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TOBACCO CULTURE. Uulest Governing the Experiment?The j Appointment of Expdrimcnters in the Several Counties. The Board of Agriculture has ap- j jjrupnaieu s>i,?uu iur me purpose 01 ; encouraging practical exniments in ihe | culture of tobacco in this State; $00 j to be given to one farmer in each j county, selected by a cuinniittee of j three practical fanu-r-, and :t premium i of $100 to the farmer reporting the j be-t results. The Board has issued a circular con-j taining the following con?!iti<?:i>, which | must be complied with: , "One acre of land must be culu-1 Vaifil in A cui'ircf rocunl I irrnst be kept, showing i lie date of seeding and setting plants, ihe variety | of seed used, the character of the soil, ; the quantity and kind of fertilizer \ applied, the daily condition of the j weather during the season (tempera- j ture and rainfall), the cost ot' proline- ' ing 'be crop, including every item ot expense connected therewith, the number of days' work given to the crop, kind and cost of labor, date of cutting and curing the same, and total yield in pounds of marketable tobacco. A statement of area and yield must be certified to iti a manner to be i>rehcribed hereafter. "Yon will be required to send a Movement of the average teiiii)enttnrc ft.io rainfall (compiled trom your daiiy record) and the condition of the croj?, to the Commissioner of Agriculture, on the first day of each month, ~ .w< , 1 .. i I... uiiu iv ?cim a tiiuipiv; v/i iuv i when cured to the Department of' Agriculture, weighing not less than ten pound?. "Seed for planting, blanks fur reports and thermometers and rain gauges will be furnished free by the iJcpartment of Agriculture, the thermometers and gauges to be returned if called for. "The fifty dollars given will be paid after the crop has been cured and readv for market, and samples, with repprts prescribed, have been sent *o j the Commissioner of Aricultmv, provided all the requirements made by the department have been complied with. The one hundred dollar premium will be awarded by the Board of Agriculture after all-of the reports reiults and the samples have been received. "You will be allowed to retain all a. l\%,v .vn (U p., 1ik_, ins piructseus uenvcu nuiu mc vi the crop, exclusive of the samples sent to the department.'-' The following is the list of persons appointed: H. F. Fuller, Coronaca; Lewis Bradwell, Aiken; Jefferson Stokes, Midway; E. E. Horry, Grahamville; T. J.'Hamlin. James Inland; J W. R. Davie, Landsford; W. (J. Baker, j !Mt. (Jroghan; Dr. J. J. Ingram, Man- ! ning: F. M. Roger?, Jr., Florence; j Calvin Bricc, Woodward: B. F. Per-1 ry, Jr., Greenville; Ben. S. Williams, j "K?-nr?crtn Cftinnfll Si .^sn^ KllV' * 1 XJ\ UUOV/U^ VAtUUUi S/* 7 I L.C.Thompson, Liberty Hill; John C. Foster, Lancaster; T. J. Duckett, -* Clinton; J- H. Counts, Selwood; Dr. Eel. B. Smith, Marion; J. F. Be!to:i, Bennettsville; J. Ii. Spearman, Jr., Silver Street; J. J. Davi?, Kicldand: Edw. N. Chisolm. Rowcsville; J. C. Griffin, Pickens; A. G. Clarkson, Wateree; F. E. Thomas, "VVedgetield; R. S. Thomas, Santuc; Jas. MeCutchen, Church; Dr. Ddw. F. Averv, Rock Iliil. Committees have been appointed imt no selections of persons to conduct the experiments have yet been made in Berkeley, Colleton, Georgetown and Spartanburg. j>o committee? nave yet ueeu uppointed for the counties of Anderson and Edgefield. A CHANGE OF FRONT. President Cleveland More Amenable to His Obligations to the Democracy in Conrrress. tween and executive departments of tLs government by a more pliant policy. > r? bHievrd that the President now btjins to sec the vital importance to the success of his administration of the cordial >tipport of his partv in Congress. Kepresentatives interested in securing appointments have marked with Measure a recent change in the man sum in which their recommendations have j.iii received by the Executive. Men who have taken umbrage at I he cavalier manner the President has formerly treated their requests for office are now received at the While House in a vastly different s:\le. It- ?a l?v I lf?mnirr;itii: ('nil gressmen that the quiet de.?ire nnnifested by the President to make dose friends with membersot his own party manifested itself ab<>ur the time trouble was threatened regarding confirm ttions between the Executive an?l the Republican mnjoritv in the Srnate. Mr. Cleveland doubtless appreciate" thoroughly the unenviable position liewould occupy with a maj ?ritv of the Democratic party in tlie House, ;?s well as a majority of the Republican Senate, arrayed against him. Iiobb?cl of S3,500 and bin Watch. Phil Cox, a tine-looking man. who hails from Yazoo Ci'y, Miss., paraded the streets of New Orleans i?>r a week - _ with a big dog at his heel- awl a thousand-dollar silver certificate piimtM :o bis waistcoat. He has been a regular attendant at the E.\p<?ii;on races sometimes oetting l.eav?h, ami was usually in the comyany . f >p-.itin?r men. lie drank a great d?*al and used to display the silver ceriiticate ? iihout anv fear of the co?seqm wes. Last Thursday night Cox was take.i to his rooms intoxicated, by three wen, named WaddJe, Costeilo and Fattikner, who put him to bed. WVen lie awoke the next morning his silver cer imcaie, hi um>, iwo uuuuunu plus and a trold watch and It was found ihat the nrrfg^-WlJ^cLL. \ removed from the door lending inro \ the back yard, but it is thought th t the presence of the big dog would have prevented a rubber from entering. V The police, were informed late Satur.% I day night and they arrested Waddle, but the Other two men who tosk Cox home have not been found. Death of Gen. Freeman. . 'Ji\ A dispatch from Canon City, C lor,Jv ado, s^ys that Gen. John D. Freeman, is who died suddenly in tliat city at 10 o'clock on Tuesday night of inflammation of the bowels, was attorney general for Mississippi immediately preceeding the war. He was also a member of Congress from that State for two terms, and to his efforts was due the success of the Vicksburg, Shreveport and Pacific Railroad. He wn.a ihfc anthor of "Freeman's ('hail cerv Reports." Gen. Freeman was a personal friend of the late Vice-President Hendricks, aud also of Attorney General Garland. He was at the time -N of his death a candidate lor :ippoint"ment as United States marshal for Colorado, aud his candidature was widelv endorsed. He was held in great resj)eci and esteem by the people throughout the State. ?Tbe health of Ex-President Arthur has caused some anxiety during the last few weeks. He has been under treatment for severe indigestion and his diet has been restricted to the simplest articles of food, principally milk and pepsin. He lias -ufiVrcd much from insomnia and the attendant nervous excitement and depression. WASIilNOXON GOS-Sii'. "flic <'hn.r^es of Corruption AjcainKt Senafur Prinic ltriv.-'ril :iT5?l tiipf'iirtin Ell) broglio. ((,o/ f 'xp'su j<://<".' oj th-' Baltimore S>in.) A clique of Ohio Republicans, ;vith ! the ;:s~i>iance of a few personal, en?: ini?*s <?!' Senator Payne in the Demo- ; cra:ic parry of that Si ate, uiv engasreri i:i a ?li -pera.c ell'orl So produce the ! improsi??n that hi> election to tin* j Senate was acc.?inp!idied through! I>ril>ery and corruption. The inline-; diate purpose seems to l?e to force Mr. j Payne to ri?~ in his seat in the Senate,"j den\ tiie charges and a-k for a corn i miltre ot 'l'ius .Mr. | Pa\ ne li:t> deciaivd he will not do, its ! he c./n.?ider> lilt: c!i;ti'^L*>, unil the; Kmrce from which they t-mauuic, he- i ilealh hi? notice. Trie lower !i ?nso of j the Onio Legislature, which i* con- ; rolled by liie ilepublican*, has al- i ready authorized a committee ??f in-1 vol iga lion, and it. i? under-mod that j all the members of the Legislature j which elected Mr. Payne, who have j been mentioned a.s receiving a considtion f*>r voting, have positiveiv denied j the allegation. The Mjhemv i?, however, it Senator Pay no cannot he; driven into a>kin&rfbr an in ve>! Ration, to toil tire the result of the legislative ! iuquisition into suitable shape, and ! make \i the basis of a formal request to j the Senate for an exumi ;aiiou into ilit- j charges by that body. Ii is alleged ! that there i> precedent for investigation in the ab>enee ot'a demand from the Senator affected. In the ease of Simon Cameron, of Pennsylvania, in j 1867, numerous- members of the State j Legislature petitioned the Senate to j investigate tlie charges of corruption [ and bribery in connection with his election, but the. Senate Judiciary Committee almost unanimously re- j ported against granting tiie prayer, on i thp around tliaf it was comnetent for the Legislature itself to make the in-! vestigation. In the Cameron case; there was no pretense of denial that j three Democratic members of the i Legislature had been paid so many j thousand dollars a piece to bolt the i Democratic caucus nominee, Colonel : Fornev, and vote for Simon Cameron,! and not of the three ever held up his j Jiead afterward. But General Cameron j held on 10 the seat which he had bought, and thought any one extremely verdant who expected him to ask . for an investigation. It would appear as if the severe ; criticism and denunciation visited upon j j Secretary Bayard by Governor Curtin ' and others in connection with the ap- ] pointment ot chairman or tne ilouse , Committee on Foreign Affairs is devoid : of the least cause. It has already been said that it is not usual for a Speaker to consult a cabinet officer concerning j I committees having familiar relations | with his department, but in this easel j it is now known that Mr. Bayard had nothing to do with the matter. While I at the State Department morning Mr. j Bayard's attention was culled to the [ statements which hav: l?-<m made about this affair, when he replied that they were absnrb. He said: "I did not interfere in any manner with the House committees, and had nothing I whatever to do with Mr. Carlisle's appointments. I do not believe that I expressed a preference as to tlie chair man of the Committee on Foreign APaiiv, and I certainly did not attempt to defeat Mr. Curtin's reappointment." A REMARKABLE CHARACTER. A Slave Who Followed ti?e Fortunes of the Confederate Army. In Man-stield, La., on Monday, was held the funeral o'f a well known and remarkable character. Levy Carnioe. seventy-six \ear* old, died after a lofe illness ami his funeral was conduct? by veteran soldiers of the Conkj-taij^B a rniy. OldjLev^a*^ He belonged to tne Iloiran f-mily in ! Alabama, and when the Florida Indian war broke out in 1837, although a mere boy, he followed his \oung master to the field ot action in the capacity j of a cook and general waiting boy. ! During one of the battles he saw his master killed by an Indian bullet, and i laid him away in a soldier's grave j a in Hi the everglades of Florida. He i remained with a cousin of his deceased j master until the close of the war. He j was ptv.-ent at uen . ai ?iessup s camp when O'CoIa, the fame us Indian chief, was, as J.evy always claimed, treacherously captured bv that officer, lie returned to hi* home and was a faithful h?>n<c servant until the breaking out of the la e war, when he a;rain went to to the army as the servant of \oiiMjr Dr. Iliiuiin, of Mansfield Place, who was :i member of the Dc S->to Pelican Rifle*, Second Louisiana In fantry. This famous company, from first t<? last, contained 151 men, and I old Levy helped to bury about 100 of J theui. Dr. llojran wes killed at the j Wilde. nc.-s, but old Levy remained j with the company and cooked for the | well and nur>ed the ;-iek until the last \ear of the war, when ho returned home to j >iii another youn?r tna-ter, who hail bee une old enough to enter the army. Of the Pelican Rifles only t hi it v icturned home, including old Levy, and all of them but one were wounded. After the war this black Confederale became a i>emoci'at :i<i< 1 lab ?re?| earnestly for the overtbrow of Republican government in L mi.-iana. Nothing except his Oiriii ami culor : piwciiii'il him from being a master | am men. The .surviving members | of the lVlx .n liiti-?s, onlv live or six j in number, arranged for I he Itinera! of ; t teir oM Irienil. KILLED HIS OW.V SOX. A Kentucky Farmer Blows His Boy's Head Ofl", Calling; nim 'Lazy. X?'W* has just been brought to ; 0-v? u>burg, Ky., by a gejtleiuan from M?lhitt;i!?erg cwuusy, this Si ate, of an ""uh<iaiit;ai a.rfWpJHilli}' of a fatii'T, near the Mud J?.:vt*r coal mines in dun c-tiiity. (}. L. Hopkins, the father, is a fanner, and is about fifty years oid. lie has an ungovernable temper at times, and has been the dreui of the neighborhood. In his fan ly lie has been quite evere, and at limes even e.iuel, and then lor a seas >ii, over-indulgent. L ist week he was o.i a spree and in one of in savage moods, tindingfault with everything at home. He charged his son WilllA SIMtli lo7tMAw?! ???/! Il'/ll't MdkUIWlCC IT iillU >? llii i?om\ ohm ? vyi buiv^ciu oc^ although ihe neighbors looked on him as a patient, iiineh abased aid over-worked boy. On Saturday morning, about 5 o'clock VViiiie, who is nearly nineteen \ears old, got up and began putting on his best clothes. Cj. L. Hopkins, the father, who was standing with his back to the fire, seeing this, exclaimed: "You lazy whelp, take oil'them breeches and put on your working trousers." Willie nettled up and replied: "P.ip, I've had enough of that," oi./< crr*Mt drnivinu fc4PU clmir you how to talk to me," and grasping the shotgun from the hooks on the joist, tired a? he spoke the last word and dew the whole top of Willie's head he hastily picked up his hat and coat and fled, and has so far escaped arrest. ADVICE TO MOTHEKS. Mrs Winsl-.w's soothing strcp should always.be used for children teething. It soothes 'he child, softens the gums, aJlajs. all pain. ?. uir3 ?> iuu V/Vuu awu 10 uic wtoi wi I 4i:irrhce.i. Twenty-five cents a bottle. | Julyl-iLtyi tMsmmmtt" m ma ?r?? -r THE TWO SAMS. The Mt'Otiri" in Cincinnati, Led l?y tlio Kcv. Sam Junrs and >Ir. Small. Ain-ady the meeting iu Cincinnati under the leadership ot the Kev. .>am Jones are becoming the leading tuple of the sriNon and give p: oni-e <d" reducing the u)?>">i prot'und religion- era ever known in Mie history ol'i'ii-s ei.y. The newspapers fraiikh admit thai lie : won upon the confidence of the people in his tir>t utterance- and thai the' happy in:pres-ion< he inadeaie widening and deepening with every service. Ills otien. ii:i?;;-aine(l maimer, hi earnest words of sympathy, iovo and solicitude, and his peifect faiih have completely captured for him the i:-arts of all wh<? have heard him. lie na> al once conquered all the popular prejudices that garbled new.-paper account might have engendered. The < ager crowds who are thronging Trinuy j church are not the usual lir-t night's i crowds of curiosity seekers. Tiiespirii ! of religious interest is fully mauiicsu-d I and the situation at this eariy >taye of I the meeting is full of glorious promises | of success. The Enquirer said editorially, after ! giving a few "pointers," that *4in his j tustle with Satan in Cincinnati, we' are decidedly 011 the side of Sam j Jones." The Commercial said of the initial ! service that "the church was crowd-! ed to its capacity, despite 1 he weather, ! and the famous preacher reached the j hearts of his hearers," and also re- i ported "flattering indications for a j great revival." The Sun said: "Before lie had talked live minutes he had that large a>scmblage at his mercy, lie was so frank, so free, so unaffected, the words came in such purity that every one was charmed. Sam James is a wonderful man in his own peculiar way. The audience was really impressed and delighted by the wonderful discourse." The Evening Telegram says: "jam Jones opened the Lord's campaign against the devil last night. llis attack was vigorous and full of Gre. The indivual sinners received broad side after broadside. Cincinnati can stand a good of reformation and stiil show Sodom several tricks. We wisii Mr. Jones success." The Evening Post, in commenting says: "In manner he is perfectly nat- j ural. He dresses, looks ami talks j plainly. You hear no gorgous, highflown periods from him. ilis speech is pure English; about seventy-live per cent, of his words are monosyllables, and words, too, have only one meaning. He thinks clearly and log ically, and his experience in addressing juries is nowing hiin good service in aiming straight at the mark." The Times-Star, quotes the strong! est points of the sermon and remarks: I "It was extremely entertainingand lull j of epigrammatic sentences which was thoroughly enjoyed by the listeners." The Rev. Dr. Joyce, the pastor of | Trinity church, says: "These are not ! only "the largest congregations that | have ever attended revival ser| vices in this city, within my knovvl! edge, but tbev are made up of the j finest class of (Jincinnatians and of i people who arc seldom reached by | the preachers and churches." i The large number of ministeis tn I of no/?n ? l'fi dentlv interested in the great work and are ready with reponsive ' aniens." Mr. Jones has filled the appointment up to this time, pioneering the way for the continuous and heavy work ahead. Mr. Small is prepared to <:o ! forward with his assignments when I reached, and the probabilities arc that as no available hall in the city will j hold the people double services will ! be held in separate churches. Every bigency will be used that grace proHMfcto make th?j^JTeerin^otjC|^^j present emergency, was one of unusual fervor and power. It created a decided sensation among the people, and caused many persons to grow serious with unusually pertinent thoughts about their own lives, unci daily examples. The effect of the sermon will be great upon the future progress of the work in this city. 3IADSTOXES FOR HYDROPHOBIA. Caroliaa Takes a Home Treatment Instead of Going; to Paris. North Carolina boasts of no less than four matUtones, each of which ialleged to have certain specific viriues, 'making each ihe <rreat ami only madstone. Wondeiful apparent cure-* have been effected by the u*e of these madstones during the pa<t hilt century. Some of them are even older than that, but faith in their effijacy has never diminished. There is a f-unou> one in Htlitax comity, and people bitten by rabid dogs have been taken to the stone or the stone has be^n taken to them for years. List year Luo cases were treated by it ami one is now undertreattnen!. Another stone is known far ami near as the Painter madstoi.e, ami is owned bv Mr. Painter, of Parson county. It is in demand by both Virginians ami North Carolinians, and there are eases known of persons having cases known of persons having been taken hundreds of miles to be touched by this stone. On Christmas eve R. M. White, of Halifax county, Va., was bitten by a mad dog. He went to Painter's as soon as possible for treatment. Painter applied the stone sixteen times to the wound. Jt adhered fifteen times, but at I he sixteenth application the >tone would not adhere. White \va< given immediate relief. Ivtst week a negro woman living near Danville was bitten. Saturday she was taken to Painter for treatment, and this is now * - - rm.- 1 ~ ill progress i mu j>uupie ui mm >c<jtion claim that this is {he only gen nine madstone in the State. None of these :nacUtones have ever been sold. By some persons they are regarded as j givitfgTnrrk 'ii their possessors. Atlanta. Months Open. ? , _ Six months ago we had ho demand for ! B. B. B., bat now onr retail demand is such I that we are forced to bny in gross lots. We | attxibnte the rapid iMid enormous demand I to the comparative sitdand price of B. B. B. I (being large bottles for Si), and its posiI tive merit. It et-!ls well and gives our eus| tomers entire satisfaction. Our sales have | increased 500 pfr cent, within a few months. Jacobs Pharmacy, per Fred B. Palmer, M. D. Atlanta, Sune 12, 1885. J During the past few months I have given | B. B. B. severe tests in the cure of Blood ! Diseases, and nnhesitatinjiv pronounce it i a safe, sore, harmless and sperdy Blood Purifier, fully meriting the confidence 01 the public. My customers are delighted with its effects, and the demand lias so wonderfully increased that 1 have been compelled to buy by the gross, as it is the best selling blood remedy I handle. * \V. A. Graham, Druggist. A Railroad "Wreck. A disastrous wreck occurred last : Wednesday night on the 6t. Joseph ; and Des Moines branch of the Lhicaj go, Burlington and Quincy system, j about four miles east of Albany, a j passenger train bound for Sf. Joseph encouuterea a nroKen ran, wneu uv whole trair, except the engine, wathrown from the track and down an embankment fifteen feet. Theiv wre fifteen passangers on the train and rot one escaped injury. An old man named Miller, from Palmyra. Iowa, was instantly killed, his neck being broken. Several were serioush hurt. ix~?sxrs&rwsstsz&i2sai fc'i ! T T^MrrTy~t*hrrfiaC>a^WW GENERAL NEWS ITEMS. Facts of Interest. Gathered from Various Ounrtcr*. '!'< " IV.if!,.nul r.atwrnn 12 ctill ! ( ctiiiil. ? Mary Tli<>nia?. colorc?1, was burnt. t<> i:i I'uinti b\ her clothing tak-! i:ig fir . ? A ?- ! !* -?i woman i.U ijn! Williams was '-tl: I !?> IJCai* Aiken a lew days ago. ?t'"U i !rir >'J0 {foM pieces have I ap;><-aivt| ir: Xc ?\ berry ami the people j are cxviu-d. ? IIo;r plague is canning terrible havnt: aiuting ih:; porkers in portions of Wi-consin. ? l iirei: oil >r>:es were uurneu ui Pliihielpiii.i on Thursd iv, burning one man to death. ?(j rapes and praches in Greenville are imt believed to have been hurt by ilie hite >nap. ?The citizens of Greenville want the <?Jd court-house removed, as it is neither n-elui nor ornamental. ?A runaway horse in Sumter struck and killed ;i mule with the shaft of the vehicle to which iie was attached. ?The residence of II. L. Brunei*, formerly of Lancaster, was burnt in Wadesboro, X. (J., a fe-v days ago. IM >a < rt ! 111 i?rt> IrtPf in f lia A IX VJ KUiUlL^1 laot ? tUIV ill 111^ Willi**, cd States were 303?more than twoihirds of them in tlie South and West. ?A dwelling' belonging to Mrs. Nicholson, of Edgefield, and occupied by Joe Oiiphant, colored, was- burnt last week. ?Marie Augustine, a colored woman who is believed to have reached the age of 125 years, died recently in New Orleans. ?Adam Schley, ilie colored man iu-} jurcd by tailing from a train on the< Northeastern railroad, died on Tues-' day lafet. ?The new bridge over the Ashley River at Charleston has been completed and will be opened for traffic in a few days. Pim/'ov tvoc tlin /^rJr*r>cf rlotr r\f fliA season at St Paul, Minn.?the thermometer ranging1 from 28 to 35 degrees below zero. ?Charles Barnes, of Lancaster, while endeavoring to rescue a friend from the broken ice in Catawba Iliver, was drowned. ? A man in Akron, O., sold his wife for five cents and now the purchaser is in limbo and the seller has made himself scarce. "Professor' Bradley, a nccromaucer, has been arrested i.: Greenville, on charges of Iraud and attempting to decoy a girl off. ?Prince Alexandria, of Bulgaria, has agreed that negotions for peace between Servia and Bulgaria shall go on at Bucharest. - Lazarus Parker, colored, of Aiken, has been arrested on a charge of beat ing his two step-chiidren to death with a garden paling. ?A Nihilist resort has been discovered opposite the. AnnitchkefF Palace in St. Petersburg, and several arrests have been made. ?A train on the South Carolina Railway, sroing toward Charleston, ran over and killed a colored man near the Dorchester road on Thursday. Vt'ni. Sheehan, convicted of the murder r>f his mother, sister and orother at Castletown, Roche, in 1877, was hanged in Cork last Thursday. ?Major Isaac Keels, of Sumter, who has been in bad health for some^ time and was also affected in mind, suici?ied by shooting himseit with a pistol. ?Uneago now claims a population the Times of that city ^^^^^tthe State, has been reoiv ganized under the old chat ter in Greenville. ?Tommic. a young sou of the late Congressman Evins, was badly burnt about the face and eyes while experimenting with gunpowder in Spartanbu rg. ?Governor Hughes, of Arkansas, has pardoned thirty colored rioters, whose sentences ranged from live to tilteen years. They had served two years. ?The President will not back down iVoin his silver suggestions, nor'will iie recede before the Senate in the matter ot Ins removals of Republicans from office. ?Mayor Courtenay, of Charleston, has been requested by a committee of I die citizens to withdraw his resignation, ami has asked for a few days' time to consider it. ?"Sheeny Mike," a notorious New York tonsil, has been arretted in Jacksonville, Fla., foi a robbery committed in Troy two years ayo. lie' was just from Europe. ? Sydney Brown, colored, who waylaid and killed Samuel Ford, white, la^t Wednesday niyrht, was taken from the jail at Galveston on Friday night, uy a moo, ana nangcci ro a tree. ?A manuscript epitaph now ii: the possession of an Italian reads: "Here lies Sal vino Annoto d'Armati, ofFluri-nce, the inventor of"spectacles. May (t.mI pardon his tirs. The year 1318.'' ?The President has approved the Act providing for the performance of i she duties of President in the case of j !lit; rt'inovai, death or inability cf buth ; ihe President and the Vice-President. - Pc:cr .Jepscn, belonging to Petersburg, Menard county, Illinois, has btfii expelled the country by the German authorities. United States Minister Pendleton protested against the ovmi lcifiii lint hie r?rr?toci- nriie nnovnil. ing. ?The late Col. lli ;hardsou's plantations arc situated in Mississippi, Louisiana and A*fkansa*, 'U|d his vast landed domain, all in active viiijvation, rivafo that of anv great feii&lr lord of^fite Old World." r ?J. and P. Coats, of Philadelphia, the celebrated thread manufacturers, nave purchased land on the Augusta Canal, on which they will build a yarn factory at an early day. Thev already own a small mill there. ?Of the $1,242,200 contributed, a \ ear or two ago, for the sufferers ot the earthquake in Spain, it now appears from an official statement that only S1G8,000 was paid out, and the iv?t Hps snnorlv in the bank of Snain. ? Incendiaries are at work down in Dixie lo an alarming extent. The public has been stirred np and lynch law is hinted at in case the depredators are eaught. Farm houses, mills, ginneries, etc., have been maliciously burned. ?The Marquis of Salisburv snubbed a delegation of Irish Loyalists which recentiy visited him. He apparently thinks that he understands British opinion as well as his would-be arfvisers, and he possibly did not like their dictatorial ways. ?The United States patent office lias granted patents to the following South Carolina inventors: J. W. itykard, Abbeville, automatic fan; J. F. Barringer, TJennettsville, broom holder; i'. lingers, Mniiin's L>epot, seeding machine." ?Spain will appoint a Governor of the Caroline and IVlevv Islands and will send out troops to establish garrisons, She will also send an e^pjoi Mmimmmim*' , i ii~r ti >11 to ihe poiut where ih? gunboat Albutross planted the German flag during the Yap incident. .?Mr. Purnell .is not fnjrJirci.oi! ?:?*r even agitated m* -.the present public clamor for coercion, nor alarmed because of tin; threatened treaeherv of the m.-ij ?rity. ot the Cabinet. 11^ neither proposes to plead for what is due him nor to sue for Liberal help. ? Mark Chcckley, a well known lion tamer and pugilist, of Toronto, was arrested last week on suspicion of stealing a diamond ring. lie was found dead in his ceil shortly afterward, having deliberately strang'ed himself with a lady's worsted nubia. ?A? a forloru hope a fcix-iuch bore oei iiji 'in^i jil -'xuiii.iuorvc, jl tun., uiti the spot where the miners are entombed, in order to eommumcate with any miner who may possibly be still alive. There is ao reasonable hope, however, that any of the entombed miners survive. ?In the suit of Thos. II. Stringham | against Mrs. A T. Stewart to recover j $50,000 damages for injuries which he | received while in her employ on a ! c ^4 n ... i_ r t .muLi. I larm ai vvarueu v, u. i., wukii > j tried in the Kings County Supivi. | Court, the jury returned a verdict of $12,500 in favor of the plaintiff. ?The silver men will soon have another ally. In the second volume of the Hon. Jas. G-. Blaine's "Twenty Years in Congress" he takes strongground in favor of silver coinage. The publishers of that book are pushing it forward as. fast as possible, in hope that it may be issued before the silver question is settled. ?Wednesday night a party of young folks were enjoying themselves on the ice on Yougbiogheny River, Pa., when a young lady named Riser fell Kinto an ice hole. Her escort, Jas. Marf shall, rushed to her rescue, but the ice j broke, letting him into "the water. ! Before aid could reach them t**e current swept them under the icc and both were drowned. The bodies have not been recovered. --The United Ireland, is an article entitled "Breakers Ahead," says: "The suppression of the National League wili inevitably lead to conspiracy. luvincibleiMii and dynamite will replace the League's open methods, for which the Government will be answerable. The United Ireland warns i Salisbury to beware and exhorts the I Nationalists to prepare for action." ?Investigations made by the Chi| cago police and defectives* have dis ciuseu luc laci mat niu uuuruuisus ui that city?composed largely of German speaking people?have beeu engaged in manufacturing dynamite i bombs and experimenting with other infernal machines, for the purpose, as they declare, of destroying the militia and blowing up the large public build' ing3 when tbe "great revolution'3 begins. A CYCLONE IX CALIFORNIA. j Railroad Cars Blown From the TrackHouses Blown Down and General Havo< Played by the Wind. One of the severest storms that hav< i ever occurred on the Pacific coast took i piacc on Sunday and reached its heigh! I shortly after noon Thursday. It extended l ij-om the northern boundary of "Washington Territory to the southern boundary of California and from the llocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean. There was an almost continuous fall of Wn and snow, accompanied by _ wind j which from five miles an hojf gradj ually increased, until abyuti:20 in the afternoon, when ^"cached eighty-two ! miles an hour. j The ot^in" was predicted by the i Si/iHrt1-Service, and a cautionary >torm .'Jwunl ?tf il H i^r>ln l\i? T !/?P_ >? ?io uu u> uiuvji v/i jljiv;iir tenant Glassford, fro in the flag staff of the Merchants' Excho?^c building. Owing to this'timely notice, many vessels remained in port and escaped the fury of the storm. Although the i bay inside the harbor was very rough the passengers on the ferry boat being made seasick?shipping did not suffer. Considerable damage, however, was done throughout the city by the wind and rain. Houses were unroofed, shed?, fences, trees, awning.*, signs, church spires and many smoke stacks were blown down. Huge plate glass windows were shattered, basements i flooded and shutters broken. Cars were lifted from their tracks by the force of the wind, and a covered wagon was cauirht up and carried some distance. Xo loss of life, however, has been reported. i 4 1 * t .oa _ ... 1.-- . 1. - ... j iioouii:ov p. in., wuen uie wmu ! was at its highest, the west wall of the Mcchanics's Pavilion was blown in and a few minutes about eighty feet of the roof of the building was carried across the street damaging the buildings on the opposite *icle. The damage to the pavilion amounts to severa thousand dollars. One "of the most unfortunate disasters caused by the storm was the colb?p>>c of a two-story building at Mission and Thirtieth streets. At the time of the fall of the building Mrs. Annie Humbert, Miss Covle and John Carroll were in tho building. Carroll cscaped but the women were buried under the falling walls and were seroi-nlp iini'hnne iiiim'n.l Tlu? " '"".m rv .. j...v.. most serious result of the storm was to cut. oft' San Francisco entirely, for j the first time in its history, from telegraphic comiimuicalioit with the outi side world. The wires began going down one after another, nut*1 a linal break occurred about ha f pant twelve in the evening. For a >h >rt time the city wires were mid red u>cless. "Washouts have oceum-d on ii?r Southern road at M*vcraf place* i?etwceif Mojava and Yuma, Tliey aiv not considered serit?u> and the road will be repaired in three or four days at the furthest. Little or no delay has occurred on the Central Pacific, although there has been a heavy snowfall between Truckce, California, and Reno, Nevada. A Dynamite Sensation in Georgia^ ATLANTA, ijrA., uartersville, the county seat of Bartow county, is in an intense state of excitement. Last night some desperate characters placed a dynamite cartridge on the front veranda of United t>tate< Commissioner Collins' resilience on Church street, and caused its explosion. This morning a telegram reached Atlanta requesting immediately a pack of bloodhounds and stating thai the dynamiters had been at work and escaped. A reporter of the Constitution went to Cartersville and reports that the explosion knocked the veranda to pieces, splintered the weather boarding, shattered window glasses and seriously shocked Mr. ami Mrs. Collins. The explosion awoke everybody in town, and the wildest excitement prevailed. Tobe Jackson and his brother Qoin _Ta/?L-eon roivro nmMrlv tiKtifvM f>r? ?J?IU vuvn?vu m vi v vj u i ww i i?u?-|/vwt because the Commissioner hud just bound ihe former over for violating the interna! revenue and the local amiliquor laws. Pursuit was organized, and Sam Jackson is now in jail. Tobe Jackson is still at largr, and is being chased by bloodhound*. ?A special dispatch to the Wheeling, W. Va., Intelligencer from Newbury, W. Va., reports that all of the thirty-nine coal miners caught in last Thursdav night's mine explosion are dead. Newbury is a town of about eight hundred inhabitant?, and as the majority of the dead men had families, the town is a scene of desolation that j beggars description. Predicted His Own Denth. Daniei G. Sperrv. of South Windsor, (.'oiin.j \vh:> rjirly Su December prcMietcii hi* drath in three weeks : thereafter, I on Tuesday afrerno ?u, wiiliin a month of the tlntcr he pre j die'ed. He had already settled his' Inwnes-; affairs and had bought a mas- , sive oak ratlin, which he kepi in his , hon-e. 'I'm.* i:ii!aix- ??f his prediction thai h?: w-.tdd p is< :uv;iv December : hatl no < lli-ol upon hiia t?r!??*r than to wake lit in more dopn s-cii in spirits. ; lie paid nothing rurther regarding* his ; presentment, utli i: was evident to his friends liiat he hud not abandoned it, i for lie showed no interest in daily ] affairs or in the future. He was well advanced in years, but was in ordinary i <jood health nntil t!si< strange present: went be^an to prey upon him. Grave ilo!>l)o:*s;i:i Atlanta. The negroes Atlanta arc in a terrible state <>t exoiieinent over !he discovery that ghoul* have pollen into j the cciimtcry of Decatur, a -iiberb of that city, and taken thc'vfrom two ; bodies. On examination *?f lour pau-[ per graves two were luund empty. | Joseph Smith, the sexton of the cetne- j tery, was suspected and was arrested, ! with (ieorye Vanghan, the colored | janitor of the Atlanta Medical College J and both are now in jail. The negroes j would lynch them if it were in their power. There will be a general dig-! giiig up of the graves, to see if any j more are empty. Vattsfhan has been Jj arretted several limes before on the same charge, and has lost his* college several thousand dollars in fines. ?Madame Louise Mourey, who I with Mr. Stead, editor of the Pall Mall Gazette, and others, was con-; victed in November last, in connection ! with the . liza Armstrong abduction ; case, and was sentenced to six months' imprisonment, died last week in Mill: tank prison, London. 1 ! I TEXAN TALK. ? : The Success an Atlanta Article has Achieved in the Lone Star State. "We Live and Permit Others to Exist." Dexter, Texas, March 13, 1S83 | Blood Balm Co.: It is a great pleasure to us to state to you that your B. B. B j takes the lead of all blood purifiers in this country, on account of the cures it has effected since we have handled it. We had ' a case of scrofula in our neighborhood, of long standing, who had used all patent medicines which were recommended to ' 1 him; besides this, he also had several doc: J tors attending him, but everything failed ' | to effect any good, lie grew worse every i day, and had not ieft his bed for the last , six months. We had seen him several . times in our little town, though it has been i more than fifteen months since we last saw him, and we suppose this was the last time lie was able to eome to town, as he lives about eight miles in the country. Ilis name is Servenka, and we got a neighbor of his to persuade him to try B. B. B~, and after using only one ijotti.e lie left his ; bed for the fir>t time in six months. To the present time he has used less than three bottles, and he is walking around visiting his friends in the neighborhood. He hpa gained strength and flesh rapidly. All scrofulous sores are healing | finely, and you never saw a happier man than" iie is." Nearly everybody lor miles around has Iteard of th^^vonderful cure, | and aii call for J-" We liad a case of nasal catarrh in odf r own family (a little girl of four years old), who has been using 13. 13. 13. for about two weeks, and already seems to be about well. N'e have onlv three bottles left, and want you to ship us six dozen bottles. We" take pleasure in recommending' B. B. B. as a medicine worthy of the entire confidence of the pubiic. Its action is more rapid than any blood remedy we ever handled. " LIEDTKE BliOS. TUTT'S FILLS 25 YEARS IN USE, I li.0 Greatest Msdieal 'lrinmpn. 01 tae Age: SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER, Loss of appetite, Bowels costive, Pain in the head, with a dull sensation in tho back part, Pain under tho shoulderblade, Fullness after eating, with a disinclination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability of temper, I.ow spirits, with afeelingofhavingneglcctcd some duty, Woariness, Dizziness, Fluttering at tho Heart, Dots before the pyes, Headache over the right eye, Restlessness, with fitful dreams, Highly colored Urine, and CONSTIPATION. TTTTT'S PILIS aro especially adapted to such cases, one dose effects such a chang?; of fee! in % as to astonish tli e sufferer. Tbey Increase the Appetlte,nnd cause tho body to Take osi KJeaU, thus the system la nourished, and by ilieir Tonic Action on the Digestive Organs, Jtescular Stools aro prtxlncvd. f'ricea.'Sc. 4J^IarraySt..!V.'ir? TOH'S HAIR BYE, Gray Hair or Whiskers changed to a Glosst Black by a single application of this Dye. It imparts a natural color, acts instantaneously. Sold by Druggists, or sent by express on receipt of $1. Office, 44 Murray St., New York. Did } ou Sup pose Mustang Liniment only gooa for horses? It is for inflammation of all flesh. NEYT ADVERTISEMENTS. Ladies wanted to work ror us at th^n own homes. 87 to 810 per wteH' cr*fn b-easily made?no canvassing?'Tasclnattns and s:eadvjmqiniyslent. Particulars and sample or th*rwork sent tor stamp. Addres> UOMEJ^s CO., P. O. BOX 191G. Boston. Mass lEJBpapE WANT SAI.ES3IKX everywhere. \A / local and traveila;. to sell otir goods Y V win p iy <rood salary and expenses Write for terms ar. once, and state , salary wtntf-d. A idresV STANDARD MLVE! WARE COM A a NY, Waslil {Tion street, Boston i Mass. consumpwn7 I have a positive remedy tor tbe a.bovo disease; by l? ne thoasandsof eases ol the worst kind mid of Ion 5 sUndlnirhaTe been cured. Indeed, i-ostronclsinyfsUli In ltaeOeacy.tliat I wl 1 sendTWO BOTTLES FREE, together witli a YAT.PABT.ETREATISZ on this disease -loanj?Uirerer. iiiioexpreMinui v.??ur ?. DB. T. A. SLOCUM, 181 Pearl St., New York. Deafness itH CACHES and CUBE, by on** who was deal twenty-eight years-. Treated by most of noted specialists or the flay with no benefit. Cured himself In three months, and since then hundreds of othTS by s'UtiP ppsccss. A plain, simple and fiuccfssmi home treatment. Address T S PAGE, 12S E :5-t 2Cth St.. New York City, T CURE FITS! When I say cure I do not mean aaerely to stop them for a time and then hare them return again. I mean a radical core. I hare made the disease of FITS. EPILEPSY or FALLISO SICKNESS a life-long study. 1 warrant my remedy to cure the worst cases. Because other* have failed Is no reason for n>t now receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my Infallible remedy Give Express and Post OQce. It costs you nothing for a trial, and 1 will care you; DR. H. 0. BOOT, 1S3 Pearl St., X.I. Fa:ker's Tonic A Pure Family Medicine That Never Intoxicates. It you liav? Dyspepsia, llheumitlsin. KldDe: or Urinary complaints, or It you aro troubles with any disorder <>i the lungs, stomach, bow els, bkcxl or nerves you ran be cured b> BARKER'S TONIC. HISCOX & CO., 163 William Street, New York. Sold by all Druggists i 1 iar^e bot ties at Ot.e Dollar. Jan27-4w . -jga FOR COUGHS AND CROUP US> TAYXjOK'S ,4gggygth,; "rETW MUIiLKZN. | The tweet goa. u fathered from * tree of the nn naae, growing along the fmall etreanu In the Son them Statet, I containi a itlanlating'eipectorant principle that looeeai the phlegm producing the early morning cough, and Etonians the child to throw off the false membrane in croop and whooping-cough. When combined with the healing mod- 1 laginocs principle la the mullein plant of the old fields, pre. ! tents in Tinoa'a Cszsoxsx Rrxxsr oy Swxrr Gu* asd Mcru.tr* the finest known remedy for Costal. Creep, ! Whooplng-Congh and Consumption; and ao palatable, any ; child Is pleased to take It- Asktoot druggist for It- Price, ; 25c. and si. WAXt?;kA. TAYXOB, Atliafau, Ga. TTie DR. BIGGEBS' HCCKLEBEHBT CORDIAL 9a Diarrhoea. Dysentery and Childrea Teething. I? ak bf ^drotgiits. Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta K. K SCHEDULE IN EFFECT OCTOBER 4, | 1885,?Eastern Standard Time. GOING NORTH. >0. 53, MAIL AKD EXPRESS. Leave Augusta 9.10 a. m. Leave "W. C. &. A. Junction 1.12 p. m. Arrive at Columbia 1.22 p. m. Leave Columbia L32 p. m. Leave Killian's 1.58 p. m. Leave BIythewood .2.13 p. m LeaveRiugeway 2.34 p. m. Leave Simpson's 2.47 p. m. Leave Winnsboro 3.02 p. m. Leave \V hite Oak 3.22 p. in. Leave Woodward's 3.43 p. m. Leave Blackstock 3.50 p. m. Leave Cornwall's 3.58 p. m. Leave Chester 4.15 p. m. Leave Lewis' 4.32 p. in. Leave Smith's 4.40 p. m. Leave Hock Hill?.. 4.56 j>. m. Leave Fort Mill ". 5.20 p, m. Leave Pineville 5.40 p. m. Arrive at Charlotte G.00 p. m Arrive at Statcsville 9.35 p. ra GOING SOUTH. NO. 52, mail ANjj express. Leave Statcsville ? 7.45 a. m. Leave Charlotte 1.00 p. nf Leave Pineville 1.27 p. in. j Leave Fort Mill '. 1.44 p. m. j Leave Kock Hill .2.02 p. m. Leave Smith's 2.22 p. m. Leave Lewis' 2.30 p m. Leave Chester 2.44 p. m. | Leave Cornwall's 3.03 p. m. Leave Blackstock 3.12 p. m. Leave Woodward's .3.18 p. m. Leave White Oak 3.30 p. m. Leave Winnsboro 3.48 p. m. Leave Simpson's 4.03 p. m. Leave Eidgeway 4.16 p. m. Leave Blytbewood 4.32 p. zn. Leave Killian's 4.49 D. m Arrive at Columbia 5.15 p. m. Leave Columbia ...5.25p. m. Leave "WV C. & A. Junction 5.57 p. m. Arrive at Augusta ?9.38 p. m. Connection is now made at Chester (by trains 52 and 53) for Lancaster and intermediate points on C. & C. R. R., and for all points on C. & L. R. R. as far as Newton, N. C. C. W. CHEARS, Acting G. P. A G. R. TALCOTT, Superintendent. D. CAKDWELL. A. G. P. A. j j | Trade fs mark- ! WheYRne growing Countries of Europe, | the use of this Medicate dWine is universal, i It is composed of the most approved VEGETABLE TONICS, j which areintroducedinto a pure generous"Wine. The very finest ! ! TAV? nTXTTiTTftVi. IVAIMr ! Ji02m.tnTciroiTa.iMnii^[ t emg its medicalbasis,itis canfideridly' recommended as a cure and preventive of ! FEVER and AGUE, ' aadallo'herdiseases originating from i malarious causes For purifying the BIiOOD mdiraproving the Secretions,Cfironio, j Rheumatism,Bloodpoisoning,a certain j cnrefor Dyspepsia,Cramp in the stomach,! ail immediate relief for Dysentry,CoIic.j Cholera-morbusandkindred diseases,! GeneralWoakness,Nervous and Mental Debility,a souveragnremedyfor Liver Complaint.and diseases of-the Kidnies.an exc ellfint appetizer; and a TONIC without a rival'.* in short^Rr invigorating ail the functions of the system, it is uneq ualled. -D OSEAsmall Wine-^lassfull.three times a day. | ] Sold by all Druggists and dealers generally.! ' TOPAZ CINCHONA CORDIAL CO.,| Sole Froprietorsd. Man ufaciurtrx. | | ~~ Jtrest. <f Trcas7~~ ' SPARTANBURG. S.C.| PIANOS-ORGANS The demand for the improved Masos & Haxtjs Piaxos is now so larsre that a second-addition to the factory has become imperative. Do not require onequarter as much tuning as Pianos on the prevailing Trr<x?.n?n circtem. . rVinsnlt (;*taJO?T3e. fcrije. 100 sTyle/of Organs, $23 to fBOO^Ycr Cash, Easy PaymeiiUvOi.Heated. . ^ Mas?n & Hamlin Organ and Piano Co., TTEVf YORK : BOSTpy-; CHICAGO. Ashley Sou The Soluble Guano is a'highly concentrate Grade Fertilizer for all cropi. ASHLEY COTTON AND CORN COMP two crops and also largely used by the True ASIILEY ASII ELEMENT.?A very che tilizer for Cotton, Corn and Small Grain Cr v lues. eic. AS It LEY DISSOLVED BONE: ASHLE Grades?for use alone and in Compost heap For Tenns, Directions, Testimonials, and publications of the Company, address THE ASHLEY PHOSI Xov33Lly 1IH1 k&uhk 80- CUBES ?Diphtheria Croup, Astiuna. Bronchitis, Hoarseness. Influenza. Sac king; Cou^h. Whooping Co Plarrhcea. Kidney Troubles. aadSpinal-Diseases. fu PARSONS' Thesepill?wer?a wonderful discovery. JTo other reUereall manner of disease. The information aroua pins. ' Find out about them and yon will always be nrgg^^old e^ei-rsrh-ere. or sent by mail for 23c. in etaa be'^iv'en wittftod.^? ^ Sola everywhere, or ocut. ?j ^ ? Six cm Sy expres#, prepaid* for $*>.00. A Clear Skin 1 is only a part ot beauty; ' but it is a part Every lady t may have it; at least, what , looks like it. Magnolia Balm both freshens and beautifies. Dionnn and Hrfrono i laiiuo aiiu uigiuio FROM THE WORLD'S BEST MAKERS, AT FACTORY PRICES OX TIIE EASIEST TERMS OF PAYMENT. EIGHT GRAND MAKERS AND OVER THREE HUNDRED STYLES TO f| SELECT FROM. . ^ , i PIANOS: CHICKERING. MASON & IIAMLIN, MATHUSIIEK, BEST & ARION. ORGANS: MASON & HAMLIN, PACKARD, ORCHESTRAL, and BAY STATE Pianos and Organs delivered, lreiglii paid, to all railroad points South. Fifteen days' trial ard freight both ways if not j satisfactory. tSFOrder and test in your own homes* COLUMBIA. MUSIC HOUSE, Branch of LUDDEN & BATES' S. M. H. , XT TT TPT7ATP AT* n o cr&r J wLl IT* JLXIV-.ULX j ,x J^m COLUMBIA, S. C. Jj FeS,D!"'--J NO More Terror!.onl/, fortenf " itlie time of labor and lessens the intensity No'More'Pain! :?f > * fl *" - w ?* greatly diminishes the dancer to life of botli . rjr^. i mother and child, and No More.Eacger!, leave* the ^ MoS aer or Child. liable to flooding, cox. vulsTons, and other lalaraiing symptoms incident to slow or The Dread of painful labor. Its truly v.-onderful-efficaM other hooa cy in this respect entitles it to be called Transformed to |TIIE JIOTHE K.'S IFIUEND and to be EA . T? ranked as one of the LJ life-saving remedies ^ of the nineteenth cen - Itury. ?nd From the nature of the case it will of -r /?\ ~V""T~ course be understood J I 9 V 1 nar we cannot PUD~ \J I_ . jlish certificates conicerning this -Rem f3JT~ idelicacy of the writers. p?oa Yet we"have hundreds _ Safety and Ease of suci, testimonials 0n - file, and no mother TO~~ who has once used it will ever again be: Vj Suffering Woman Without it in her time JH . iof trouble. H A prominent physician lately remarked to the proprietor, that if it were admissible' to make public the letters we receive, the "Mothers' Friend" would outsell anything on the market. . . Gentlemen:?During my career in the practice of medicine 1 use;* your "MOTHER'S FRIEND" in a great number of cases, with the happiest results in every instance." It makes labor easy, hastens delivery and recovery, and insures safety to both mothek and child. >'o woman can be induced to go through the ordeal without it after once using it. Yours trulv, T. E/PEXXIXGTOX, M. D. Palmetto, Ga., June 10,1S84. Send for our Treatise on "Health and Ilanniness of Woman." mailed free. Bhadfield Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga. Sufftoon. Aeartalncoxe. Notexpensive. Tbr?* nanus' treatment in one package. Good for CoiA in the Jwd, Headache. Dizziness, Hay Fever, <?c. JlftycenSfc B/ *11 Druggists, or by mall. ? T. H AZEXTPQB. Warren, Pa JBLE GrUANO. ?d Ammoniated Guano, a complete High OUXD ?A couiplcte Fertilizer for these fcers near Charleston for vegetables, etc. ap and excellent Non-Ammoniaied Ferops, and also f.r Fruit Trees, Grape Y AC1I) PHOSPHATE, of very High ior ine various aurucuvc ana insirm.ve 'HATE CO., Charleston, S. C. , Necralgii- Bheanatiam, Bleeding at the Lniurs, agh, Catarrh, Cholera Morbus, Dysentery, Chronic tree. Dr. X. S. Johnson & Co.. Boston, Slaaa.. ""Dll I C ' BLOOD. B I Is is W 91,v? them in the world- Will positively cure or id each box la worth ten times the co?t of a box of i thmkftiL One pill a doae. Illustrated pamphlet ips. Dr. 1.8. JOHff SON & CO.. 22 C.S. St., Bo atop. M wm mm n ?Nothing Ca earth "nlffTi S ? ??will make hens lay 'iftBm* wl H 'WW It cures. --W m 19 W chicken cholera and KRlS- .m ? 01 V all disease of hcna. '' V m| at? 9 E&nt ' Is worth its weight ' nlw fcffl 1 saa"1 ** %r$ig?~