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gggggggtegj ggBgai MgPBgyi* as^ati^irrx-.SSi CON VICT FARMS ON SHAKES. J Tke Plan Adopted by. tho Penitentiary Directors--?I>etail * of the Leases Recent- ! It Made. (From the Xeic* and Courier.) Colubmia January 27.?It will be j remembered that the terms upon { t_ * L_ _ ! J _ C J} T * f? , ' wuiuu me uoaru 01 uireuiurs ui mr penitentiary, at their meeting-; held in the early pari of this mouth, leased j three plantations for convict ru>idence . labor were not made public because ! the contract had not been committed to writing. Much interest iris been j exhibited in the matter, ami it seemed I desirable that the public should be in- i formed of the detail* of the contracts. ; inqnirv wax made tins morning at in?- i office of the Clerk of Court for this J countv, and it was found that the: Seegers and Sims contracts had been ! signed and were hi the Clerk's hands j awaiting record. The lease of the Seeders plantation | contains the following provisions: ! John C. Seegers leases to the board of i directors of the penitentiary for a: term of five years from January 1, j 18S6, his "Big Lake" plantation, locat ed in Richland county, some miles j oelow Columbia. lie ag.iers to fur nish all the farm utensils, implements | and machinery required by the direc- j tors, and to furnish also such mules j as may be required by the directors | for farm work and a horse for the use j of the manager of the farm. He furth- j er agrees to furnish all the lumber I necessary for the maintenance and re- j pair of the convict stockade and such | land as may be required for vegetable ' gardens. lie agrees to p.iy each year j during the term of the agreement and j lease one-half of amounts which shall ! be required for the purchase ot commercial fertilizers and cotton bagging ; anct tic?. The directors agree to occupy ami; use the farms solely for the employ- j ment of convicts, the convicts to be j managed bv officers and guards of the ! penitentiary. They agree to furnish j such a number of convicts as may be necessary for the proper cultivation of' the farm, and to maintain the>e convicts and their guards at the expense; of the penitentiary. They agree to; properly care for the mules and horses ; furnished, thesaid animals to be main-; tained aud fed Mi*. Seegcrs. Thev j agree to pay one-half the amount re- j quired for the purchase cf commercial fertilizers and cotton bagging and ties; j to return to Mr. Seeger>, when the | crops shall be gathered, the seed corn j and other seed brains and cotton seed ! famished by him for planting such j crops. The cotton seed raided on the j farm to be used as a fertilizer: and at the expiration of the lease, after the deduction of the amount of seed advanced by Mr. Seegers, the remainder is to be equally divided between the | two parties to the agreement. The J board agrees to pay to Mr. Seeders as j rent of the farm one-half of the net proceeds of sales of crops made on the j farm. This arrangement and lease is signed j P Caofrovcj our} 'T* .1 ] .1T"W- I U V tJKJili I u. uuv? * . V. ? comb, superintendent of the penitentiary. The lease of the plantation of ,J. C. s F. Sims, about ten miles be!ow the i city, is couched in the sume term?, j This plantation has 1,400 acres. Of J coarse the maintenance of suo!i a large [ force of convicts without return until j the crops are made will be expensive;! bnt if thin arrangement were not ef- j fected the prisoners vvou'd have to be supported in idleness at the peni:en-! tiary. So that there is no ri-k on the j n.f )ho Sifotri hi:t <1 eprfMl III V. Olie I ha'v v' V ? , I would jucige, of making ihe convicts by harvest time pav tor their own sup-1 port during the year and yield a surplus, more or less large. About one hundred convicts are already on the leased Secgers, Sims and : g^g-irir.,_ Aughtrv farms, and others will be j ^^"^a^gnt out next Monday. They have ! c&S^jLraept on the Seeders | place, the&Sfcling of comfortable log-1 hauscs and stockades and at e now; ditching fields, clearing fallow lauds, i &c. ? * ? THE MONUMENT TO LEU. Desisrn for the Proposed Memorial of the ; Great Southern General. A correspondent of the American \ Register states that a distinguished j American sculptor, whose, name is; withheld, recently shipped tVuin Rome j a model for the proposed equestrian j monnment to Gen. Robert E. Lee, to ! be erected in Richmond, Va., and for i which several unsatisfactory competi-j tions have already taken place. The j model in question is in the form of an i exquisitely designed architectural base, | square in shape and diversified with j graceful columns in half relief. Rising \ from the centre of this is a short fluted I column or altar piece, so to speak, j placed upon a smaller base, and ueoo- ; rsted with a bevy of beautiful childish f -fi/riietirn-u-u-fin<r wivnlar shields ! 13UJ/J/V. v...^ w representing ihe eleven Southern Slates and occupying spaces between Uiein. The column is surmounted by a colos-) sal female figure, typifying the genius j of the South, with one hand resting \ upon the plough, while the other is extended forward as if ready to crown j the warrier whose name slu; delights ! to honor. Projectiug from the princi- { pal base is an extension of the same j height and style of architecture, bearing"upon it the equestrian statue of Lee, which at once arrests the atten- j lion of the beholder as a striking and original conception. The horse and rider, though in a manner such a* only I a man skilled in horsemanship coulii j conceive of, seem to divide the honors j with each other in the contrast of .1 I- ? . K I expression creaieu uy me scuiyiur. i Gen. Lee is shown as sitting erect and ; looking intently towards a (l:si:uit { point of interest, but yet calm and ; strong and self-poised in his conscious , ^ knowledge of the situation. The horse, j on the contrary, while represented as obedient to bis master's will, and j awaiting his signal for action, is stepping slowly forward, but reaches his head aloft and towards the point of danger, indicating hy hi> di!a:ed nostrils and eagenuss of eve that he scents ! ' --? - r-.. I tne Datue aiar ou. ju is a pomtu ui an | animal in I"nil sympathy with his rider, and \ct teeming: with exciten>eut' and impatience to participate in f'.t* ] event about to transpire. The con- j ception of the whole, it is claimed, is a j superb one, full of the lofty dignity of : character befitting the original, and ! has the high artistic quality at express-; ing the strong emotion both of the I rider and his steed without resort to ! the too frequent necessity of physical j action. Chloroform and Kobbery. The Cincinnati Sun publishes the ; following: *'S. E. Chamberlain, a i stock dealer living near Toledo, was i found insensible in Mill Creek bottom i early this morning and, alter being j restored, stated that he arrived in tins city Tuesday night; that he entered a ! hack at the depot and requested to be | driven to the Palace Hotel. After he j had proceeded sonic distance lie said he heard a peculiar noi>e as of air i escaping from a tube, and soon aft"r wards Ion all consciousness until thi= morning. Plis poeke.'s had been rifled CI OA onH ?i "vfllnahln <r;>!.I watch " ~ r> The policc claim that !he hack was! 'dxod? by means of a pipe extending frorr. the driver's seat to the inside of J the vehicle, so arranged as to enable j the driver to force a sleep-prodnci;ig : jas into the inside." ?The heaviest snow fur fourteen ; years lies over England and all aloi'g j the Continent. / CIVIL UJGHTS IN CREEJ* VILLI.. ' Suit to lie Brought by a White Child's Colored Parents IJecause it was Dismissed frwm School. (Front tk< (sreenci'U yeic8.) An interesting and remarkable case, which may come under the civil rights law?, lias bee: develoyed in (inati township, this county. The West (jnatt High .School, :t few miles below the city, is a flourishing one for white scholars, taught bv T. E. Ewart. It is >upp< ncd partly by individual ?ub.-cri|;tions oi' white citizens and parth from the public fund>, tiaving a ten months' ses>ion, and i- patrouized 1?\ the bc>t people of that section, J.u the neighborhood there is a white - * * ? ' I'x.nro,' WOIIIUIJ tilill 1 U I"./ Or ?H?inw-UV IVIIIV4 named Smith, who claims to be a Spaniard, but is regarded and treated a? a full blooded negro, having every appearance ?'f being one. Bi-lbre her marriage to Smith, the woman was a willow and liad a number of children I who are pure u hire. The>c children, however, regard Sniiih as their father and are called by his name. La^t week one of them, a tboy of fourteen, was sent to Mr. Kwart's school. He promptly objected to the attendance of the boy, and reported the case to the trustees, ?T. J. Mackey, John P. Scruggs . and It. Smith. A number of patrons of tl.e school gave notice that if tlie bimtn ooy auenai-u it iuey wuuiu withdraw their children. On Friday t!ie trustees met and unanimously decided to dismiss the boy. The community -sustains Mr. Ewart and the trustets, but the Smiths are indignant and declare their purpose to prosecute the teacher and tne trustees in the United States Court under the civil rights law. But it is difficult to sec how such a prosecution could be had, as the boy was not discriminated against because of his race, color ur previous condition, being a full blooded white, and was objected tu because of the social position of Vis papers. The case is without precedent so far as is known. A HAUNTED HOUSE. Annarii 'sus in a Doorway Create a Sen sation in an Indiana Toirn. About four miles to the southwest of Wabash, Indiana stands a little cluster of houses. The inhabitant* are intelligent tanners who have retired from agricultural pursuits, intent <?n ending their days in Arcadian simplicity ami quiet. One-halt' mile south on the Somerset mail route is a trame cottage rapidly falling into decav. The heavy front door stands ajer on one hinge sufliciently to reveal a cheerless interior with crumbling floor and walls. The nearest dwelliag is a quarter of a mile (lisianr. i uac uie uuiiuiu? js uiu i scene of .spectra! gatherings everybody I in tho town is convinoed. About iwo weeks agi>, while Dr. Watson was driving pa*t at midnight, his horse suddenly stopped and then be^sm to back. Cr ancinj; toward the old house the doctor was li >rritii*d to observe the figure of a uian in the doorway dressed in black. His coat and vest were throv open revealing a white shirs. The figure swa\ ed backward and forward for several moments. The doctor sat dazed, and then recovering himself applied the whip to hi6 horse, which sprang forward. The apparition. * i>- ^1.1 i?eLK*r>uii orunii, cm uiu i.iuiiti, while returning home from a neighoors late in the night, s.iw a woman in the doorway ot' the same hou.se and heard groans. Tlie figure was clad in black and the oress was partly in front, exposing a white under garment. Slie appeared 10 be suspended in mid-air, with hands uplilted as though in supplication. The tignre of a boy was also observed on another occasion by Mr. Brown and two other fanners, who heard the rattling of 'he rotten floor. So frightened were they all that thev fU-d without investigating the matter, and there is no disposition aniony the villagers to keen vhril. It is proposed by a, party from Wabash 10 watch night after night, and solve the mystery it possible. THE CALHOUN 3IOXOIENT. The Bronzed Statue of the Great Statesman to Rest Upon Xative Granite. The Sunday JSreics mentions that ou Friday last i he contract for building the stoue work for the bronze statue of John (J. Calhoun was awarded to Mr. E. T. Viett,ot Charleston, for the sum of $13,000. The monument is to be erected on Marion Square, and the work will be pursued forward at oncc so that ii will be finished by the 1st of November next. The design for the monument was furnished by }Ir. A. E. Ilarnisch, of Koine, who has already completed the main statue and is now at work upon the ?inaller figures. When completed the monument will be one of the largest and handsomest works of the kind in the United States and will constitute a titling tribute to the memory of , the illustrious South C;i-~'.inian, whose magnificent statesmanship exeitea the wonder and admiration of the entire people and swayed the destinies of the whole nation. The stonework will be of hammered dressed irranre 36 feet square at the *111(1 !-i!i ti>0f l.iirh T in fiivt level* 4 v o AUV MWl 4".? Vl of stone will be 36 feet square, and on top of it wiil be placed seven successive layers gradually reducing the base to 30 feet square. Then will come four stone steps bringing the , whole up to a height of 15? tect. On , top of the steps will rest ibe first base , ot the die-block. It will be 12 feet ' square and will support the second base, which in turn willbesunnounted by the die-block or pedestal lor the j main figure. The die-biock will have ,. fuur s-iues, two of which will be square ; J and two circular in shape. The j , corners will be gracefully panelled", 11 and in these panels will stand four j b 'iize palmetto trees in high relief. |! Tne use-block will be finished oft on ^ top with a heavy moulded cap, which ( w ill bring the monument tip to a height ( of 33 teei. The only thing in the | nature of an inscription upon the inou- , ment will bi' ihe single word Calhoun, , carved ?n r;?i>ed eight-inch letters on a ( conspicuous portion of the granite j work. I On top of the die-block will rest the , colossal statue of Calhoun, 15 feet high , giving tiie whole structure a total ele j v:ilion of -18 Icpf. The main statue has been completed . and is now at Genoa, Italy, awaiting shipment as soon as the pedestal is ready for its reception. It is cast, in broze and represents Calhoun in the act ot rising from the Senatorial chair. , The model was nude by A. E. liar- j iii-cii, .sculpKv, at Runic, ami was c.ist . iu bronze at tin' touudry uf San ] 1 Mitchell, in the s-ame city. Tim four i alh-jr.-?rica! figures are now being made j' by Mr. Ilarniscli, ami will be placed at i ! symmetrical points on the stone steps j of the base.Mr. Victr, with his wonted energy, ] ha> a!ie.tity ordered ibe granite from | the quarries Messrs. Woodward, ' j Haskell & E on, at Winnsboro, and j ; expects to commence work as soon as ! it arrives. j j ?Tiie Hon. M. F. Clements, of the < Kentucky Legislature, has the eyes of i the D:i?e ball world upon him, and the eves sparkle wiih anything .bat ad-' miration and pleasure. Mr. < le:nents j i> one ut a committee on morals and ' religion and thinks that base ball , sanies should not only be prohibited \ on ^'iiiday, but on every day of the ] week. ' : A BATTLE WITH MEXICANS. L'flite;! States Soldiers Attacked by Grerts* : er?*-r?e?uiiK me A dispatch from Lieutenant Mans, | tinotigh General Crook, stales, that on i the 11th January the troops under! Captain Crawford surrounded an In-: dian camp fifty nile3 southeast ofj Nocori, Mexico. After a running fight | the Indians escapid, but sent word! that they wished to liold a conference, I and while the troops were awaiting1 the time for the conference, they were I attacked by one hundred and fifty-four j Mexican soldiers. Efforts were made | to let them know the troops were j Americans and friends, and Captain | . t 1- - I _ _ > T XI _ .. J ! l/ntwioru ami xjtcuitjuaiu jiaus ?u- i vauced to talk t > them when a volley ' was fired. Captain Crawford was shut j in the head, and Horn the interpreter was wounded. The Mexican fire was returned, and the firing lasted half { hour when Lieutenant Maus succeeded in having a talk with the officer in command of the Mexicans, tlu-ir captain having been killed. He was told that, the Americans were taken for hostiles owing to the darkness. Horn, the chief of scouts, and two Indians I were slightly wounded and another; was severely hurt. The Mexicans lost! four killed and five wounded. In the j telegram sent by Lieutenant Mans he j says he believes the Mexicans expect- j eu 10 anve me Aiucnraus uu wim their overwhelming force and secure the camp and effects ot the Americans. Captain Crawford died on the 18th during the march to Nocori, where he was buried. He was unconscious until his death. Lieutenant Mans then assumed command. While the troops were en route to Nocori two squaws entered the camp, through whom arrangements were made by Lieutenant Maus for a conference with two bucks of the hostile band. This ended by Chief Nana and one buck and his wife and a child each of Gerouimo and Natchez, the sister of Geronimo, one boy and a woman being given to Lieutenant Mans as hostages for the observance of peace until Geronimo shall have met General Crook, with whom he expressed a wish to have a talk. The meeting between General Crook and Geronimo will take place in about a mont:> and will undoubtedly end in the surrender of the Indians. The band consists of Chief* Geronimo, ^Natchez, Chihuahua and Niua. twenty bmks and some women and children. Lieutenant Mans is now heading for Lang's ranch. JAY GOULD AXD HIS DETECTIVE. A Fanny Story About the Millionaire and ! How He Travel*. (From the News and Courier.) It would appear that a fair proporiion of Jay Gould's hours of idleness is spent in the faccinating occupation of stock jobbing. In other words, he is alwavs himself. Jay Gould only spent a few hours in Charleston, but if the report be true, he was even than plotting to ''unload" to the advantage of himself and his prospective heirs. A correspondent of t he New York Time.% writing from Charleston, says: "Dispatcher were latelv sent from this city representing that he had changed his plans so far this winter us to decide to <rive up Lis yachting trip and go oji an inspection lour over the Southern Pacific lines. For the very reasons that have been indicated already this report was untrue. Me had no thought of making a Southern Pacific trip. The statement that he had was used only for a peg to hang a stockjobbing scheme upon/' The correspondent, however, does j not "itemize the bill" and leaves ihe ! public in the dark as to the details of the etock-jobbing scheme. The Times correspondent further states that Mr. Gould on his trip here "brought, be sides his family and his doctor, another guest, a man of retiring manner, who was never seen with the excursionists, but who was, for all that, in Mr. Guul-d's estimation, an important member of the traveling party. This man of the retiring manuer was a private detective, a doughty, middle-aged fellow of experience, who draws a yearly salary out of Jay Gould's till." This uman of retiring manner" was not on exhibition in Charleston, at least when the great multi-millionaire went abroad in the public places, wiihre, under ordinary circumstances, Mr. Gould might be exppcted to go in fear and trembling. The Tunes discredits the story of its correspondent, and ironically says: "As for Mr. Gould's carrying a private detective on his yacht, "that does not indicate that he goes in fear of his life. He is in no danger of attack at sea encept from pirates, and a private detective is a poor safeguard against a buccaneer of the Spanish Main. He may carry a private detective around as the ancient potentate was accustomed to set up a death's head at dinner to remind him what hi.sfate might have been but for the iucomoeteucv of detectives." CLEVELAND STANDS FIRM. The Attorney General to tell tlie Senate "Xo"?Mr. Garland's Firm but Polite Note. The Attorney General has sent a letter to the Senate in answer to the resolution calling for all the documents and papers in relation to the management and conduct of the office of District Attorney for the Southern District of Alabama, in which, after acknowledging the receipt o?the resolution in hfi fiavs; "In response to your resolution, the President of the United States direct* tne to say that the papers which were in this department relating to the tirness of J. D. Bennett, recently nominated to said office, having been already *ent to the Judiciary Committee of the Senate, and the papers and documents which are mentioned in said resolu tions, and those still remaining in the custody of this department with exclusive reference to the suspension b. the President of (ieorye M. Dnstin. the late incumbent of the office of District Attorney of the United States foi the Southern District of Alabama, it is not considered that tiie public inLerust will be promoted by compliance with -said resolution and the transmission of the papers and documents therein mentioned to the Senate in executive se**ion. Very respectfully, 'A. H, Garland, Attorney General." Atlanta Mouths Open. I Six months ago we had no demand for 8. B. B., but now our retail demand is such ;hat we arc forced to buy in gross lots. We itfcribute the rapid rmd'encrmous demand ;o the comparative sii.e and price of B. B. B. 'being large bottles for $1), and its posi;ive merit. It s-1 Is well and gives our eus:omers entire satisfaction. Our sales have ncreased 500 per cent, within a few months. Jacobs Piiaijmact, per Fred B. Palmer, M. I). Atlanta, Sune 12, ixs,r>. During the past few months I have given B. B. B._ severe tests in the cure of Bioud Diseases, and unhesitatingly pronounce ii i safe,' sure, harmless and speedy Blooci Purifier, fully meriting the confidence o: :V>o \fv nrf> with its effects, and the demand lias so wonderfully increased that 1 have been jompclled to buy by the gross, as it is the bkst selling blood remedy 1 handle. * W. A. Graham, Druggist. ADVICE TO MOTHEKS. >1.* tPrvjT o K/WTKTV/S cVir\n 1/i o1? iravs be ust-d for children teething. It soothes th? child, softens thfl gums, allays all pain. ;uits wind colic, and Is the b?>st remedy for UarrhCDa. Twenty-Are cents a bottle. Jolylittyi * Gl?>"?ItAL NEWS ITEMS. | Facts of Interest, Gathered ft'om Varions | Quarters. ?Turkey is nuking ready for ihc r fray. ?The health of tlie Pope has im-: urovi-d. . ?Eleven murders were committed in Paris la^t week. ?Seriou* floods arc reported in the South of France. ?A tiie in Opclika, Ala., last week destroyed several stores and offices. j ?T. L. Chambers, a merchant of Chester, died in Florida. ?Europe i* covered wiili snow from the Hebrides to the Arno. ?Titled foreigners are thick at New : ? VI IV ?Senator In^alls is said to bo nuts- ! ing a Presidential boom. ? P. Lnrillard, the great racing man, | has withdrawn tram tiie turf. ? The Tribunes of New York and! Chicago are calling cach other names. ?Ex-Congressman Rainey is running a coai yard in Washington. ?Morgan O'Donncll was drowned off Sullivan's Island beach on Sunday. : ?The United States Bagging Association in Charleston has been dissolved. ?This has been the hardost winter >si?At l*i ml Itoc c*\~ ftoi*i in f n*onf v years. ?Col. Ashbel Smith, a veteran of! the war for Texas independence, died j in Houston. ?The wea'her has been so -evere in Pickens that trees were split and opossums frozen. ?Eeighteen bodies so far have been brought out of the Orral mine at Newburg, \V. Va. ?Bhx'.ished is feared by sftme on account of the disagreement in the Ohio Senate. -An Indiana man's diseased liver was recently removed, and he is now doin^ well. ? Greece still refuses to disarm. The Briti>h Mediterranean fleet has been ordered to the port of Athens. ?Two murderers, a Mexican and an Indian, were lynched in Carsonville, Cal., on Thursday. -- The Mississippi Iiiver is blocked by a mass of ice for over sixty-five milos iihovp. mid below St. Louis. ?A child of Mr. John. Stockman, of Newberry, was bitten by a mad dog last week. -Each Congressman pets this year 6,500 packages of vegetable seeds, besides 500 packages of flower seeds. ? White & Mathews, fancy goods, and Trim & Spear, candy manufacturers, of Charleston have suspended. ?Last week Percy Sibley, a white boy, stabbed and killed his father, while in a fit of anger. - -The British Government is ready to push the fighting in the House ot Commons on the Irish Question. ?Calvin Simpson, the negro who murdered Mr*. Graves in Henderson, Ky., was taken from jail and lynched. ?Servia is disheartened uy the announcement that the great European powers have decided to coerce Greece. ?A small colorcd child was fatally burnt on the premises of F. M. Baile\ on Edisto Inland last week. ?A boy employed in a mill in Youngtown, Oiiio, dropped a lamp into an oil pan causing a $50,000 conflagraiion. ?The St. Cloud Hotel, Arch street, Philadelphia, and several adjacent stores were burnt Ias?t week; lo>s heavilw ?The County Poor House, at Jackson, Mich., was destroyed by fire last week, and a nunibar of tue a^ed inmates perished. ?Tiie latest sensation iu Chicago is the marriage of a son to the bride-expectant of his lather. The parties are very respectable. ?Dr. Sam. Price- and Wm. Powell quarreled over a medical bill in Walker county, Ga., fought and both were fatally wounded. ?It is claimed in Washington that leaders of both parties have arranged for the admission of three new States? j Washington, Dakota and Montana. ?George Daniel last week eloped from Griffin, Ga., with his sister-inlaw, and killed his wife who was in pursuit. ? A fire in Brownesville, Ala., last week destroyed six stores end four dwellings. Loss about $10,000; no insurance. ?Hon. David R. Atkinson, formerly a Senator from Missouri and leader of the pro-slavery party in Kansas, died on Wednesday. ?The two-story dwelling and store of Robert Ward, colored, of Greenville, was destroved bv fire; lo.-s $4,000. ?President Cleveland is reported to value "Auld Lang Syne" and Sep. winner s "MocKing uirci" auove ait other music. ?According to the Baltimore Manufacturers Record, the assessed value of property in the South has increased nearly $1,000,000,000 since 1879. ?A (ire burned throe building; corner of Orleans and Linden street*, Memphis, Tennessee, on Friday, and Fred. Schmidt, a German, was burnt to death. ?Charles Howard, a colored watchman in a railroad slu.p at Marietta, Ga., was murdered a lew nights ago and an attempt made to burn the body. Officers arc after the murderer. ^/vf 4Ka T?An/1 JL 1IC llCiglll UCpCUl HiC J.LI^IIUIW41VA and Danviile and Western North Carolina Railroads' and the woolen mills at Salisbury, N. C., were destroyed hy fire last week. ?Officers from Gainesville, Ga., in pursuit of Jackson, the fugitive, report one ot thrir dogs missing, and .hat anoie wa? found on a tree, signed by Jackson, which said that he had borrowed the dog to hunt with and would return him in the spring. ?J.ieut. Cordon, a cousin of the late King Alfonso, has been sentenced at Madrid to eight.years'confinement in a military prison for publicly villifv-' ing the Queen. ?Miss Berenice Morrison, of Chi cago, forty years old and worth $3,000.000. has married the son of her iiousekeeper, a voting man of twenty- [ one. Her friends are surprised. ?The municipal eletion in Chester iasi wetk resulted in the selection of J. L. Gh'Jiu fur Inrcndant; E. T. At- ! Vinson, Dr. G. D. White, S. M. Jones ! and G. B. Heath for Wardens. ?Mr. J. P. Meredith, well known | in railroad* circle* in South Carolina, j has been appointed Superintendent of ' the Memphis & Charleston Railroad | vice A. P. Donovant. resigned. ?The amendment to repeal the liini- j ration clause in the Arrears of Pen- I -ion* Act would, if passed, cost the ; Prmnri States treasnrv about $70,000,- i uoo. ?Orejron is pro lacing annnally j .bout S1,000,000 in gold, silver and ! copper, the greater portion of which j come* from the southern portion of i th-; State. ?An acrimonious drb.it e took place ! in the New York Senate chamber on i Wednesday between Democratic and i i iViiVV-fciW* Republican- m.inbers, dtit'ing which ; the lie was pa>.?ed. ? E J ward Guthrie, an elderly colored ni:m of unsound mind, county suiciik* in Ontiiriesvilie, York comity, last week by heating his ' cad with a ruck and cutting his throat with a knife. ?The son of one of the leading mer-. chuuf* in TCincrctmi (I):1S ;l mania, foi starting tires. ^Vithi:i tlie . past three months lie has caused the . destruction of $150,000 worth oT prop-: erty. ?Alexander of Russia answers Bismar4k'soi:der;driviiig out of Germany j all lius<ian Poles by isniiijr a uka*e orrteriuff out of Knssia all unnatural-1 ized Prussians. ?That is a terrible rumor which conies from the East that the Emperor nf I 'liiii!? trill tnl.-r> tin* Ciiivprmneiif into his own hand.*, as well as make a matrimonial alliance. ilis majesty : is fourteen years old. --The muddle in the Ohio Senate ; remains still unsettled. A committee of conference has had under consideration the differences between the contending factions, but have not yet effected any adjustment. ?The business failures occurring throughout the country last week, as reported to R. G. Dunn & Co., num-. ber for the United States *252, Canada, j 37; total, 289, against 329 the previous week and 332 the week previous. ? Mrs T.ne.v Carnfiiiter. a bride of two mouth.*, living near Winchester,! Va., blew down ilie chimney of a leer- j osenc lamp to extinguish it, when there i was an explosion and she was burnt to death. ? Gounod is writing his opera, Joan j of Arc, in front of the principal altar! of the Cathedral of Rheims, over the i very fL.g-s tones where Joan walked, j and images he is inspired by the stir- i foundings. ?It is said that Fithugh Lee is mak- j ing one of the be-t business Governors j Virginia ever had, and that whi.e lie! pays due attention to the claims of j "society," the humblest citizen of the j State can get access to him. ? In the Connecticut Senate Ia?t j week the rules wore suspended, and a | resolution was passed oallimr upon j ( 'rtTifri f>.c lf> tli(> rlllfV nil tobacco, so a* to protect this indu*tr\ | in Connecticut. ?Tlic Victoria Railway station at I Norwich, England, vvas partially de- j molished with dyinanite last week, no | lives lost. Some parties think that i <ras and not dynamite caused the ex-j plosion. ? An old gentleman named Moore in Canton, Gi., last week while feed ing his horse was knocked down by j the animal, which then bit Mr. Moore ; through the throat. At latest infor- j mation ill*. Moore was dying. ?Gainesville, Ga., ha? had another i fire, in which 'lie new Odd Fellows'j HmI! was cotismnnH. Tf was evidentlv i the work of an incendiary. The cui- j orcd Odd Fellows had a room in the i 6ame building; also the Knights of | Pythias. ?The English Cabinet has decided ; to resign. The defeat of the Government last week has left all political parties in the House of Commons in a state of chaos and mny result in a dis solution of Parliament and an appeal ; to the country. ?At Williams, Ariss >na Territory, | the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad is j having a*i arte.-hni well sunk. At a I depth of 130 feet an air chamber of un- j known size has been struck, from j which a steady breeze is blowing j through the pipe. ?A second suit has been entered in J the (.ic?>r?ria Courts against the South, Carolina Carolina Railway for damans by heirs of persons killed in Smith Carolina. The latent has been brought j in Atlanta for the killing of Engineer ! J. C. Huunicut at Iieeves'. ?The City Council of Charleston j unanimously adopted resolutions grant- j ing Mayor Courtenay such leave of i absence at; inav be necessary for the restoration of his health, and requesting him to withdraw his resignation. It is thought he will comply with the urgent request. ?The Opera House block at Franklin, Pa., was burned last week. Nothing was left but the outside walls. The loss is about $95,000. Insurance AHA Knoinocc ACfriKlich y\jyj\j ? Uivi til VUOItlVJO | ments, a magnificent lodge room and a | number of apartments occupied by families were burned out. ?Mr. Canda, whom President Cleveland has appointed Assistant Treasurer at New York, has been Treasurer of the National Democratic Committee since 1880. lie was born in Paris, but cam.? to this country when quite young; he has held positions of great trust, and is a close friend of Mr. Tilden. ?A negro lias been elected Mayor of La-Fa>ette, Walker comity, Georgia. This was done in a joking spirit bncause the charier of that town had been changed a?:iin?-t the protest of its citizens. We fear the joke has been carried too far and the people of LaFuyettc will realize it all too .-oon. ?During the past ihree month*, more industrial organizations have been incorporated than for ri.e preceding twelve months and if half the projected enterprises be carried out, labor will be in active demand, wages will advance, and the producing capacity of the country will be materially increased. i - * i ?An engagement occurred in me i mountains of tonora several weeks j ago between a party of Mexicans and i a detachment of Crook's cavalry, in which Captai'n Crawford and the Mexican Captain and four of his men were killed. Tlie Mexicans supposed the United States troops were renegade Apaches and fired on them, when the fire was returned. ?The knkhix, out West, arc being vindicated by the grand jury. A dispatch from Lakoma, Wyoming Territory, says that the jury in'he trial of fifteen prominent citizens and offi.-ials of Seatt le, indicted tinder the so-cailed kuklt'.x act, have rendered a verdict of not guilty. The town is wild with ex citement, and the feeling that the Chinese must go is now stronger than ever. ?The cotton mills of the South arr> crowded with orders; the machine shoj s of New England are better employed than for a year, and in some cases wages have been advanced, unsolicited. The boot and shoe factories arc running full time, and with fair prospects ahead. Dridgc builders arc in the market for large supplies of material. ? * ? ---? > t.?mn 1*1 am I liaiiroau oiuiult.s n.-ive uuugm tons of steel rails within the past 9') days, and in a few weeks fhe entire year's production of 1,WO,000 tons will b? sold. ?Results from Florida place lier loss ro>ultinir from the freeze, at. $2,000,000. The damage to orange ?rrovcs ami The fruit i* placed at $1,100,000, while the injury to pineapples and other tropical fruits swell the loss to $2,000,000. It is thought mat me j young" nursery trees in the upper part of the State are badly top killed, though by nu means a total loss; the bearing trees arc injured to the extent of losing the/ail crop of fruit, and a largely diminished yield for 1886 may be pected. Pineapples and other lender tropical growth have been killed to i he ground. mm i ii i Accused of Her Husband's Death. On December lo, Albert Hows j ard, a yoa!!?r ;i:h| iveai:hy farmer of; Peterl)<?ro, M .ilis.m rouriiy, X. Y., ilii il vcrv sti:lilcii!v. uiiik*r >u?ii eiuus ! circiiiii>i;i:tcf>. Alter the funeral tlie neighbors began to recall I he indi-s- ; erect conduct of Mrs. Howard and t!ie ; farm band, Henry Austin. The body j was exhumed, and in the stomach were t'miit unmistakable signs of arse- ! nic. An inquest was held and tiie ! arrest of Mrs. Howard and Austin j followed. She wa< indicted as tiie j principal in the murder ami the trial \va? tin at M;H*ri>vii!e last week. Mrs. Howard i-? haml-onie, twentv-live years o!d and appears in court elegantly dressed. 11?-i- li:tle boy, seven or eiirlit years old, wa- with her. Many prominent ladies were present. A Whole l% iiniiy JN>iso!iHl. The colored people of Ilaai; stead, Texas, have b-en ?:.rown into a >i.:te | of great. e\.cl!e.neut over a report which hns ju-i come in ?>f a uhole family of negroes being p<<i>oned at Howth station, < n iho 11. & T.C. Kailroad, distant about six miles north of j that place. The circumstances areas follows: A family of negroes, of whom Morris Johnson is the head, were | poisoned on Saturday before last by eating ?he flesh of a stolen hog which had been do-cd with strychnine. The hog's owner, to trap the thief, who was evidently appropriating his porkers. administered to some of the testaf a a use or poison, jiic nsuii uuuvi i mentioned ensued. liill Harris and j Henrv Clay, two guests ot Morris Johnson, and Johnson's step-daughter have died, and several of the family are j in a critical condition. Milton Wkstox, a Chicago millionaire, has been tried, convicted and sentenced to the Riverside penitentiary in Pennsylvania as accessory to a murder committed in that State some time a?jo, and entered upon his sente nce on - if ; 1 - - I. ~ Hie 'St ii) 111-r. lie is> uiTiunis ui<j ijjusi i remarkable criminal of the day?a man ! wonh over a mil lion dollars, a luxuri- ! ons home, and everything' to live for, j is made to change his station and pav the penalty of his crime in<t as other men do. Ir has been often said that money would acquit a man ot any crime, but it has not been done in tbi? instance. Ilis counsel hope to secure a pardon for him at an early day. TEXAN TALKTI The Success an Atlanta Article j I has Achieved in the Lone Mar State. ' We Live and Permit Others to Exist." Dexter, Texas, March 15, 1SS5 Blood Balm Co.; It is a great, pleasure j to us to state to you that your B. B. B, takes tlie lead of all blood purifiers in this i country, on account of the cures it has effected since we have handled it. We had ! a case of scrofula in our neighborhood, of i long standing, who had used all patent j medicines which were recommended to him; besides this, in- alsi nan several doctors JittendiiiLr him, but everything failed to ellect any good. Ilr sivw w? rse every day, and had not ieft his bed for the last six montlis. We Stnd seen him several times in our little town, though it has been more than lilteen monthssince we last saw him, and we suppose this was the last time lie was able to t-ome to town, as lie lives about ci^lit miles in the country. IIis name is Serveuka, and we got a neighbor of his to persuade him to try 11. li. 13 , and after using only one uo'iti-e he left his bed for tin: lir-t "time in six months. To the present time he has used less than tiuvc bottles, and lie is walking around visiting !:is friends in the neighborhood. lie has gained strength and llesh rapidly. All scroi'uious sores are healing J finely, and you never saw a happier man j than* he is* Nearly everybody for miles | around lias heard oi this wonderful cure, j ami mi wit.t n.'i'd :l li!(?(?d remedv call for I the B. B. IS. We had a case of nasal catarrh in our i own family (a little girl of four years okl), i who has been using B. B. B. foraboufc two weeks, and already seems to be about well. We 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 public, its action is more rapid than any blood remedy we ever handled. LIEDTKE BMO.S. TIJT^S HRi ft ml 53 PILLS 1 25 YEARS IU USE. Ih.o Greatest Hodlcal^Trhiagli of the Ag:! SYMPTOMS OF A TORP1? LIVER. Loss of appetite, Rovrels cost kve, Pain 5 a the head, with a dull sensation in the back pirr, Pain mider the shoulderblade3 Fullness after eating, with a.disinclination to exertion of body crmind, Irritabilityof temper, Low spirits, with afcclinsof having ncjlccted some duty, Weariness, Dizziness, Fluttering ar the iinnrt. n<,f? iicCflff! the eves. Headache orcr the right eye. Heedlessness, with Ctful dreams, Ilitrhly colored Urine, and COWSTSPA75G8. TjjtT'S PiitTiS are especially adapted to such cases, one dose effects such a change offeelhijr.-'s to n-<t"n is litliesiitTerr r. They Increase tha A i;pctitc,nnJ cause the body to Take ou FJcsli. tins tiie sy*tem is nourished,pr<l bytli rTonic Action on the l>if?est ive Orc:ms?Kes:wIar Stools are prod nor'1^ [i,i-li'p2.'k;. 4 ? JUari-ay St?.X.Y. TUTTS HAIR DYE. Grat Hair or Whiskers cbringed to a Glosst Black by a single application of this Dte. It imparts a natural color, acts instantaneously. Sold by Druggists, or sent bv express on receipt of SI. ^ffTco, 44 Murray St., Hew York NEW ADVEKTISE3IEXTS. LADIKS WAXTKI) to wrk for us at their own homes. ST to Sio prr week can be easily made?no eativ.isairu faseiuatinjr aiirts i-arly emnloymenr,. Particulars nnrt samnleof x "no v.mk sent for .stamp. AtiiiivrA HOME MT'N CO., P. O. Box loin. Boston. Mass. WK want SALESMKN* everywhere. I.hmi a:i>l trawliiu. t.i sell our ;;oods. w'll' pav vroofl salary anil expenses. 1 Write for terms.tt once, an-1 state sal.irv wnntrci. A idre.ss STAN 1)A 120 MLVKK WAItK COM A ANY. V.'a-hl j^tou Street. lJo>'u;n. Mass. CONSUMPTION, j ~??i*{vrtr^mAavf.?rthoAborodlsoa?o:by Its I , & uaivt* ?v ?j - - ? _ uso thousands of cases i?t tho worst kind and of lonj* j standing have been curod. Indeed. *ostrons:isiutfaith i In its eltJcucj". tliat I wl 1 $?iidTWO BOTTLKS 1*'KKB, ( tosctherwltna V.UXaBI.ETKK.ITISEoji thlsdiseaso to any suXfiTer. Giv??cxpro?8micl 1* ().;.<!dr ss. f DK. T. A. SLOCUM, Ul TcarlSU, New York. DKAFXI-'.SS ifm CAI SESand VVRK, by one who was deaf nwuty.i.'ijjiit yc-its. ! Treated by moss of noted sp?vla!i.-ts of Uiedayuith ?io lk*n?llr. Cured hJnixc'.f 1 In tlirre nmnihs. awl s-lnce tl!"n hundreds of i olli*rs by s.irni'pr >?vss. A plain, simple arid suwss iit ft .!;!( > Treatment. Address T S. | I'A'iK, l-.rf K i-t CCth St.. NVw Vorlc City. j j I CURE FITS!": t tfxv rnto T do not mean morely to stop them for a j time 01.d then bavc then; return n?..tn. I mean a m I cure. I have made the dtac-?e of FIT:-. EPILEPSY or KAl.Lr 1X9 SICKNESS a UW'loui: stud}. I warrant my remciv to | cure tiie worst eases. Bornusc c:!:era J.iive fa!i? I 1:0 reason for n t now receiving a cw?*. S*ii?l at oncefo: ,1 J treatise and a Tree Pottle of my JJifr.IIIMe romc-.y. fi.vs t } Exuv*a ?n?l iv*t UiU'e. It oftayou nothing i??rat-.! ? and 1 will cure jcu. Dit. 11. G. liUUT, lcS 1'earl St., X.V, t Fa ksr's Tonic j ! A Pure Family Medicine That Xev. r : intoxicates. ' . If \0u h::v? ])ysji.;i?.sl:i. Klieum.it-m. K! ?r I'rtDary cniripl il'ir.s. ur 1: you troubled i wiih any dtscrder Oi lin-luij'^s, s:o;mc-.J. bmv- ! K <>r norves you can be cured bv Parser's Tonic. " i ISiSCO.X & CO., *^*> tf-iBHoiii Vftrk. i ? Soi?l l>v all Drjjr,'I>;. 1 i lur.e o.itt: m o.ie j lXMIar. J.iniT-?w FOR COllCHS AND CROUP US* SATtsOH'S MULLEIN. The rirrct fcia. u ptherwJ from ?tree of the nae cist, graving ?lon* the (mall strtami lo the Southern StttM, - TwwT.tlww rn*#?nf*nt TtH&sinl# <Vlt Wnwit Hie phlego producing the early mornln&ooa;b, red nlmnlate? the child to throw off the fkl* irerabrxai lo erocp and wboopins-oourt. When combined w.th the healis* sjsdUirfaoni principle !a the raollcin plant r'tbe oM flelw, present* in Tatlox'i CiintOKn Eimidt or Swxrr Gc* ajo Mcu.n-1 the flneet known remedy for Coazht, Croap, TJThoopinK-CoB?h and Cooramption: and ? palatable, any child Is pleased to take it. Aii vorir drtiirrirt for it. Price, 86c. and SI. WALTER A. TAYXOR, Atlanta, Gt. Use DR. BIGGERS" Ht'^SLEBEERY CORDIAL fix WirrbT*. Dyaenteiy and Children TeetMcj. For tale by ^dru*?iat?. Did \ou Sup J M. pose Mustang Liniment only good for horses? It is for inflammation of all flesh, BRA DPI ELD'S An infallible specific for all the diseases peculiar to woman, suoli as pain ful or Suppressed Menstruation, Falling of the Womb, Leucorrhcea or Whites, ctc. F.. male CHANGE of LIFE. If taken (luring this critical period, great suffering and danger can be entirely avoided. ea* n i g regulator i Send for our book containing valuable information for women. It wiil be mailed free to applicants. Address Tiie Bradfield Regulator Co., Box 28, Atlanta, Ga. Sold by all druggists. Charlotte. Columbia & Au?rnsta R. U SCHEDULE IN EFFECT OCTOBER 4, O lsit'i,?Eastern .Standard Time. (MVC Vrtl'TlI NO. 5.;, MAIL AND EXl'UESfc. Leave Augusta 9.10 a. m. Leave )Y. C. &. A. Junction 1.12 p. ni. Arrive at Columbia 1.22 p. m. Leave Columbia 1.32 p. m. Leave Killian's 1.58 p. m. Leave Biythewood 2.13 p. m Leave Ridgeway 2.34 p. m. Leave Simpson's 2.47 p. m. Leave Wiunsboro 3.02 p. m. Leave White Oak 3.22 p. m. Leave Woodward's 3.4:5 p. m. Leave Blackstock 3.50 p. m. Leave Cornwall's 3.58 p. m. Leave Chester 4.15 p. m. Leave Lewis' 4.S2 p. m. Leave Smith's 4.40 p. m. Leave Rock Hill 4.56 p. m. i \r;n r? <>n r\ m uua? c i vi c ?u>u. Leave Pineville 5.40 p. m. Arrive at Charlotte G.00 p. m Arrive at Statesville i).35p. ra GOING SOUTH. N'O. 52, MAIL AND EXP1IESS. Leave StatesviMe 7.4o a. ra. Leave Charlotte I.im) p. ni Leave Pineville 1.-7 p. m Leave Fort Mill 1.44 p. ra. Leave Uock Hill 2.02 p. ra. Leave Smith's 2.22 p. i?i. Leave Lewis' 2.30 p ra. Leave Chester 2.44 p. ra. Leave Cornwall's 3.0:5 p. ra. Leave lilaekstoek 3.12 p. m. Leave Woodward's 3.18 p. ra. ' /\?i. 1 '?i n tii Leave ?) inn- r. m. Leave Winnshoro 3.48 p. m. Leave Simpson's 4.03 p. >u. Leave Kidjreway 4.1(5 p. m. Leave I5lytlie\vt>od 4.o'2 p. m. Leave Killian's 4.4ii p. m Arrive at Columbia 5.13 p. in. Leave Columbia 5.25 p. n?. Leave V?\ C. & A. Junction 5.57 p. m. Arrive at Augusta 9.38 p. m. Connection is now made at Chester (by trains 52 and 5:'.) for Lancaster and inter? f> f' t> I? am! tor Ul^llliilV [njiu\.z> VIli \^. w v. a*. % all points 011 C. & L. K. K. as far as Newton j N. G. 0. \V. CUEAKS, Acting G. P. A* G. II. TALG'OTT, Superintendent. I). OARDWELL. A. G. P. A. Ashley jSou The Soluble Guano is a'highly concentrat tirade Fertilizer for all crops. ASHLEY COTTON AND CORN COMI two crops and also largely used by the True ASHLEY ASII ELEMENT.?A very cln fiii-r..!- f,,r / (!nni anil Small Grain Gi Vines, etc. ASHLEY DISSOLVED BONE: ASHLi grades?for use alone and in Compost heaj For Terms, Directions, Testimonials, and publications of the Company, address THE ASHLEY PHOS1 Nov2oLly c^"CUTt?8?Diphtheria, Croup, Aathxna, SroaoMtfi Hoaraeness. Influrnaa, Hacking Cough. WhoopintCi Diarrhooa. Klcr.oyTrpubio?.oc?iSplnaiZHneasca. Pa oAicnytT! rMitouiiw These pills -crcre a irondsrful dieeovery. No othc relieve all manner of dlseeee. The information arcv pills. Find out about then: and you will alwas^b free. Sold everywhere. or eent by mail for 3Sc. in stai 3hendar.'a Con-iit-.ann? g ? ? g KB Powder is absolute'-yEU SjJ rat Q KB gj?5 R|| pure and hichly coh-Sm S| Sg S ?3| octitrated. One ouncekS?B B9 Sgf Ka M I Is worth a poundofE25g SSj gat g Bffl I any other kind. It isEjSfg H . DIB strictly a medicine to K 55 9 Fa B K? \ bo riven with food. B ? B , , ? . Bold evorywhare. or sent by mail for 25 cea s in staa Sis csu by exprets, propaad, for S3.0C* I } / ? j A Clear Skin ie /-inlir n Tiorf nf T^^anfV* i but it is a part. Every lady i may have it; at least, what looks like it. Magnolia Balm both freshens and beautifies, PisnfiQ and Annuls jllUiiUU IU1U. Ui&t'HU j FROM THE [WORLD'S BEST MAKERS, AT FACTORY PRICES OX THE EASIEST TERMS OF PAYMENT. * 1 EIGHT GRAND MAKERS AND OYER ' * THREE HUNDRED STYLES TO SELECT irKUJl. PIANOS: CHICKERING. MASON & IIAMLIN, MATUUMIEK, BENT & ARION. ORGANS: MASON & HAMLET, PACKARD, ORCHESTRAL, and BAY .STATE. Pianos and Organs delivered, freight paid, to all railroad points South. Fifteen days' trial and freight both ways if not satisfactory. *27"Order'and test in your own Monies. COLUMBIA MUSIC HOUSE, Branch of LUDDEN & BATES' S. M. H. N. W. TRUMP, Manager, COLUMBIA, S. C. I J I Trade Mark. | 3 /?*> z iafhfiTVine ?rown|Counb-ies of Europe, i thense ofthisMedicatfidWiTieis universal. > Itis composedof themostapproved i VEGETABLE TONICS, || tArhiph j?roirihpn^ii/?pd into annre generous Wine. The very finest' ! l SA IXEH?t4BA2S, i "being its medicalbasis,itis confidently; j | recommendcdas a cure amlprcvenlrve of j ^ FEVER anq AGUE, j andali other diseases criminating from i malarious causes For purifying the SLOOB - j andinproving the Secretions.Cfironsc. ' RhBumatism,B!oodpoisor.infi.acertain I cureforDyspepsia,l>2!fip inthe stomach, j I animinedkte relief For Dysentry, Colic, f Cholera-morhus and kindred diseases, GeneralWeakness,Nervous and Mental i D0 bility, a souvercignreraedyfor Liver j Comp!ain?.anddiseasescfiheKidnies,an j exc ellent app etize r} and a t n fv i r without a rivah? in shorter invigorating all the functions ofthe system, it is unequalled. ?3D O S E ? Asmall Wine-glassfull.threetimes a day. <? Sold by all Druggists and dealers generally; ITOPAZ CINCHONA CORDIAL CO.,! Sole TroprictoijdLAfanxfacturcrs. A ^<f Treas^ j *' SPAR TATS'BUP. G. S.C. I r> * o.u.1. 6 t I : || rrice per dqui^ j E*ey loose A certain cere. Not <i5p<>a?!ve. Thre? 1 months' creatmect la cat- :i?-. Oy .-O for Cold to tbe Head, Hradache, Hay I"?wr. <tc. Fifty centt. By all Dru?si.-:% or by as:-.:!. E. T. HAZ?LT.IKE. Waxrea, ftk ltble Guano. J ;ed Amnioniated Guano, a complete High 'OTND ?A comnlet-e Fertilizer for th??sp. kers near Charleston for vegetables, etc.. ap and excellent Non-Amtnoniaied Ferrops, and also for Fruit Trees, Grape:Y ACID PHOSPHATE, of very Hig)'? for the various attractive and instructive PHATE CO., Charleston, S. C. _ ^ !nunii?iir a I, Neuralgia, Bheumitimn, Blccdir.c at the sujrh. Catarrh, Chclern Morbus, Dysentery. ChrouSHfi mphlet free. Dr. L S. Johaaoa & Co.. Boatoa, ^ NEW, SICE K ^ S BLOOD. 1 | Iza iss l| r? like them in the world. Will poaltlvo:v euijH md each box la worth ten times the con: or a I cQ| e thankful. One pill n dose. l:lu?ti-*!o<t p?uti^H nns. Dr. I. S. JOHNSON' & CO.. 22 C.U St.. UoHMB IP* ? lux:'. OiU i- d. JOliaa^i* & va).. B<m\HE