island two steamers were run aground, and the wv Ashley river bridge, in course of construction, was swept away. Four vessels were wrecked. The loss is estimated at one million dollars. The work of restoration and repair has already begun. The work of repair of the principal wharves for the season's business had *nst been finished. In many places .hese were torn up. x\ loaded schooner was blown from the river across the track ot the Northeastern Railroad. The tracks, wharves, depots and warehouses of the South Carolina Kail road were also badly damaged. The stone flagging of the beautiful .and famous Battery was demolished and blown into the water. There is not a whole tree in Charleston. The walls of the battery are demolished all around, and the place is a complete wreck. There was considerable damage to shipping, and the wharves are all torn up and unroofed or tunica over. Ihe railroad tracks! arc torn up and bent like kiiitfing needles, and the depots arc unroofed and badly damaged. A large vessel lying at anchor was blown up on the marsh and lies stranded there. A schooner in a little creek running out from the harbor was blown square across the Northeastern railroad track.; Fortunately, there was no loss of lii'e. A most serious accideiit befel Mr. Doiterer, living on the corner opposite the Citadel Square Baptist Church. The spire of the church was blown down across his house while the family were all at breakfast. The spire of the German Lutheran Church, perhaps the tailcst in Charleston, leans worse than the tower of Pisa, and if it does not fall will probably have to be torn down. A large wholesale store, corner King and Reed streets, had the gable end blown in, and a large number of other buildings were more or JUJUlt'U. The phosphate works near the city are but little injured, except the Atlantic, which loses its acid chamber. The German bark H. Peters was driven ashore; the German brig Freiheit was sun,k in a collision; the dry dock schooner William E. Lee was blown ashore; and the Norwegian bark Veritas and the Italian brig San Prieco are ashore at Castle Pinckncy, with a three-masted schooner, name unknown. No lives were lost. Steps will be taken at once to rebuild the fallen houses and to repair the other damage done. THE STOM OX Sl'LUVAX'S ISLAND. On Sullivan's Island the hurricane was terrific and destructive. A number of houses were blown away. The New Brighton Hotel had over one hundred guests, and great fears were r?ntpr(!)infti fnr tlion* ?;)t'e! v. Almtit 0 o'clock on the morning *>1" August 2o the storm reached its greatest velocity. At = that-hour, while the hotel people were at breakfast, the Casino fell with a great crash. Fortunately all the, rooms in that building had been vacated, but there were grave apprehensions that the dining room and the main building would sooji succumb to the violence of the .storm. Brave men were blanched with fear, and their hearts almost ceased to pulsate, so fearful was the apprehension that the ladies and children were doomed to instant death. The ladies behaved with a heroism that was really grand and sublime. Not a murmur escaped their lips. They faced the danger with such fortitude as to challenge the admiration of the men. At 0o'clock the wind changed from ihe southeast and stood increased from the southeast when the Casino full. It is thought Ihut the maximum velocity of the storm "was from sixtv-fivc to sev enty wiles nit hour. The main building of the hotel is intact, having stood the storm without very serious damage. it is said that this storm was the most violent in thirty years. At 10 o'clock it was nearly over. The loss to ttic New Brighton will he 830,000. i There was a very general destruction j of property on the Island; hut iliej people are profoundly grateful that j their lives were saved. The Island j was in the main submerged, hut when ! the wind changed tho waters receded and all hearts rejoiced and were made glad. Telegrams from Wilmington, X. Jacksonville, Fla., and Fernandina, Fla., and other places on the coast, j indicate that the stonn was almost as : wiue-spreau as it was uesmiouve. FURTHER ACCOUNTS OF THE STORM. I ..iCiiARi.KSTOX, Auirast 2(5.?It was j impossible yesterday to telegraph an ! adequate description of the cyclone. j It proves the most disastrous storm ' that has ever visited Charleston, i Within a comparatively lew minutes | the iiijtiy-jtojpaivatc residences was' very large lii ' the aggregate, though I the individual losses were compara-1 lively small, consisting chiefly in roofs I and fences. ^rt:ne of the wholesale I dealers, however, lose heavily by damage to their stocks. The heaviest j losses were along the water front. A| description of the damage in this j locality, however, was given in the j Augusta dispatch. The Snllivairs I Island steamers PocosTn and Sappho j are aground in the harbor and are! considered beyond repair.- The Union, j Naval Stores and City Wharves are ! badly wrecked. On Charleston's fav- i o'rite i)romenade, East Battery, the ground floors of the residences were from three to six feet under water, and the handsome gardens were cov ercd deep with sedge. The sea rose so ! rapidly as to have the appearance ot a i tidal wave. The steamer iiontfcello of the Florida line encountered the gale 24 hours be- ! fore she reached Charleston and had a i troubled passage, but was not injured. The railroads leading to Charleston are considerably damaged. On the Savannah Railroad several hundred j leet of track was washed away, but the j road was in working condition last j night. The freight depots ot the < Savannah and Northeastern Railroads ! are badly damaged, but the freight in V ????M???Bi^??MMM?)?MM depotsisiuunjnred. The Northeastern Railroad track for a mile and a half is covered with water and one-half of the track is washed off. liunninjr arrangements have been made with the South Carolina Railroad. - .\e\\ > coinci mug me crops i> Ji?e;i- . gre. The rice factors believe the rice crop not damaged much, as tide ? water would scarcely reach the _ fields before :i change in the direction ^ of the wind ..otild take it down the river. There is no doubt, however, a but that the cotton crop on the sea 11 islands is seriously damaged. P The coastwise steamer St. Helena is . ashore at Martin's Point and a canal J| will have to be cut to get her off. On Sullivan's Island many houses J! were damaged to a greater or less jj extent*. The New Brighton Hotel had its windows blown in and crockery " broken, but withstood the storm brave- * Iv. The Casino was lifted entirely . from its foundations and dashed to the !' ground. J! The J?ew$ and Courier makes the . following rough estimate of the losses; 11 Wharf property, $3o0,000; private l! property, 8:300,000; churches, $30,000* 11 cotton presses, $80,000; city property, a streets and parks, $35,000: railroads, $50,000; Ashley River bridge, $8,000; 0 shipping, $1-00,000; lumber mills, $20,- J? 000; miscellaneous, $100,000: total, !' $1,12:3,000. Jj Ciiaklkston, S. C., August 27.?The e city is ringing with the sound of hammers and pile drivers, and the work of ^ repairing and rebuilding is proceeding^ a with great rapidity. The wharves are ^ alreadv prepared fur business, but .. there were no marine arrivals or de- l( partures to-dav. All of the railway tracks have been repaired, aiul trains 0 on the various roads are running regu- n ii P larly. a The town of McCiellanville, between g here and Georgetown, suffered severely J, by the storm. A number ot houses t] were blown down and the loss to j turpentine and terrapin farms in the c vicinity was serious. e The roads in Magnolia Cemetery in ^ the suburbs of Charleston and the f. Catholic cemetery adjoining are washed and many monuments blown down c and defaced. k A KASJUAJLLY TKICIV JSXFUSJKU. J< How the Radicals Managed to Rob a Postmistress in Spartanburg. (troin the Carolina Spartan.) Several years ago when it was difficult to get a postmaster at the i small offices, the people about Campton secured the appointment of Miss Lizzie Camp. Mr. Bray was in business there and he took charge of the c office and attended to the business, c; Squire Camp and Dr. Dean went on o Miss Camp's bond. The reports were S made out resrularlv and Dr. Dean si always attended to these to see if they p were correct. In 1879 Miss Camp was si notified that her office was in arrears t< something over $23. This was a sur- ti prise. Dr. Dean went over all the ti reports and verified them and ascer- v taincd that the office was owing the b department only three dollars and a o few cents. But he and Squire Camp ti concluded to pay up the amount claim- a cd rather than have a squabble with v the Postoffice Department and perhaps c: have their office closed. A few days li ago Miss Camp was notified that there ti was an amount placed to her credit in o the Department and that if she could e send on a statement of her manage- a ment the money would be paid. The C papers hart ail been kept and copies of v the reports forwarded and pronounced h satisfactory, and Miss Camp was g notified that she would soon receive a h check for the amount due. The ex- I nlanation of the transaction is that n Miss Camp was assessed $*20 for elcc- T tion purposes, and not responding wilh f; the money, it was charged up to her is and taken ont of her salary. Tins is v dishonest partisanship of the worst ii type. * e ?The Washington correspondent of ? the New York Sun makes a serious ^ charge against the Hon. John Sherman, lately secretary of the treasnry, and now Senator from Ohio. The accusation is that Mr. Sherman, while . secretary of the treasury, being about ( to build a new house in Washington, caused' designs for it to be made in the toffice ot the supervising architect of tj the treasury, and had the buildiDg of it overseen by persons employed in that office?all being paid for, not by ^ Mr. Sherman, but by the Government. From the Reverend Clersry. ^ Among the many ministers of the t< gospel, who have been helped by j, Brown's Iron Bitters, the Ilev. E. A. tj Spring, Condon, Iowa, says, "I used e] ir f<?i* rmrl form/? if n great help." Ilev. Jas. McCarty, Fort t, Stevenson, Dakota, says, "It cured me j-j of severe dyspepsia and increased my 0l weight twenty-five pounds." The n Itev. Mr. Offtiy, Newborn, N. (J., says ? he ha? taken it, and considers it one of aj the best medicines known. The Rev. jc Mr. Whitney, Hingham, Wis., says, ^ "After a long sickness from lung fever, ,r I used Brown's Iron Bitters and gain- r ed strength." So throughout the f( State.s with hundreds and hundreds of ft other clergymen. * <c ? tl ?Mr. Thomas Fitzpatrick, a mer- ft chant of Lancaster, is on a business trip to New York, with his wife, si Tuesday afternoon he went c^jwn is town alone, stopped in a saloon, took si ? JJ J 1 1.1 3 .. r 1* a iirniK, was uriiggcu, iuuwu 01 uts tl watcli and ?30, thrown in the street, when the police gobbled him up and he was'surprised next morning to llnd himself in limbo. After an explana- r tion of the circumstances, he was released. Statement of Facts. jj Tiie Itev. James L. Pierce, of Ox- 2s ford, Ga., says: My- wife from early 0 girlhood has been suffering frcrii rheu- tl mutism. She has tried many remedies p: and I must frankly say has derived 0] more benefit from Swift's Specific than j[r all the others after long and faithful n; trial. cji Mr. T. L. Anderson, a prominent business man of Temple, Texas, under & date of February is, 1 885, writes: I oi can certify without hesitation that-the C; medicine known as Swift's Specific w is the best blood purifier I have ever p used. tj Col. A. J. Brooks, of Round llock, V) Texac, under date of February 18, tc 1885, says: I have been afflicted with a tl blood liumor and indigestion for fifteen tj years. I have used various medicines ni but with little purpose. I have re- rn ceived more benefit from Swift's SpeciHe (S. S. S.) than anything- else I jj have taken. It is the best blood puriiier on the market. ffi The Kev. W. K. Kirk, a member of the Alabama Conference, M. E. Church fc South, says; Through gratitude to the gj proprietors of Swift's Specific, and a q desire to benefit suffering humanity, I fa heartily recommend S. S. S. as the Sc best remedy I have yet found for $< rheumatism, with which I have suf- u, fered for years. By the use of this a. medicine 1 was enabled to resume my ti pastoral work in October last, for ti which I had been disabled for two or 0] three years by rheumatism. jj, Mr. T. J. Treate, of Wacissa, Fla., q writes: Swift's Specific has cured a cancer on my face, and has almost q made a new man of me. . a - Treatment on Blood and Skin Dis^ Y< ea^.s mailed free. d< Tiih Swift Sfecific Co., Drawer 3, tc Atlanta, Ga. * is i.i ir ?Savannah suffered no damage from al the cyclone of last week. I tt THE CITADEL ACADEMY. en Walker Gives the Kea.?ous for Iiij Resignation. Charleston*, August 22, ISSo. To the Editor of The JS'ews and 'ourier: The resignation of the unersigned as a. member of the board f visitors S. C. M. A. having become nown, and having been mistakenly onstrued into a reflection on the oard, I desire, in justice to the board nd myself, to have my position fully nderstood, and therefore ask yoiu ublication of this letter. I tendered my resignation because ie work of the board has recently ikeu up and would probably in the nmediate future consume inor<> of my me man in previous years, aur uiort ian I could give, consistently with iy duty as president of the Charleston lannfacturing Company and othei usiness engagements. I was renderiga voluntary publicduty,so when this iterfercd wiih business obligations, lie business notso much of myself, bui nportant interests of others confidec :> me, 1 was necessarily forced to renquish what I have always cherished s a most honorable public trust. I have since authorized the chairmav f the board, through whom I forwarded my resignation, to withhold it 3r the present, with the understandrig that I am to be relieved of am uties interfering with my business ngagemen's. Inquiry of the chairman of th( oard reveals the fact, which I mighi s well stale, that no other member o: he board has resigned, nor has he am eason to suppose that any one con emplates doing so. I heartily concur in the recent act; f the board of visitors, which are tlx resent subjects of public criticism. J ssuine my full responsibility for mj hare in these act?, all being the unani ions actions of the board. I be!icv< hem just, politic and wise, in the irect line of the maintenance of disipline and good order in the Acad my, that they will be of ultimate enefit to the Academy and put it h ar better condition for its high anc oble work; and I have the lirmes ouviction that if the facts wer< nown, the public, including our pres nt critics and even our enemies, wouli 3in inc cordially in this opinion. Very respectfully, C. I. Walkek. wt JOHX SHERMAN'S BLOODY SIIHIT. he Incendiary Speech Made by the Olc Sorehead in Ohio--The Sonth Still in th< Saddle. The opening speech of (he Ohic ampaign, on the part of the Republi an party, was made at Mount Gileat 11 Thursday afternoon by.Senator Johi herman, before a large" open-air as smblage. The speech was carefullv repared in advance, and makes aboui ix ordinary newspaper columns. A iw passages upon the changed condl :on of affairs in the national adminis ration are as follows: "Some of the cry men who boastfully threatened tc reak up the Union, and, with the ath of office in support of the Constiutioii fresh on their lips, conspired nd confederated to overthrow it, raged war against it and were the ause of the loss of a half a million ves and thousands of millions o] . ensure, have been placed in higL ffiees again, in the very seats of powr which they abandoned with scon nd defiance- Two members of the !onfederate Congress and one mar /ho sympathized with them are at the ead of the great departments of the overnmeHt. I saw the Union flag al alf mast floating over the Interioi )epart.ment in "sign of honor anc lourning for the" death of Jacot 'hompson, whom wc regarded as demiter and conspirator. This countrv ? now ronrftsfinted abroad bv rnei rlio, within twenty-five sears, wen i arms to overthrow it, and the govrning power of the Executive brancli f the government io in sympathy ,'ith their ideas and selects chiel fficers ot the government from mei. ?ho were in war against it. This trange tarn in events has but one exmple in history, and that was the sstoration ot " Charles the Second fter the brilliant but brief protectorte of Cromwell, and like that restoraon is a reproach to the civilization ol ic age. In the South it may be said lat 110 known Union man has been ppointed to office. The offices arc lied from the rebel ranks. No man dio acquiesces in the results of the rar and honorably demands a fail allot and fail1 count can be appointed > office in the South. The rebels arc i as absolute mastery in the South a* icy would have been if the Conl'edracv.had succeeded. "Fellow-citizens, the line drawn bciveen the two panics is now as disnct as it was during the war. but we ccupv a different field of battle. Then n f/\i* tKn r% f* f lir lvuOllw xyyL 1 4J^ ' unvu * ?*v 'nion, and, as a means to that end, the bolition of slavery. Now that t lie Un>n is saved and slavery abolished, w? ght for equal political rights for all leu and a faithful observance of the institutional amendments. We are >r the exercise of national authority >r the preservation of the rights consrred by the Cohstitution, and upon )is broad issne we invite co-operation om the South as well as the North." Rather more than one-half of the ;)eech is given to discussion of the sue between the two parties in terms milar to those employed in the ex acts here quoted. THE CAROLINE ISLANDS. he Territory Forming the Cau^e of Trou. ble between Spain and Germany. (From t/te St. James Gazette.) The Caroline Islands arc a rcmarka1 r? rfi?onn r\ f fAmnnfmnc in tVin forthcrn Pacific- They are, perhaps, f no great strategic importance, since icy lie on'the road to nowhere in articular; but, from the point of view f the archaeologist, they are interestig in the extreme. Certain Dutch avigators, who visited them nearly a encration ago, returned to Europe itli wondferful stories concerning the igantic ruins that had been discovered 11 some of the smaller islets at the istcrn end of the archipelago, but it as not until 1883 that anything aproaching to a systematic survey of ic group was undertaken. In that sar her Majesty's ship Espiegle inched at main* of the islands, and lose officers who went ashore found lai the magnificence pf the reinins had hot been exaggerated. The iost imposing rnins are at Metalanim [arbor, :in Ponape, and at Chabrol abor, in Kusaie, and an idea of their randeur may be formed from the fact lat some of the stones of the buildigs measure as much as thirty-five et long by twenty feet broad and Etcen feet thick. They are ornaraent) with rude sculptures, which bear a .mily resemblance to the well known :ulptures of Easter Island, in the Diithern Pacific. Yet Easter Island id the Carolines are fully 6,000 miles ?art, and, so far f.s is "discoverable, . ?V. rt V) rtA*V\T?nmAO_ LCit; u*w litre; w;vii an v tvnuiiuaxva011 between them. The object and igin of the monuments are alikfc uunowu. It my be added that the aroline group, which was discovered y Spain iu 1526, has hitherto, even by crraan geographers, been regarded as Spanish possession, although for ;ars there have been no Spanish resists on any of the islands. The ex;nt of the laud surface of the group rather more than three 300 square liles, and the estimated population is _>out 22,000 souls, all of whom are of le Malay race. GENERAL NEWS ITEMS. t Facts of Interest, Gathered from Various Quarter*. ?The smallpox is on the increase in Montreal and is spreading to adjacent ' towns. ?Queen Victoria and the I'rinccss ; Beatrice and her husband have gone , to Balmoral. ?The King of Bavaria is to be placed under guardianship, as lie is . undoubtedly insane. ?An expulsion of Polish subjects ! from Austria has been begun. All classes alike arc expelled. ! -Ex-Governor Reuben E. Fenton, of New York, died suddenly at his ! desk in Buffalo, on Tuesday. ?Many houses and other buildings . at Boston were damaged badly by _ .lightning and rain on Tuesday. < ?An earthquake shock was felt through the Canary Islands on ThursI day, but 110 damage was reported. I ?There has been a remarkable fall ing off 111 the importatiou of diamonds I into the United States within the past year. 1 ?After losing SO of their 120 men, me ronuguese Airican exploring ex: pedition found the sources of the ' Lualaba River. 5 ?All the emblems of mourning for General Grant have been removed > from the public buildings in New York t and Washington. f ?Mr. Alex. Vogelsang, of Philadelr phia, is about to astonish the world - with a flying machine with fans two feet long instead of wings. 3 ?President Cleveland has not yet * returned from his summer vacation. The report that his health was failing turns out to be groundless. [ ?The Ilcv. Henry Ward Beecher indignantly denies the report that he ^ never pays his bills and that his con* gregation are trying-to get rid of him. > ?The Pennsylvania Prohibitionists j in a convention of three hundred and I 11XUJH UVllUWUtV,VI C? OUaijiJLVUK t Prohibition candidates for State treasj urcr. ?The people of Ohio vote at the 1 next election for an amendment to the State constitution changing- the time of State elections from October to November. ?There is 110 falling off in the rav} ages of the cholera in Spain. The i daily average of deaths is nearly fif5 teen hundred, and of new cases nearly five thousand. ) ?Col. John S. Mosby, late United - States consul to Ilong Kong, has been I presented with a silver cup and an 1 address by the Chinese merchants of - San Francisco. ?The "Washington correspondent of t the New Orleans Times-Democrat says k that the correspondence of President ' Cleveland in reference to the unfit * judge is bogus. ' ?Floral offerings are being sent to , the tomb of General Grant in such ' profusion that it is thought that it will [ become necessary to provide a place of deposit for them. ! ?There seems to be something in i Montreal that favors the propagation f of smallpox. In 1872 it broke out ! there, and in the following nine years . 5,000 people died of it. i ?H. II. Day, a Chippewa chief, 5 while en route "to St. Paul last week, i was taken from a train at a way stai tion, and so brutally beaten that he is ; not expec.ed to recover. ?The commissioner in lunacy reports that McCullonafh, the actor, is a ' decrepit old man, in a condition of ' hopeless lunacy, and that his death is " only a question of a few months. ( ?The grand jury of Buncombe , county, North Carolina, have returned [ true bills against William H. and E. P. ' Jones, father and son, for the murder . of the Joyce family of four in April ^ last. [ ?A dispatch from Jackson, Miss., ; reports that six passengers were fatally . injured in an accident, on Friday . morning, on Bayou Pierre. The [ engineer, n reman ana a Drakeman were . killed. ?A Philadelphia man asserts that he f saw Preller in that city in May, al1 though he denied his identity. Max* i well's claim that the so-called mnrder ; was an insurance doclgc may yet be i verified. ; ?Secretary Bayard wants a consul i for St. Paul de Loando, on the west , coast Africa, at a salary of $1,000. [ Mr. C. II. Davis, the consul, has re' signed and returned home. He paid over $2,000 for traveling expenses and doctors' bills last year. ?Light frosts have fallen at various : points in Wisconsin and Iowa. The t damage to the crops is inconsiderable.i The weather is exceptionally cold for i the season throughout the West. Frosts have also fallen at Staunton, Va., and ! in different parts of Pennsylvania. -The rush for vaccination at Mon | trcal is so great thai policemen are deI tailed to keep back the candidates. It is reported that small pox hae broken | out at Richelieu, some miles from ( Montreal. The proposed excursion , to New York has been postponed. s ?Miss McLeod has arrived in Amcri ica to lay the claims of the Scotch i crofters before her countrymen in the United States, and to make arrangements, if possible, for the transportation of several hundred families to this country. The immigration i9 expected to be very large. ?Patrick Eajran, president of the Irish National League of America, says it is a mistake to suppose that the ; League is dead ; that it has six huni dred branches which will be in working order at the time of the convention to be held in January at Chicago. Pnninll will nrMinhlr l\n nnoeonf- oc well as T. D. Sullivan who has also promised to attend. ?The New York Republican Stale Convention will be held at Saratoga on September 22. The State committee adopted resolutions declaring that all > voters whose general intention 19 to act with the party and to promote its success at the next election be invited, without regard to any so-called "fun! damental tests/' to take part in the primary elections for the delagatcs. A Doctor's Wots. Crawfordville, Ga., June 11,1883. For ten years I have been suffering with muscular Kheuniatism. Patent medicines and physicians prescriptions failed to give relief. "Last summer I commenced to usa B. 13. B., and experienced partial relief before using one bottle. I continued its use and gladly confess that it is the best and quickest medicine for Rheumatism I have ever tried and I cheerfully recommend it to the public. * J. W. RHODES, A. M., M. D. ?Joseph E. Bowen, who is said to be the oldest member of the Masonic Order in the United States, and the senior member of the Grand Lodge of the State of Pennsylvania, is dead, at the advauced age of 95 years. He retained possession of nearly all of his far?nHir>s nn tn ?hf? <imf? nf his and seemed to take great pride in referring to events which occurred nearly a century ago. ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Mrs. Wisslow's Soothing Syrui? should always be used for chli.'ren teething. It soothes the" child, softens th.^ gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and Is the best remedy for diarrhoea. Twenty-Ave cents a bottle. JulyHLtyi 1 i THE XETTS OF THE STATE. Some of the Latest Sayinsrs and IJoIngs in South Carolina. ?Drought in the upper part of Edgefield is materially atlcctijig crops, principally cotton. ?The Abbeville Medium says this is a most suitable year in which to repeal the Lien Law. ? Milledge Harris-the negro for whom the Governor- offered a reward has beeti lodged in Edgefield jail. ?The joint council of the Lutherans of Lexington have extended a call to Rev. Mr. Itahn, formerly of Augusta. ?The Teachers' Institute of Lexington county closed on Friday last, after a highly successful session of two weeks. ?Mrs. Claudia M. Fishburne has been appointed postmistress at Summerville, vice Ahrens, an obnoxious Radical. ?Adam Williams, the fifth victim of | the female poisoner in York, is recov-1 erinff. lie did not eat so much cake f as the others. ?Lucien Douglas, of Abbeville, has I one stalk of cotton containing' 438 j blooms and bolls. It covers,36 square j feet of ground. ?CoVccfor Bradley has lemoved | a lot of Revenue officials of the old Republican crew and appointed good men in their places. ?Mr. .lacob Keistler, one of the oldest and most respected citizens of Lexington, died on the 13th. His age was nearly ninety. k ?Mrs. Martha Gable, of Lexington, has a curiosity in the way of a double egg?two pcrfect hen eggs joined together at their cuds. ?The first bale of neve cotton in Suinter wa9 bought on Thursday, 20th ult., by O'Donnell & Co., from Essex Taylor, for 10$ cents. ?The supposed murderer ofLomax, in Union, for whom a reward is offered by the Governor, has been lodged in jail for identification. ?B. F. Welsh, who killed W. C. Moore at Lancasier on Saturday before last, applied to Judge Witherspoou for bail last week, but it was refused. ?A partridge in York has taken charge of two young chickens, and when an attempt was made to capture the chicks the usually wily bird showed fight. ?An itinerant sleight-of-hand performer has been imposing 011 the people of Marion. His so-called entertainments were "thin," and the auditors were wroth. ?Hickson Jackson, a colored man, injured by a locomotive during the storm in Charleston, died on Thursday. Joseph Grant, colored, was struck in the head by a flying brick and badly hurt. ?A large water moccasin was killed about ten feet from a pond near BatesKii?vr Tf flttomntncr tn Bwnllow "ulO' -"v."!-.. ,, - - a trout weighing a pound, and the fish wriggled and squirmed after the snake was killed. ?Mrs. Clara S. Cook, of Aiken, last week attempted to jump from a buggy, which the frightened horse was backing into a ditch, when she-fell between the wheels and was seriously injured by being kicked in the head. ?Dave Abnev, colored, who lived on Mr. Mat Coleman's place, in the Saluda section of Edgefield, was bitten by a dog last May. On the 14th ult., he was attacked by hydrophobia^and after suffering great agony died the 16th. ?A negro girl employed by Mr. Monroe Shealy, of Langley, to look after his infant daughter, becoming angry at Mrs. Shealy, took the child in t^ie woods and beat it terribly with a stick. The brute was lodged in jail. ?Mr. M. C. Longshore, of Silver Street, who is in his sixtieth year and is the father of about a dozen childre* and of seventeen grandchildren, was made happy last Thursday by the arrival of twins at his house?a boy and a girl. ?The widow of Col. Jack Bnrriss, of Edgefield, died recently, under mysterious circumstances. A bottle containinga preparation of morphine and t. _: c i,^? SU'YCIlIlllli; Was luunu mjai IIUI nuintj which she is supposed to have fasted with fatal results. ?A dog took a fit in an Edgefield Baptist church a few days ago, and the congregation, mistaking it for hydrophobia, were in a state of consternation. Order was finally restored, the dog was removed, and the sermon was concluded before a demoralized audience. ?The 13-year-old son of Jesse Johnson, living about s?ix miles east of Greenville, was killed by a train on the Air-Line railroad on Thursday last. The young man and his two brothers were walking on the traek, when the train upon them unawares. The two brothers cseaped by jumping' from the track. ?An Egyptian nlnmmy has been received at Due West, which is a present from the Rev. John GrifSn to Erskine College This mummy was the daughter of a priest and is recorded to be between three and four thousand years old. It has created some sensation in this vacation village. It will not be opened entirely before the session begins. A mummy is rather a curiosity in the South. ? A handsome monument has been erected in the Spartanburg cemetery, to the memory of the late Congressman Jno. H. Evins. It is made of Aberdeen gray Scotch granite, highly polished, while the base is of Winnsboro granite. The weight is 12,500 pounds. The rlAeiorn nf the. mnnnment is in wood taste " ? """ ? a - - ? J and in keeping with the character of the man to whom it is erected. The workmanship is excellent. JUDGE DAVID DAVIS. His Responsibility for Military Rule in tha Southern States. A correspondent of the New York Herald shows that Jud^e David Davis is responsible for the military rule that the South had to endure in the Reconstruction period. When the case of McArdle, of Mississippi, came before the United States Supreme Court of that district for a writ of habeas corpus to discharge him on the ground that tfoe Reconstruction laws under which he was held were contrary to the Constitution of the United States, four Judges of the Supreme Court held that the laws were constitutional and five held that they were unconstitutional. Judge Davis was for the unconstitutionality of the laws. When the morning came for the announcefKa flA/?iciAn if nroc rM*An<%c^ ilUJtJL V/X 111V UVVlCiVtl AV If Uw) l/l V^/VOVU IV defer it for a week. Judge Davis's vote carried the adjournment. In the meantime a bill was introduced into Congress repealing the authority of the Supreme Court to hear appeals in habeas corpus cases. It was rushed through both honses and passed. It wa6 vetoed by President Johnson and passed over his veto before the day appointed for the announcement of the decision. On that day the Supreme Court was compelled "to dismiss the appeal in McArdle's case, Justices Grier and Field dissenting and protesting against the outrage on justice and law. The Southern States by this means became the victims of all the terrible phases of Reconstruction, with all its carpet-bag horrors. ?ALl'S. ouoiner, 01 .Daiesuurg, uaa a banana tree bearing fruit. ?A camp-meeting- held by Northern Methodists (colorcd), at Piney Hill, | Rutherford county. N. C., last week, was attacked ?>>' an armed body of j Zion Methodists ami fired into. The j Northern Methodists lied in disorder, seven of them being badly .vounded. The invaders then collected the effects of the routed party, piled them up and made a bonfire of them. ?The treasury department is informed tlj#t a party of armed Cubans have left the Island of Cuba for the Florida Keys, audit is supposed that their object is to organize a filibustering expedition to overthrow the Cuban Government. Instructions have been issued for the revenue cutters to look out for the party and prevent their landing. ?John Hughe?, a New York peddler, who wished to commit suicide, adopted the novel plan of throwing a stone in the air and letting it fall on his bare head. The police stopped him before he succeded. ?Abbeville received her first bale of new cotton on the 25th from Mrs. E. A. Robertson's place, it brought 9+ cents. A QUESTION ABOUT Browns Iron Bitters ANSWERED. The question has probably been naked thousands of times "How can Brown's Iron Bitters cure everything?" Well, it doesn't. But it does core any disease for which * reputable physician would prescribe IEOS Physicians recognize Iron as the best restorative agact known to the profession, and inauiry of any loading chemical firm will substantiate the assertion that there are more preparations of iron than of any other substance used in medicine This shows conclusively that iron is acknowledged to be the most important factor in successful medical practice. It is, however, a remarkable fact, that prior to the discovery of BROWN'S IRON BITTERS no perfectly satisfactory iron combination had ever been found. BROWN'S IRON BITTERSteSSs: headache, or produce constipation?all other iron m edlcincs do. BROWN'S IRON BITTERS cares Indigestion, Biliousness, Weakness Dyspepsia, Malaria, Chills and Fevers, Tired FeeIinar,General Debility,Pain intho Side, BackorLimbs,HeadacheandNenral? gin?for all these ailments Iron is prescribed daily. BROWN'S IRON BITTERS.S^i"? minute. like all other thorough medicines, it acts slowly, when taken by mm the first symptom of benefit is renewed enersrv. Tho muscles then become firmer, the digestion improves, the bowels are active. In tcomen the effect is usually more rapid and marked. The ejea begin at once to brighten; the akin clears up; healthy eelor comes to the cheeks: nervousness disappears; fu?<-tional derangements become regular, and if a nursing mother, abundant sustenauco is supplied for the child. Remember Brown's Iron Bitters is the ONLY iron medicine that is not injurious. Phyriciant and VruggitU recommend it. Tho Ge^ line has Trade Mark and crossed rod lines on wrapper. TABLE NO OTHER. TUTTS PILLS 25 YEARS IN USE, Tbe Grcateat'Medical Trinmph of the Age! SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Loss of appetite* Bowels costive, Pain in the bead, with a doll sensation in the back part* Fain under the shonlderblade, Fnllness after eating, with a disinclination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability dftemper, Low spirits, with a feeling of having neglected some dnty, Weariness* Dizziness, Flattering at the Heart, Dots before the eyes, Headache over the right eye, Restlessness, with fitfal dreams, Highly colored Urine, and CONSTIPATION. TTTTT'S PILLS are especially adapted to such cases, one dose effects such a change offeelingas to astonish thesufferer. They Increase the Appetite,and erase the body to Take on Flesh, thus (bo system Is nourished, and by their Tonic Action ort the l>isestiTeOrzans,lteetilarStoolsare ?TOduced^Pric?^#5c^j^Iijrra3^t?2^; TIITT'G rYTDIflT Q1DCID1DIII A I U I I 0 LA IIJUU I UKIIUHruillkkU Renovates the body, mates healthy flesh, strengthens the weak, repairs the wastes of the system with pure blood and hard muscle; tones the nervous system, invigorates the ' brain, and imparts the vigor or manhood. 81. Sold by druggists. OFFICE 44 Murray St., New York. DEAF ARB BLZ8D. How an Atlanta Woman was Matle to See and Hear. AN INTERESTING STORY. Miss Minnie Wallace resides with Mrs. George Fickland, 41 McAfee street, At lanta, ija., ana iromner own jijjs u tution reporter learned the following appalling story: Several months ago she became almost totally blind and deaf, and could not taste anything except salt. Her bones became the seat of intense pain, her joints were swollen and painful, and eventually her whole body and limbs became covered with splotches and small sores. Her appetite failed, and she gradually lost llesli and strength, and had but little use of herself, as her limbs and muscles were paralyzed. She, . i well as her friends and those with whom she lived, despaired of her recovery. Her sufferings, combined with loss of hearing and taste, and blindness, were truly heartrending. All treatment from physicians and the, use of medicines seemed powerless. Her disease was blood poison and rheumatism. As she now seemed well and hearty the re porter asked what wrought such a wonderful change. ?<T nco/l fi hv a friend," she replied, '-and before one bottle liad been taken I began to see ar.d near. The second bottle relieved all rheumatic pains and improved my appetite. When 1 nad completed the use of six bottles my eyesight and hearing were fully restored, sense of taste returned, all splotches disappeared, sores all healed, and my strength and flesh restored I now feel as well as I ever did, and my friends, as well as myself, are astounded." 'What was the medicine?" asked the reporter "Botanic Blood Balm?B. B. B.?was the great remedy that acted so powerfully on my disease and. cured me. 1 never experienced any unpleasant symptoms from its use, and its action is so quick that it surprises all." The reporter tl:en sought a physician . who knew the case, whereupon lie handed ! us me ionowiiig mies: 1 "I examined the above case of blood . poison and rheumatism, before and after being cured, and certify to the facts as . above stated, and must acknowledge that I the B. B. B. effected a most wonderful ( cure in this well-known case. [Signed] "J. P. DRUMGOOLE, M. D." Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., will mail \ a 32-page book free, filled with magical effects. Sold by all Druggists. Sept2 ENGINES*^ Most economical and durable. Cheapest in the i market, quality considered. SAW MILLS, 1 CORN SHGLLERS, CIDER MILLS, COTTON PLANTERS AND STANDARD IMPLEMENTS GENERALLY. Send fof Catalogue. A. B. FARQUHAR, Pennsylvania Agrlcoltural Works, York, Pa. . Did you Suppose Mustang Liniment only good for horses? It is for inflammation of all flesh. tmtmiwl a certain core. Not expensive. Thr?? montM' treatment In one package. Good Jot Cold Id tbeHead,Headache,Dizziness, Hay Fever, <tc. #SS# CORDIAL, i FOR THE im m mm ram i Dr. BipRcrs' Huckleberry Cor- j dial is the great Southern re met? v for curing Diarrhoea, Dysentery, CrampColic anil all bowel affections, and restoring the little one suffering such a drainage upon the system from tlie effects of tketeing. For sale by all druggist*, at 50c. , a bottle. Send 2c. stamp to Walter A. j Taylor, Atlanta, Ga., for Kiddle Book. Taylor's Clicrokce Remedy of Sweet Gum and .Mullein will euro I Coujihs, Croup and Consumption. Price,25c. , and ?1 a bottle. I MOTHERS' j PEIEND.j i NO More Terror! This invaluable prep-, a ration is truly a tri-' urnph of scientific j No More Pain t skiII>and n? more in-1 ' estiniable-benefit was ever bestowed on the ' No Mors SaTiffer'imot,H*1"s of tl,c workl- I ano jjLore i/angeiv It 110t on]y ishortens the time of j ?,A (labor and lessens the | [intensity of pain, but, ibetter than all, it; */r J.T. ni. n greatly diminishes the Motner or ufllLCLi ganger to life of both 'mother and child, and leaves the mother in a condition higlilv fa-1 The Dread of vorable to speedy re-1 coverjr, and far less .. , , liable to flooding, coi. MotherhOOajvulsions, and other alarming symptoms incident to lingering Transformed to ami painful labor. Its truly wonderful efficacy in this respect entitles the Mothers' LJ Friend to be ranked as one of the life-saving appliances given to the world by the ?nd discoveries of modern science. From the nature of ~r x "Y7- the case it will of I I a Y course be understood B # jMidi vvc i jlish certificates con jcerning this Remedy j without wounding the Safety and Ease'5??'icacX oft'ie %vrit" *? J Yet we have hundreds iof such testimonials on ' file, and no mother ?to jwho lias once used it will ever again he _ _ . ___ (without it in her time Suffering womaiijof trouble. A prominent physician lately remarked to the proprietor, that if it were admissible to nuke public the letters we receive, the "Mothers' Friend" would outsell anything on the market. Send for our Treatise on- "Health and Happiness of Woman," mailed free. Buadfield Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga. We want 1,000 More BOOK AGENTS for tlie Personal History of U. S. GRANT. 40,000 copies already sold. We want one agent in every (irand Army Post and in every township, Send foi Sj'Kcial Terms to Agents, or secure agency at once by tun/lJnrr in tfontnc fAt* ontfil' Address F0ESH2E & McMAZINT, Aujf20L4t Cincinnati, Ohio. .1TTK\TS?A% IF1 -A. 23/ jVT IL"! IR, 3 ! W E offer you the celebrated Peterkin Cotion Seed "at $1.50 per bushel. It tvill give forty per cent, of lint, and equal the yield in seed cotton of any other variety. Wc are agents for the De^rinjj Binders, Reapers and Mowers, the Thomas Rake, Corbin and Acme Harrows, Farquhar Cotton Planters, Iron Aire Cultivators, Saw Mills, Engines, Gins, Presses, Plows, Etc. Repairs for Champion and Buckeye Machines and for Watt Plows. Write to us. McMASTER & GIBBES, Mar4L6m Columbia, S. C. PEACE INSTITUTE FOR YOUNG LADIES, RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA. rpiIE FALL TERM COMMENCES OX X the first Wednesday of Sei<tcmbcr, 1885, and closes corresponding time in June following. Advantages for instruction in all the branches usually taught in first-class Seminaries for Young i.adies, unsurpassed. Building heated by steam, and in every way as to equipment, &c., equal to any in the South. A full corps of First-Class Teachers engaged for session commencing in September Terms as reasonable as any other Institution offering same advantages. Convspon-'mce solicited. For catalogue, containing full particulars as to terms, &<*., address Rev. R. BURWELL & SOX, July21)L2m Principals, Raleigh, X. C. KINO'S MOUNTAIN -EiILC3-?? fc3CJJfc?CJ OJ-?, KIXG'S MO UXTA TX, X. C. A Mathematical and Classical School with a complete BUSINESS COLLEGE: attached. The largest male hoarding f' school in Western Nor li Carolina. Mili-j fcary plan, except in its business I.Vpartrae'nt. One hundred and folly students last year?over ninety hoarded. Its grauu- : ates in Bookkeeping iill lucrative positions in every Southern State. One hundred dollars will cover all expense of full course in Business College. Two hundred dollars will cover all expense for ten months in* regular departments, and furnish both ; dross and fatigue suits of uniform. Next session opens 24th August, 1S85. J Send for Catalogue to J. W. T. R. BELL, A. 31., July9L2m N Principal. J CHARI.OTTK j Female Institute J Session begins September 2nd, tcax Tnurt on<1 i?xt; Vlt/OVO WJ uuv -??MJ ? -" ' '? Unsurpassed in the thoroughness and high standard of its Literary, Music and Art Departments. For Catalogues apply to KEY. \V. I!. ATKINSON, Charlotte, X. C. P. S.?Persons receiving catalogues will take notice that the session begins a week sooner than announced in the catalogue. July8L2m Good Pay for Agen<*. SI!M> to S200 per mo. ma<lc xelliae ourGraud Now Hivtoi?. Famoaiand Drcliive lialtlvo cl IheWorld 1 Write to J. C. Jtct'nrdy <t Co., Philadelphia, Pa. J ANBERBILT UI ACADEMIC; BIBLICAL; LAW; M Civil Engineering and Manual Technology em pi ven to Civil Engineering-. Full course in Mas Literary aati Scientific Departineut, $?; ia Th< ST AUIM TONF EM STAUNTON, VIRGINIA. KfcV. ? Opons its session Sept. ?th. 1SS3, with a corps o baildinss. Kl- rant and tit-althful location. Home Departments 01 Music and Art in Ibc iiancU ol skilled 1 r; j A Clear Skin is only a part of beauty; . but it is a part. Every lady may have it; at least, what looks like it Magnolia j Balm both freshens and' beautifies. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS* jj MOSQUITOES, issriis "".MOSQUITO BITE CURE, gives JnstanC reller. and drives tliem away. Address A SALLADE & CO.; S East iStii St., New York. ? BURNHAM'S ^ S IMPROVED v -tJH ST,VXDAKD ^ Is tbe BEST constructed and jfr finished Turbine In tlie world ? gives better percentage J .vitb part or lull gate, and is - irrnM >o!d rnr LESS MONEY per ? wWS^^SgRaiS 3or?e Power tlian anyotker t-atffeaaB Turbine. Pamphlet FREE by BURNHAM BROS., YORK, PA, Julv'23L4vv * . Established FAY'S 1866. A Manilla Hoofing! Resembles line leather. For Roofs, Outside Walls, and Inside la place of Plaster. Verystrong and durable. Carpets and Rugs of same material, catalogue wltli testimonials and J samples FREE. Vt . H. FAY & CO, Cam- M den, X. J. AUg2 GL4W THE Columbia Music louse 4 WILL SAVE YOU ' TWENTY-FIVE PER CENT. BY BUT I.NG Pia* aM finis i OF THEM. -id EVERY INSTRUMENT WARRANTED ?o? 'vi DELIVERED AT ANY DEPOT OU ^ STEAMBOAT LANDING IN THE STATE. 0?0 A WHITE FOR TERMS AND PRICES . o o SPECIAL TERMS FOR SHORT TIME ^ SALES. ' J Respecifully, ^|j COLUMBIA MUSIC HOUSE, O N. W. TRUMP, Manager, 12G MAIN STREET, COLUMBIA, S. C p Local-agents in Fairfield County: Jk J. O. BOAG, Winnsboro. I A. A. MORRIS, Ridgeway. itttt (JHUKUllM AJN. FORTY-FIRST YEAR,?1885. j&| The Religious Weekly of tlio Fi of est ant Episcopal Church. itu A magazine of Ecclesiastical intelligence, Ce votlonal and general reading. aad the largest ^ and most Influential weekly la the Pidtestant * ' AS Episcopal Church. >JH In tlic Xe*.vs Department .the energy of ^ The Churchman Is well known, and Its organization Is very complete for procuring news which it gives tvltli remarkaoie promptness. r .s The Jlasraxine Department alone con- * tains in a year sufficient reading matter to make more than live i2mo books of soo pages a each. ja Its Book Reviews are a prominent fea- iffl tare. JLiterary. Art and Scientific Xotes are carefully prepared by specialists. Its European Correspondents are persons or eminent ability. SsThe Children's Department is Illostrated and specially edited for th; clilldfen. a $3.50 a year In advance, post paid. Three A H/* I lorc tn <"'l??mvwon Cln/vla aat\<oc L."?n r,r.r\tc uwiiuio v vivii.i uiuu. ciumn iva vguusi, M. H. 3IALLORY ?fc CO., M 47 Lafayette Place. Xew fork. r ^ Apl2i/.m ' Charlotte, Columbia & Arurasta R. K SCHEDULE IN EFFECT MAY 10,1885, ^ ?Eastern Standard Time. -i GOING NORTH., A NO. 53, MAIL AND EXl'IiESS. JB Leave Augusta 9.05 a. m. Leave W. C. &. A. Junction 1.12 p. m. ^ Arrive at Columbia 1.22 p. m, Leave Columbia 1.32 p. in. Leave Killian's 1.58 p. m. Leave Bly the wood 2.13 p. m Leave Ridge way 2.34 p.m. j Leave Simpson's 2.47 p. m. _ A Leave Winnsboro 3.02 p. m. MI Leave White Oak 3.22 p. m. .ffs| Leave Woodward's 3.43 p. m. Leave Blackstock 3.50 p. m. Leave Cornwall's 3.58 p. m. Leave Chester 4.17 p. m. L.eave L.ewis 4.32 p. m. t Leave Smith's 4.40 p. m. t Leave Rock Hill 5.01 p. m. Leave Fort Mill 5.120 p, m. Leave Pineville 5.40 p. m. Arrive at Charlotte 6.10 p. m. A Arrive at Statcsville 9.35 p. m, A GOING SOUTH. * . NO. 52, MAIL AND EXPRESS. Leave Statcsville 7.45 a. m. Leave Charlotte 1.00 p. m * Leave Pineville 1.1.27 p. m Leave Fort Mill 1.44 p. m. Leave Kock Hill 2.02 p. is. Leave Smith's *.. .2.22 p. m. Leave Lewis' 2.30 p m. Leave Chester 2.44 p. m. Leave Con 1 w?ali"s 3.03 p. ni. Leave IJlackstock 3.12 p. m. Leave Woodward's 3.18 p. m. Leave White Oak 3.30 p.m. A Leave Winnsboro 3.48 p. m. Jta Leave Simpson's 4.03 p. m. Leave llidgeway 4.16 p. m. Leave Blythewood .4.32 p. m. ^ Leave Killian's 4.49 p. m Arrive at Columbia 5.15 p. m. Leave Columbia 5.25 p.m. Leave W. C. & A. Junction 5.57 i>. nt. * f Arrive at, Augusta 9.3x i>. m. jA v*;ij:uc<.:uii is now maue at v^jiesier i,uy trains 52 and 53) for Lancaster and intermediate points on C. & C. K. R., and for ill points on C. & L. K. R. as far as New- m ton, N. C. j M. SLAUGHTER, G. P. A. G. R. TALCOTT, Superintendent. ^ J D. CARDWELL. A. G. P. A. A ESTABLISHED IN 1798 1 BINGHAM'S fs the onlv school for Boys la the South with GAS LIGHT, a tlrst-class GYMNASIUM, ana A 1 flrst-clnss liATB-HOUSE. M Special terms to young men of small means. The lS3rd '-csslon begins August 23th. 48 For Catalogue address ^ Mdj. R. BIXGHLAW, July23L2m iiINGHA>l SCHOOL, X. C. f & 2?| 3 8 3 R S ?=4 WHISKY HABITS car* d 3 W S 2 8 l\li at homo without pain. BOOK , I 3 fil 11 fir S ?'f particulars sent FREE. A * WOOLLET, 2C. D., Atlinta.Gk. jM JTT/rPgTTV Nashville. Tenn. MX V XjJ?&dXX X 96Departments: EDICAL; PUA1?3I ACEUTICAL; DEXTAL. braced in Academic Department Special attention lual Techsiolojfy. Session opens Sept. 16. Tuition in sological, free. ForCatalogue(tree) *aid to Scct'y. ALE SEMI NARY, 4 J AS. WILLIS, A. M., Principal. W f 12 Officers and Teacher*. Excellent brick influence. Moral culture receives carelul attention, teachers, dumber oi pupils limited.