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w POLIIICS AND POLICIES. A TALK tVITH COL. A. K. McCLCRE ' OX IMPORTANT TOPICS. The Editor of the Philadelphia "Times" * Submits to an Interview aml":I>lscus8es Some of the Live Issues of the l3ay. Col. A. K. McClure, the distinguishU editor of the Philadelphia Times, fpcently passed through Charleston, and was interviewed by a reporter of {he 2fews and Courier. Jn reply to requests for an expression of his views ppon different matters now greatly mgaging the public attention, Col. jloCluie said: CIVIL SERVICE REFORM. "In the first place, we have more professional politicians in the North than you have here. We have a great deal of dissatisfaction as to the civil service reform policy of the President bat it is among the politicians who are so by trade and who expect Mr. Cleveland to do jnst what he h&s promised not to do. But there is no doubt that the overwhelming sentiment of the Democrats of the North is in favor of Mr. Cleveland's policy; and mac sentiment is giuwiug miuusci day l>y day for two reasons: First, he is doing more and more to saii>iy the reasonable wishes of the Democrats in tilling offices; and second, they are getting to understand better and better bow wise that policy is. If the Democratic party do not sustain Mr. Cleveland in his present policy they will utterly destroy the party; it will go to pieces and be broken up?disintegrated." "There is another thing," continued Col- McClnre, "that is steadily streng tbening Cleveland at. the North, aifd tl at is the growing confidencc in him of business circles, which, you know, are very largely Republican in the "XTl? TT? i U ft AltAA rtf 1 ^XVi'lU.. 11US IUC UVtJUUCIIUO Jlldnstrial, commercial and financial men, and those who regard business as of more importance than politic*. As to the dissatisfaction existing, there is not one-quarter as much with Mr. Cleveland in the Democratic party as there was with Mr. Lincoln in the Republican party during his term of office. I have no doubt whatever that before Mr. ('leveland has fille'' one half of bis term of office, unless something entirely unexpected and not of his own creation should happen, he will be the strongest President this country has had siLce the war." "Are the mass of Independent Republicans satisfied with the Administration of Cleveland?" asked the Reporter. THE INDEPENDENT KEl'L'lU.ICAXS. "The great mas3 of the Independent Republicans that supported Mr. Cleveland, have entire confidence in him and heartily sustain him. They are very independent, of course, ami do not sustain any person blindly. Tiiey do not approve of everything he has done, bat they have an abiding faith in his inherent integrity of purpose and in his ability, with all his embarrassments, to work out his policy and to make it a success-. They are entirely satisfied with him as President and with his general policy. As I have said before, there are a great many Redublicans in commercial and finanmnl MwIps tphn vnfpd flaailiit him, who now have a great deal more faith in*him than they ever had in a Democratic President; and whilst he has lost the faith of a very few of the Independents, if any, he ha* trained the faith of a very large proportion of the most intelligent business Republicans of the country. HOW THE PARTIES ARE AFFKCTED. As to the effect of Mr. Cleveland's Administration upon the organization of politics Col- McClure said: course haSifcestf^cf visibly weaken the organization .of both parties in the North." - ^_ THE PRESIDENT AND THE "SRNATE. "How is the President's course in the contest with the Senate on questions of removals regarded in the North?" he was asked. Co!. McCInre said: "He is very earnestly and cordially sustained by the entire Democratic party, and by a very large proportion of the Republicans in his contest witli the Senate. He will undoubtedly bt __ sustained by the Republican Senate.'3 THE GARLAND MATTE It. In regard to the general opinion of Attorney General Garland's relations to tbe Oroverninent uoi. iMcuiure saia: "All parties have absolute faith in the personal integrity ami confidence in the ability of Attorney General Garland. Yet it must be conceded that his connection with the Pan-Electric affair is a misfortune to himself and a misfortune to the Admistration, because it puts the Administration upon the defensive, and that is always for it au unfortunate position. The chief misfortune of it is that it is visible to the public that, in an important les?al controversy which the Government has assumed, it 4 chief law nffiopr. and confessedly its ablest, is , not in position to represent the Government by reason of a very innocent connection which he formed three years ago in the organization of the Pan-Electric Company. He can in no way benefit his own company or his own stock by any legal proceedings, lor if he were to set aside the Bell patent he wotdd either irive the patent to Grey or decide that the whole thing was unpatentable, and therefore it _ conld not in any way benefit the PanElectric Companv. But at the same time it is a good sign to see public opiuiou sensstive on the subject." TARIFF REVISION". ?v After a very carpful inquiry on the subject for two davs In Washington, ? Col. -McClure states his belief that there will "be no revision of the tarifl at this session of Congress. The Repabiioans unfortunately have consolidated against a revision as a^atter of party policy, and Morrison wiiLjiot present a bill to Congress that fee Democrats would pass. Besides, if it were passed by the House, it would not pass the Senate. SILVER COINAGE. In regard to the outlook as to the suspension of silver coinage Col. McClure said: "There will be no suspension of silver coinage. The silver craze is the outgrowth of the greenback craze with increased proportions, and with a rrrtA/? lr\r> Af virrhf TIIA ^VvU J UUUVWt.V i.M VI 1 iWl XI* & U V only diffcultv is that they do not make a dollar a dollar. They might just as well make a 25-cent dollar us an 80-ceni dollar. But I believe that there will be legislation upon the subject, without limiting silver coinage, that will either make the silver dollar worthy of the nation or will hinder it from making any disturbance in the financial affairs of this country. I do not look at all for a suspension of the coinage, There is no need to do it. The country can stand all the silver that can be coined fKav rri! 1 n>r\\n on rl/il!ov* Xk ttlVal IliU vvtu H*l* WViIV?-l THE NEW SOUTH. Concerning the people of the South, Col. McClure said that "this section is now lor the first time in a position to l>esrin a rapid growth. Never before has she been in such good position to command the entire confidence of capital at the North. While there has been am?in '*"t T-. ^ ,j, : geisii'ally ;i tviiliiTcSi'.X' ii: i!it" traiKjiiiiitv ot* the Sontlij even bet'ore ttie election of -Cleveland, s-til! it was always I said: 4Wait until tlicso people get , into nower. then there will be a dis I turbance, a disposition to :ever.-e the [judgment of the war, to make prop| erty unsafe and society turbulent." j Now it is seen that the South, instead | of undertaking to di-turl? poliiies, has gone (< work to command the confi: dence of capita! in every part ot' the ! word, to invite immigration, and now | for tlie first time monev, which is very | sensittve, is free troin ail doubt as to j its saiety m every pari <<i inc soutu. i Our lar^je surplus of money ami skilled I labor must very soon turn Snilli, ; where it can be very much better re' warded than in the .North. They will ! go to the manufacturing of iron and i the development of coal, and the sph;| niug ami weaving of cotton and all : the various and diversified industries which those things carry ?vith slicm. | As a consequence the 'ideof Noiihern ' And forei?/n imnii?ra:ion will tui 11 j southward instead of westward, be| cause the West is every year becoming j less and lc?s inviting to foreign eini: gration. i "I regard the prospects of the South I as even much better than the Southern j people themselves regard them. There j is nothing in the history of the world j that can be compared with the cllbris j of the Southern people to lehabilitnte ! themselves, Considering the i tions under which they grew up, their j system ol' 1 lor which has been so vio! lently revolutionized, and the ntc^ssity j for diversifying their industries, of j which they knew little or nothing, it j is marvellous how they have adapted I themselves to the new order of things j and to what a stage of advancement they have arrived in a few years. I Pennsylvania has much more reason J to fear the South in the manufacture i of iron and in the competition than j any foreign country. You will draw j a large portion of our industry to your I section, and we, as we have always i done, will learn so nething new and go ; at it. There cannot be anything more I insane than the raising of col:en here in the South, where you have the benefit of a splendid water power that never freezes, and where everything cheapens production, and then to ship that cotton away to bleak New England. and there to have it snun and j woven. That system cannot la.?t in S the New South. Whenever capital comes South, where it is bound to come, there will be a revolution: ami it cannot be far distant." FARMERS TO THE FRONT. Call for an Agricultural Convention at Columbia?An Address Setting Forth the Grievances of the Tillers of the Soil. To the Fro mers of South Carolina ; Seventy-six per cent, of our Stain's population are activelv engaged in <l?l itiu tui ill |Mii ?iu -v; n.n.-i w.iv,half of the remainder an: directly dependent upon the fanners lbr the means of a livelihood. We may justly claim, then, that we cun>tiiu:e the State, yet we do not govern it, nor are the laws administered in our interests, and few are passed for our benefir. We pay taxes and vote ami there is no further use for us. These taxes do not grow any less, while our ability to pay them grows smaller year by year, and nothing worth naming has been done to foster and encourage thai interest which feeds and sustains all others. The negroes used 10 be the "mudsills" of our economic fabric: I hnf thousands of white men?land owning farmers?find themselves slowly but surely sinking beneath the waves to be added to the 1'otindation upon which a few men and corporations are erecting their fortunes. Impending bankruptcy stares thousands in the face, while oilier thousands are overseeing their own plitnfaTtriis f&t their victuals ami cioih^sjwa?g? =^3W^fi'Tt"i>a;ie ?fSeStOSarg?dy ' prevails and our lands are growing [ poorer year by year. Large, areas of ' South Carolina are being made a desert to feed negroes, while the landowners, giving no thought to the lulu re of themselves and children, stand idly by, or assist and direct this | j skimming of a Stale, which, by reason ' I of soil, climate and geographical posi; I tion. miy'nt be made a veritable Gar den <>!' Eden. The negroes *,viJ1 "go West.*' wont the bones are p:ek'd. : What will v.e do? We are "fanning ; towards despair''* in thus continuing to | impoverish our lands l-y ignorant cul; ture, but nothing is dune by our Legislature, or its creatures, to stop it, or I to try to teach the people a better and . wiser system. Forty thousand dollar.are spent annually in the Stale, thrce; fourths of it spent by fanners, to educate men for other professions and pursuits; the farmers get nothing, and are left to grope their way (awards the grave in ignorance and its consequent povertv. Even the pittance donated . to educate farmers by the United States Government is taken from us and appropriated to sustain the institution at which onr future masters are being trained. How thankful we should be to the good Lord for such generosity and wisdom among our statesmen, tocalled I Again, wc- pay $25,000 annually by specific tax, which comes out of the farmer alone, to sustain a department of agriculture. A good slice of this is spent to collect the phosphate royalty, which goes to support ;he State Government,' and the rest is frittered and wasted, so far as we can see, the only benefit received by the farmer* being a partial protection against fraudulent fertilizers. A majoiity of the board of agricultnrr> 'irp jmt. riKriitrpf] in t'nrmim' Who v ~ ~ w - o " wonders, then, that so little has been done by it to benefit onr larming interests? Four bad crops out of five and the consequent poverty of our farmers cryaloud for economy and reduction of taxes. But this cry, which came from every county, was ignored by the lust Legislature, which also persistently refused to obey a plain mandate of the Constitution to provide for a reappor-J tioiiincnt of representatives by holding a census. It is small wonder, then, that nothing was done to protect the farmers against robbery by dishonest , fertilizer manufacturers. Legislature which recently adi Ion rnedrttiovglm^ 'cO.'r^h-fe^jjccn | very negligent of the public welfare, i The thoughtful and intelligent farmers A f ( l>A Cfrt fft O f/1 t A oi%_ \jL i*veinnyji. anvi vx IU vivui. UJI* otljor such body of law-makers and Constitution breakers. Xor can they aSbrd to allow the agricultural interests of the Stale to be subordinated to everything else, and no effort made to foster and protect them. Other States with less expenditure than we are making, arc doing ten times as much to encourage and assist those engaged in fanning. But the money spent is not entrusted to politicians or to t i;? ?.-c elected by politicians. The farmers I manage and control it them-clvcs. r> .1. iiJvivivi v_^ nidi uiu j demands prompt and united action on ! tlie pare cf tl.e true and loyai farmers ef tiie State, and that a convention of ; such can only redound to the bcnelil : of agriculture and consequently of ' every other interest and calling, we call such a convention to meet in the | city of Columbia, Thursday, the 29th ; of next April, to take into considcra' tion the question touched upon in this t trtrrftl \r ntKr.i* ixof ait in vccj lyjjv i i?v. i ciiv.ii uiuu i iitib" ; ters as they may deem of importance I to the political, social, educational or industrial interests of the farmers and J of the State. Each county agricultural society is reu nested u> .send live tit-legate?. Jvicii local or township agricultural club i- request to send one delegate. The farmer?; of Midi conntv are re quested ;?> >cn<! five delegates over and above those from organized societies, ami to effect ; 1?:< it is .-uj^e-ted that those in sympathy with the movement call a mass meeting or count y convention of farmers in their respective counties to appoint -aid delegates. If the wise.-t and best of our farmers thus assemble we l'eel and believe there is em.ngh of both patriotism and statesmanship among us to 11ml retne| dies for those evils; ami, without trenching upon the rights of others, manhood enough t;> demand and obtain ;i proper i ce-giiition of our rights : and need-. ; While this is essentially a farmers' movement we invite the sympathy ami moral support ut good men of every calling. Agriculture is the basis of our economic structure and supports j the rtM. 1 e nsnot rise without carry; ii:g with it Ii:e superstructure. There is among the politicians in South Carolina an up-country and low . 1. it ..v ! ' couuciy. mere I- iiu suua niiu 01 division among the fanners. Ourinj teres is arc one. Let us come together | from llie mountains to the sea, and, I exercising the God-given right that the : majority should govern, organize as | farmers and obliterate this line forever, j J. T. llanna, i>. S. Newell, J. Jameson, It. R. Beaty, J. M. Elgin, B. F. | Duncan, J. A. Gray, Win. Wilkins, ! A. E. Fant, J. L. Walker, R. P. Clinkscale?, X. L. Ervin, D. N. Johnson, II. I'. Dttvall, B. II. MontI gomcrv, T. B. Martin, J. B. O. Landrum, C. G. Tutt, ii. R. Thomas, T. L. Ilouces, R. B. Lyons, H. II. Gooch, J. II. David, j. H. Lane, M. 1)., J. T. Covington, J. R. Morrison, J. O. Jones, J. G. Williams, J. II. Bowen, M. L. Donaldson, i O. P. Hawthorne, T. C. Willoughby, Sam. J. Iluison, llarrv Hammond, t ii \\r t t> 'p ! o a. oiiuiuiu, tr ? u uuimiug) it* x. Mockbee, M. F. Barnett, Wm. Long, I II. W. Anderson, John It. Harrison, Alex. J. Norton, \V. 5?. Ollen, S. B. Mays, M. A. Murkest, W. L. Durst, J. L. Bryan, J. A. McAllister, G. M. McDavid, M. B. Williams, I). F. Saddler, J. T Cook, J. Watkins, ! J. L. AVollord, Win. Jeflcries, J. A. i Major, Wm. Cooper, J. G. McCutchen, Ben. S. Williams, C. A. Berry, E. C. Smith, Albert Harris, j E. S. Allen, A. 1' West, B. Cause, If. d. Belsill, J II. Mopsev, Sr., j W. 1). Evans W. !* Drake, R. M. Pegues, Chas. Cropland, Jas. BlaI lock, J. C. Davis, M. S. Striblinir, J. W. Sheler, H. B. Buist, S. P. Burbagc, J. L. Hunter, J. E. Tindal, | I? T T> T MnTonnn It* U . J ittlllwXI~Ull} I/. AJ. IMj I Wm. Stokes, Benj. Mock, J. II. Whorton, Thomas W. Goldsmith, J. M. Whitmire, W. A. McElvev, Kobr. S. Beckham, W. II. Tim-merman, II. B. Gallman, O. F. Cheatham, I). IJ. Tillman. A IILOODV DEED AND A TUAGID END. Almost Successful Attempt to Drain a Lady While Asleep?The Arrest and Confession of her Assailant?The Terrible Sequel. (From the Hampton Guardian, March 12.) Friday night last Mr. Gideon Sauls Iffl his home, situated between Gillisoiivillc and Hcnuis's Cross Roads, for the purpose of attending to some business at Coosawhatchie, and was detained all night, 'i he only parties left on his place were his wife and a colored boy a?red about seventeen years. Tx .1 W ....... 1 ...1 * t l/uring uic nigm, una wiuie us'.eep, Mrs. Sauls was awakened bv^-^nsc^ blow on t he head. Asj*iff?arose she was struck Lwos-uccajgsive blows in llie face with an axe^<vliicli knocked her senseless, and in /pat siatc she remained until next, nuking. She was there o'clock the next day, bovenmo upon tiie place, sect for Mr. Meeker, ii neighbor. Shortly after this her lnis. bund arrived, awl the news spread through the neighborhood. Mrs. Sauls intoruied her husband that she had ' been assuulied bv Charlie Mills, alias , Charlie Brunson. Search was made for the boy, and he was captured about ; 3 o'clock Saturday near KiJgeland by Mr. Alfred Sauls. Ho was carried , back to Mr. Gideon Sauls's and turned over to Mr 15. S. Ileapc. lie was , taken before Mrs. Sauls and identified bv her, and acknowledged his guilt. ' He staled that lie was persuaded by Iiezekiali Primus, Sr., colored, to kill Mrs. Sauls during the absence of her husband, and to secure what money there was in the house and divide with Primus, and he (Mills) was to run away. When lie struck the blow Primus, who was outside, didn't corne in, and he became frightened and left. Alter making his statement he was I taken before Trial Justice Ileid and a commitment prepared. Mills was then turned over to Constables 13. S. 11 cape and \V. D. Freeman. They left Ilennis's at J o'clock Monday nisrht to briiur Mills to the jail at this ..llT..,! uriw.;.' :i^ | l/JtUAT. >? UUU auuill UHLt 11UJU3 UUlii Hennis's they were met by loO men, white and colored, who forcibly pushed the constables aside and took Mills away. Later in the nighr the dead body of Charles was found swinging from the beam over the gate opening into the yard in front of the residence of Mr. \V\ II. Ellis, who lives three miles from Ilennis's cross roads. While under arrest the boy told the constables that he had killed a white boy with a brick in Savannah abouf. a year ago. Hjs story corresponds with ti e killing about that time of a white boy named Joseph Masters, whose father still lives in Savannah. Mrs.?Saulsis still in a precarious PMiulitmn mwl hoi* ovf* /-*??-? r* 1 tr uujiuiuvuj ttttvi iiVxl IVWVVIJ CALl^UJUJV doubtful. Primus was arrested, but denied having anything to do with the attempt to murder and rob Mrs. Sauls. lie was released. Was it Cancer? I liave been taking B. B. B. fop-six or seven weeks for something like cancer on my neck, r.nd I would not takrOXE raou^saxddollaks for the benefi-l received. v I had previously tried various so-called ! blood remedies, but B. 13. B. is the best, rlie quickest and the cheapest blood purifier i ever used. I refer to any merchant of Griffin, Ga. J. II. BARNES, . ' G'iffin, Ga, Were we so disposed, we conld make a case of cancer cure of the abova, but as we do not think that genuine cancers aie ever cured, we do not propose to I iiuii!uu? me jniuuu. xuu uuuve is yemups only a case of scrofulous ulcer, which B. "B. B. cures more speedily than any i remedy. It will cure any so-called cancers I in one half the time and one third the I money required by anv boasted remedv. BLOOD BALM CO.," I * Atlanta, Ga I ?Stewart Pringle, a noted Confed- j | era'ejiegrro, died in Morclmse, Parish, j I La., ia-t week. lie went through ihe j j Mexicon war with Col. Butler, of; j South Carolina, and was in the Con-j ' federate army with (Japt. If. D. Brig- j j ham. lie was Southern to the core. ; He would never admit that fhe South | was whipped, but would always say ! that ti*'* Confederates were overpowerj ed. After the war he was a staunch ; Democrat, i'e loved to talk of Lee j and Jackson, but Stonewall was his ; favorite. lie had a. canteen from which Jackson drank, and no monev I i con 1:1 have induced him to part with li( ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Mrs. Window's sootmixo Stkcp should al! ways be use<1 for children teeth in?, it soothes : the child, softens the gums, allays all pain. ! cures wind colic, and Is the best remedy f. r ! aiurrhcea. Twenty-live cents a bottle. ; Juli'l4Ltyl ir&T irw IiTnUTiPi'iTiin in ijnjjyfTT-TT-iTiF'FtliT Iii'inm GJSS^KAITNETrS ITE3IS. " Facts of Interest, Gathered from Various Quartern. ?Si'iiator John F. Miller, of Cali-I forma, is dead. ?Mr. Gladstone is confined to his j bed from a cold. ?Church troubles have bceome epi-J dcmic all over the country. . j ?County Treasurer Jloliingsworth, j of Viucenuo, Intl., is short $78,279. ?The railroad strike in the West seems to be losing strength. ?Mrs. Marv B., widow of ex-Gov- \ . i'>r. x" i_ .1 i ci nor oe\ mour, 01 jsew x oi k, i* ueau. | ?Pm-iiinonia and other diseases are now attributed 10 the use of natural j gas. ?Ex-Senator Jerome B. Chaffee, of j Xevv York, and the wife of ex-Attorney t General Brewster died last week. ?W. Johns and his son Frank, are i on trial in A.sheviile, N. C.? tor the j murder of the Joyce family. ?Mrs. Langtrv is said to have lost the little prestige she originally had in London society. - Wiggins predicts that a terrible stonn will rage on the Atlantic some j time this month. ?The Prohibitionists of Atlanta have ' won their case before the Supreme Court of Georgia. ?The Chicago Tribune savs that to analyze Mary Anderson's acting is "like carving the breast of a cold turkey." ?Five thousand new physicians will be graduated from the 101 incorporated j medical colleges in the United States this year. .. * - The Emperor Dom Pedro, of Bra- j zil, is planning the erection of an acad-1 emy of arts, which will be first ot its j knicl in south America. ?Tlic Virginia Legislature has voted down a proposition making the giving ; of railroad passes to members of the i State Government a misdemeanor. ?The tug John Martel was blown! up by an unexplaiened explosion near j Boston and her crew of five men were i drowned. ?The notorious'Archers, who have | been confined in jail in Shoals, Ind., J charged with murder, have been lynch-, ed. ?A fire in a drying house in Oels, Prussian Silesia, caused the death of ! several women and the J-crious injury \ of many others. ?Three thousand and five hundred ! accessions were reported to the M. E.; Church at the Baltimore conference , last Thursday. rIM%/* n A^iif fr? TT/incft f~\ f* 1 ? A uu lua^auuuvviio nuuow kji uvir j resentativos lias defeated by a large majority the prohibitory amendment, to the Constitution. ?J. \V. Sells, his wife, son and ; daughter were found murdered in' Osage City, Ivans-a?, last week. A young son is suspected. ?Senator Vest, of Missouri, who is j seriously ill with neuralgia at the base ; of the brain, will go to Georgia and Florida for rest and treatment. ?Capt. J. E. Brow and M. A. Grace had a shooting match in the New Orleans custom, when the latter was killed and the former badly wounded. ?Major General John Pope of the' k i r. 4.? L>DiLCU oiaies^iruiy reuieu lrom acu>u ; service on Tuesday, March 9th. He ! will hereafter reside at Cincinati. j ?The Supreme Court of Georgia has affirmed the sentence of George F. | Jackson, of Augusta, convicted of >T*each of trust, and he goes to the penftyjtiary for six years. ?The^obraska City saloon keepers^ have all sigffttf. Tit not to sell any liquor *to any man who is known to have signed the temperance pledge. ?The Philadelphia city courts rececentlv granted 24 divorces in one day. There is one branch of trade that enjoys all the exhilarating vivacity of a constant ?The latest news from the circle of the "grand old party," is that John A. Logan, resolved to divide literary honors with James G. Blaine, has taken to poetry. ?Meningitis has broken out among the prisoners in the Atlanta jail, and several have died. The others have bcrn moved to the jails of Cobb, Bartow and DeKalb counties. ?The friends of Dr. Armstrong in Atlanta will perhaps build for him an independent church. One of the curators ' of St. Luke's Church, Bishop Beekwith's Cathedral, has tendered his resignation. ?Two railroad trains collided trains collided between Monte Carlo and Mcnrtona in Spain last week and more than twenty passengers lost their lives. Msny carriages were smashed and fell: in rhfi spa. i ?A railroad shed, a train of cars loaded with milk and a quantity of freight at the pier of the Monarch .Steamship Company in Jersey City, were destroyed by fire last week; loss over ?300,000. ?It is not often that a beggar is encountered in mid-ocean. Yet a steamer just arrived reports that it was approached by a destitute schooner ; that asked for food, and being supplied went 011 its way rejoicing. ?Fire Chief Mahedy, of New York, was killed on Friday afternoon while returning from a fire. An engine ran into his buggy, throwing him under the wheels of "the engine and crushing his shoulders so that he died in a short time. ?There are now 10,000 employes on ir ^c ~ ij SbtlKU cUUlly UJU J1UB Ul. U1U VjrUUIU. roads, and the movement is still spreading. Business on the Missouri Pacific is at a standstill, but the roads showno disposition to yield. - ?A lady named Bankston, traveling with her family from Coweta county, Ga., to Mississippi, fell from the train Saturday near Chattanooga and was fatally injured. She had gouc out on the platform for fresh air. ; ?Humphries, the murderer of the two young ladies near Milledgevllle, has been placed in the Macon jail for safe keeping. He says if he did the murder it was while he was intoxicated and didn't know he was doing. ?A Russian convict is said to have survived a punishment of 2,000 lashes. As high a number as 4,000 lashes is said to have been imposed in some u.,*. cases, uui nu wuviwcvci sui vivcu iue infliction of the punishment. ?There are indications that the Eastern tide of Chinese from the Pacific Coast will torn partially to the South. The eolored laundry women will doubtless soon raise their battlingsticks and cry: "The Chinese must ?0." ?The boiler of the tug Rifleman exploded i:i Cardifi harbor last week. The vessel and and crew, consisting of six persons, were blown to atoms. The cylinder of the engine struck a passing Italian ship, a quarter of a mile distant, and killed the pilot. ?As soon as "Old Sorrel," Stone?1? t?i :*.,N r... - Willi tJHChMHi > w ui nut ac uica, il?> ix iuuv; will be turned over (o a taxidermist, who will mount it for preservation. A miliiary friend of Geu. Jackson's has supplied the necessary money. ?Matthew Arnold who is now traveling on the continent making researches in educational-matters for the English Government, writes to a friend in Boston that he intends to rTfi^fjWiWHi * ? u"^ ^tjTwfry~??Vw revisit this country in May and will | remain here until August. ?An attempt was made on Thurs-1 day in Paris tu ::s.-as.sin:i:e Jnio Verne. J Two \ylto tiiCtl a: liim lrom a revolver !>y :i young student, who turned out u> be the :iuthor*s nephew, | and who had coine Paris for the ex- j pros? purpose of killing l.i* unci:-. ?Sc<:re:ary \Vi;iiney is ;i nephew of the inventer of the cotton gin. The widow of another nephew is a resident j of Washington. She i? a descendant j of the W'olleslonecraft family, one of! whom, her ^landaunt, was the second j wife of the poet Shelly. A... \ .-..SI , C L* ... ?.uurjtjiu- liu .igimiuuciuc, ;i opuiiish iioblt'inai), has been recognized by the Mexican Government a* a descendant of the Aztec Emperor Montezuma II., and has I>cen granted an anual pension of?1,400.13, to be paid him! during his lifetime. --The Rev. Sam Jones told his hearers in Chicago that they could not pray rightly unless on their knees, and a clergyman present retorted by saaing that it was a good thing to see some people praying in any fashion. T!'f> wnnrf nf rim Mmnnda nnm mitlee touching the refusal of the j President to furnish to the Senate cer-; tain papers touching the removal the Albania District Attorney, was discussed last week. The Democrats seem to have had the better of the argument. ?The German press loudly protests . that the proposed rebuilding of Rome will result in the destruction of its remaining antiquities. Memorials are being signed by artists and archaeologists, everywhere, protesting against the sacrilege of iJome by building speculators. ?'The family" of the King of Denmark may not irreverently be termed a relicrinnc ciinnaitv chno Wlion tiovt lio f,'vww v v i * i veil y gwvwt II Iiv?4 WV..H nw gathers liis family around hisn, which he is accustomed to do every year or two, lw will have before him Luth-1 craus, Anglican?, Russian Orthodox, | Greek Catholics'and Roman Catholics. ? All the Democratic organs say that Miss Cleveland is making host of friends for herself and the President by j entertaining all the Congressmen's wives, and the Republican organs | insist that she is making enemies right and left by t ho same policy. ?There is much excitement in Au- j gusty, Ga., on the Chinese subject on j account of the arrival of several Celestials and the expectation of more to follow. There arc several hundred now in the city, some of whom have married American wives. The feeling seems to be that tne Chinese must go. ?The Trade Council of Los Angeles, Cal., lias issued a circular calling on the citizens to aid in peacefully removing the Chinese. A large number of employers in consequence are discharging ilie Chinese. About nine hundred Chinamen has arrived there from the surrounding districts since the agitation began. ?By the death of Senator John F. Miller, of California, the Democrats will gain a temporary- seat in the United States Senate. The Legisla IUXC I> llU'l 111 SCfiSIUU, ilUU vruvciliui. Stoneman who is a Democrat, will appoint a Democrat lo ihe vacancy. The new Legislature will choose a Senator will be elected this fall. ?The business failures occurring throughout tlie country during the last week, as reported to R. G. Dun& Co., number for the Unitej^^far'es 'ill, and for Canada 2.VJfi<ntl 239, against 249 last week a^ 248 the week previous. Busings casualties are on the decl^aaaf^vcry section oi the country, ""especially in the Eastern and Middle States. ! --The Pan-Electric investigation ! i.-/ ?i. _:_i _ UCIOIU U1U fcpUClUI COIUUllliUC Ul U1C House began in Washington on Friday. J. II. Rogers, the inventdr. testified that stock in the concern had been given to Senators Garland and Harris j and others, free of cost, lie said the stock had no actual, but a purely j speculative, value. f ?No man is more unfortunate in his letter writing than Gen. XV. T. i Sherman. * lie has ju=t written a letter ! in which he said that his children could no more enter a public school than a common tavern. Of course his usual . luck followed him, and the newspapers i have published the letter with severe I editoiial strictures. . . . ?The latest novelty 111 the line of boycotting;conies from Chicago, where the Knights of Labor have-notified the publishers cf the City Directly of their refusal to furnish the names of some ' 30,000 members of the order unless he consents to the substitution of anion printers in setting the type for the I lion-nnionists who have hitherto done j , the work. ?Tiie Savannah Times thinks the ; castigations administered to Boutelle, of Maine, by Mr. Wise, of Virginia, and the flaying given Henderson, of Iowa, by Hon. Thomas M. Norwood, ought to deter any other Radical blatherskite from trying to wave the bloody shirt in Congress this session. il is uiIq hj uc a vti y ituiiguiuuo experiment. / ?Alexander H. Stephen's grave is still unmarked, but above the grace of Ilarrv Steven, his colored servant, a stone has been Greeted bearing the legend: "He was for many years the faithful, trusted and beloved body servant of Alexander II. Stephens. Like him he was distinguished for kindness, uprightness and benevolence. As a man he was honest and true. As a As a Christian he was humble and trusting." ?There was annular eclipse of the sun on Friday. In New. York patient observers were rewarded lour minutes before sunset by seeing a slight indentation of the sun's disc, just as it was sinking behind the JSew Jersey hills. The officcr in charge of the hynrographic bureau in the Maritime Exchange said that the eclipse was of very little nautical importance. There will be a total eciipse on August 29, which will be plainly visible in New York. ?There is no limit to the advantages that American talent can derive from foreign culture. Miss Hattie Eddy was a young lady whose beautiful voice was much admired in Philadelphia. A year's study in Paris has of r.nnrsft imnroued her method and exe cation, but this is in no way comparable to the vast progress she has made in her name. She is now Mile. Enrichetta Edica. By any other name she would not sing as sweet. -There is no landed class in France, properly so-called. There are S,000,000 peasant proprietors. Entail and primogeniture arc unknown, and a bit of land can be bought and sold as ! easily as a cow or a familv Bible, j vr?.enn ann .mtniti-v frt?L <jvv/,vw wuun ; iuin . have, within the past five years, quitted ! the green fields and homesteads of, France in order to seek a living in the j great towns. j ?I?onisc Michel was polled with! stones and snowballs at Versailles j while addressing a meeting on strikes | and Socialism, but escaped without i injury. Her companion, Mine. Bougouro, was also mobbed, her cab being pelted with stones and bedaubed with mud. Some of the missiles struck her on the face and drew blood. She finally took refuge in the Mayors office. i ADE 3fOVKttE2fT. An Open Letter to the Sooth CrtoIIe; Congressmen. Iii^accordance wiih a resolution o the Executive committee or me nee Trade Association, a copy of the fol lowing letter lias been mailed to eacl Senator and member of Congress fron this State: HEAI/QCAUTERS FKEE-TKADE ASSOCIA tiok'ot SorTH Carolina. Columbia, S. C., March 4, 1886. My Dear Sir? The Free-Tr?tde As sociation of South-Carolina beJievetha of all causes assigned for the presen deplorable prostration of industrial in terests in the Uuited Slates, none is moi < disastrous and far-reaching than th< svstem of so-called protection undei which a grevious tariff, imposed avow edly as an extraordinary war measure has been perpetuated through twentj years of profound peace. They believe that Jhis wrong endure! only because unrealized and unexpos ed. They have therefore resolved t( urge upon the people of South Carolt Uil, ill pilUUU LEICCilllg?, UIV piuj/uvu of demanding of Congress a speeds abolition of artificial-barriers and gov ern mental toll-gates, by which thf traffic of the world is diverted from iti natural channels, and man is deprivei by man of bis God-given right to securt the fullest returns to his labor. Feeling assured. that as a custodial of South Carolina's interests in tin Federal Congress you are desirous o maintaining her past record in thii matter, and. of removing obstruction; to her material progress, the Fre< Trade Association warmly invite youi aid in their work. -They trust that; you will consent U deliver at least oue public address a such time and place in the State as ma; be most convenient, discussing' th< burdens of the tariff, setting forth thi position of Congress in regard to it repeal in whole or in part, and sug gesting the means by which your con stituents may most efficiently co-oper ate with you in securing relief s< greatly needed, yet so long deferred. By order of the Executive Commit l> t i IUU. it. 1/a r ioj Chairmau. A TAEE OF WOE FROM IRELAND. Maidens Naked and Starving?The Inhabi tants on the West Coast Subsisting o: Moss and Roots. The English Government has place* gunboats at the service of Mr. Tuke i his work of relieving the inhabitants c the islands along the western Iris coast. Indescribable distressJias bee developed among among the peopl inhabiting the Arran 161c.", ofFGalwav who besides having hardly anythiii, but moss and sea grass left to eat, ar wtiMiAnf fii-A on/^ Aflnn roitKrtnf it li uwut UJ V airu uiivu n ivuvuv vivwitn<| and shelter. It is not rare to find girl of seventeen and eighteen kept in en forced hiding during the dajtime be cause bereft of every thread of cloth itig, long ago bartered away for see potatoes or roots to feed the smalle children. Fishing-Inspector Brady re cently went among the miserable pec pie of Arran to distribute relief fui nished bv an organization of Iris police. His funds ran short and h still had so much pitiable wretchednes to relieve that he appealed to Mi Dnssey, who is charged with the dis tribntion of the raised in Americ through the New York Sun for th impoverished fishermen of Acbill nn Boffin Islands, and begged bim to di J^nftr* ipre for the benefit o I the Arranese. This Mr. i permitted to do, and be reports that 3 j order to save the lives of scores < people, now dying of starvation 3 those Western islands, it is impera1i\ that re.ief on a large hj Ue be at on< organized. A Deadly Draught. Tuesday afternoon about eighty it i mates of the almshouse at Lebanoi j Pa., were sei^d with vomiting an I severe pains. Dr. Weiss, the atteiu | ing physician, was hastily summone I and at once pronounced it a case < wholesale poisoning. Measures wei promptly taken to counteract the-pois on. Most of the victims suffere severely from nausea, and twelve < them are in a critical condition. A investigation revealed the fact that a who drank oi the coffee prepared 1c Tuesday's noon meal were sick, an the doctor soon found the coflee p( lined with a thick sediment of par: green. The vessel holds a barrel c more, and into this some person ha thrown almost four pounds of poisoi Dr. Weiss is of the opinion that had : not been that the poison was to strong, causing instant vomiting, mor t han half the inmates of the-almshous would now be dead. T STATEMENT OF FACTS FOR THE PUBLH TO CONSIDER. Atlanta, Ga., Januery 12,1885. Emerging from a severe and long spe of typhoid, fever, I discovered that th fever had' settled in my right leg; whie caused it to swell to an enormous size remaining, so quite three years; resistiii; all treatment. A small ulcer finally mad its appearance a little above -tlie ankl which refused to heal tnanv and all Hxtei nal application and the use of the uios *? ted blood poison remedies. Tne ulcer continued to enlarge, fre queutly discharging, j*erhaps, as mucli a a cupful of pus or matter per-day Th size of the;uleer was about.two niches ii diameter, "extending to a depth near th bone. At one time it appeared that th flesh in all contiguous parts, would sure!; become a running sore, as its peculiarl; flabby, spotted and unhealthy conditioi clearly iudicated, and it- was intimate* that I might lose my ieg. My conditio] becoming so critfcal, and the ulcer, enlarg ing sr -apiaiy, we sent ior i;r. J. r. Ltrom goole, who made a thorough examination and said that the flesh on my leg for si: inches around the Sore would soon siougl off if not remedied; that I mjawt have nr leg bandaged daily and commence the us! of B. B. B7 I acted according to his instructions, am after usuin'g the second bottle, -the -ulce looked fresp and healthy and commence* healing. I continued tne use of B. B.' B. on/1 tVio ??fr>nisVi7nonf-!>r>H oofyo faction ..of myself .and friends, the ulce continued to heal rapidly and is now en tirely well, and I am .attending to my busi ness* at W. II. Brotherton's store." I d not hesitate to recommend B. B. B. as; wonderful, speedy and - effectual blooi purifier, far superior to anything else ; cvGr . 1 refer toW. II. Brotherton, W. B, Gone Major D. A. Cook, Dr. J. L. Pinson am others of Atlanta W. M. CIIESniKE CONSiiMPTim 11?* a POINTS T tfOXO* *bOT?dU?JU*? ; &r?U ue thbawcaJj u feaffw^>r ti ii iront kta^-wd of torn; staadlajchiva mmi wmli nae^/io franc 1 * my'faith in It* ttcacy, th?r I *W *e&<JT-*0 BOTTLE3 *&E?, together iritn a VAT/tTfcBLE TRSATETE on tBf? tfStaao to any ?ufforer.s 6lr? expre?r?n<hP O. addfin. - PS.' T. A. StCWW.iwrFttrhSfc, Kow York. Did ) Oil Sup pose Mustang Liniment only good for horses ? It is for inflammation of all flesh. l^jjgrc FOR COucHS AND C8?uP US* i TAYIiOR'S - 5 MULLEIN i The sweet gma, u gathered from a tree of the same r.s??, growing along the small streams in the Southern Plates, J contains a stimulating expectorant principle that loosens the phlegm producing the early morning cough, and stimulates Ue child to throw off th? :als? memhraae in croap aad whoopinj-cocgS- When combined with the healing mnci7 laginocs principle In the mullein plant of the old fields, pre- I r sects in Tatxoh's Chxeoxzx Rxhzdt or swirr Grv axr I 1 Mcues the finest known remedy for Coughs, Croup, Whooplng-Cough and Consumption; and so palatable, any child la pleased to talce it. Ask voor druggist for it. Pr!ce, i 25c.?sdSl. WALTER A. TAY10B, Atlanta, Ga. 5 Use DR. BIGGERS' HUCKLEBERRY CORDIAL fo: Diarrhoea. Dysentery and Children Teething. For sale hj 1 'K druggists. > " ,m ,, ' ' J &&, ^ * _v'. t .<gEfe|L * Trade ?0??* Mark. ! a ' y?{b-\' jjM</ ES s i ? htheTKne grovm?Gnailries of Europe,; thense cfthisMedicated'Wiaeis universal, j It is composed cf the most approved 5 VEGETABLE TONICS, -which, are introduced into a pure generous"Wkie. The very finest j IiGKA. iNCH6JE4BABE, "being its medicalbasis,itis confidenoly reconpiendedas acure andpreventive of . I* FEVER and AGUE, Q and fill ottier dis eases originating from ; , malarious causes ' For purifyingtiie s if , ELOOU li andimpiwing the Secretions,CFironic,! 11 Rheumatism,Btaodpoisoning,a certain e careforDyspepsia.Cranrtp inthe stomach, '? an immediate relief for Dyssntry, Cclic.i | Cholera-morbusandkindred diseases,: 9 GeneralWeakness,Nervous and Mental I 5 Dability, a souvereignreniedy forLiver ! Complairrfc.anddissssss of the Kidnies.an j .. excellent appetizer; and a i- TO!S3 J C d without a rivab r in shortiTbr invigorating all the functions !- ofthe system, it is u.n eq ualIed. h ??X5 O S JS ? Asmall Wine-glassfu:',threetimes a day.; e Soldby all Druggists and dealers generally, s TOPAZ CINCHONA CORDIAL CO., >, SalejPc^^t^^^^^nufaclura'S. ? & Trcas?* : a SPARTANBUT5G. S.C. Price per Bottle $ 1.00. i I V" | i i iTi XEW ADV EliTISEMENTS. ill m ADXES WANT?::) to work for us at their tp It own kcmes. 10 S10 Per week can be re sU easily made?no ca?v::ssln?j?fascinating IB and s eady employment.1 Particulars r.nd saroDleor the woik sent Tor stamn. Address HOME M'F'N CO., P. o. Box 1015, Bastci:. Mass. WE WANT SALESMEN everywhere, local and traveling, to sell oar .vrcods. Wll' puy good salary and expenses. '? : Wrlse lor terms at one<\ nn! st;ite id salary wasted. Address STANDARD MLVER 4 WARE COMA A NY, Wash! yfon Street. Listen, jj Mass. ? I W1NTR i) e T ~ in i JL * i * ' iui us ut t;:cu U>?JI homes, 87 to $10 ppr week can be quietly ^ made. No photo painting: no canvass'ig. . f For full particulars, please addivss at or. re, CBESENT A1JT COMIV-NY, If CVul.al *j Street, Boston, Mass. Box 5170. 'f W^EAFXESS its CA i'SES and Ci'tlE. a I) by one who was deaf twenty-eisrht years, jf p** Treated by mcst or noted specialists oi . the day with no bcneiir. Cured hinixeij IS in three months, and since then hundreds of >r others by same process. A plain, simple and j successtul home treatment. Address T S. u PAGE. 12S East 20th St., New York City, 1. : I CURE FITS! When I eay ccrc X do not mean merely to stop them for a Q time and then have thorn return acaln. I mean a radical core. I have made the disease of FITS. EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a llfe-loncstodv. I warrant ray remedy to cure the worst cases. Because others have failed Is no reason for not now receiving a enre. Send at cnce for a ? treatise and a Free Bottle of of Infallible reme<!.tf fiivo Express and Post Office. It rustsyou nothing f<ca trial, ju>d I will cure yool Dli. IT. G. EOOT, 1S3 Fear! it.. X.Y, Packer's Tonic d u A Pure Family Medicine That Never Intoxicates. HISCOX ?? CO., 163 William Street, Xcw York. 1 Sold by all Druggists in lar^o bottles ar One e Dollar. MclilJ-4'.r 5.J&.SHLEY jSoLl i The Soluble'(yuano is a highly conceutrat r Grade Fertilizer for all crops. 1 ? ASHLEY COTTON AND CORN COMr ? two crops and al?o largely m. d by the True r .. ASHLEY ASII ELEMENT.?A very cht Utilizer.for Cotto:i, Com and Small Grain Ci . Vines. Pita. 0 ASHLEY DISSOLVED DONE; ASIILi * Grades?for use alone and in Compost hoar [ For Terms, Directions, Testimonials, and publications of the Company, address 1 THE ASHLEY PHOS] Nov2oLly lAUMMiy'S a^CXTSES?dphtherifi. Croup, Asthma, Bronchitis Hoarseness, Influenza, Hacking Co-ar;h, Wncopin;* C< . TTi#*n^?ty m-rtn'hlr.fi And Srwnall>isc?.s<^s. Pa: These pills were a wonderful dis^verv. other | relieve all manner of disease: The information arou pills. Find out about them and'yeu will j?.:vays b< j free. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail fcr ?.r>e. a stag | Sheridan's CcnartionoM ? -. p. r? 5?: r? it rc J Powder is absolutely^ fbj gS a E? Jf?-" Pg 2 S I pure and highly cors-gj s5j S3 H? ?3, M 5 H j centrat^d. Oceounccgigja g? ?? rL-. g i any*otter I'.^sESe KsM ft'it EH' l|i? 1 I strictly a medicine tog W jw SfSs SS R t?._ R 53 a ] be given with food. BSBa ? 55 ?2 Est s.<dt I Sold everywhere, or sort by mail for 23 ecnts is atom j Six cans by oxpress, prepaid, for S5.CC > J A Clear Skin ^ < is only a part of beauty; but it is a part. Every lady ' may have it; at least, what looks like it. Magnolia Balm both freshens and VCd*J "MOTHERS5- r *?Q More Ten'or* N?t only shortens u un e i error. he time ^ ]abQr and jlessens the intensity JTn'Mnrf* Pail ' of Pain? but> it: AN O-MOre ira^H. nrj-eatly diminishes the danger to life of both i Ko.MoroEanger!;|S^S^?^ condition highly fa, J vorable to speeay re,n ,,, coven', and far less Motlier or Clllld. liable"to flooding, coi. vufcions, and other Alarming symptoms incident to slow or The Dread of painful labor. Its j , truly wonderfuLeffica; Motnernooa cyin this respect entftles it to be called ? *. 1 ''HTTn -\r s\ m TT 1? T>>C iT&csiornicu iv % .1 MIL* V A nii ao FRIEND and to be ranked as one of the IJ Jr "j! life-saving . remedies " [of the nineteenth century. ?nc[ From the nature of 'the case it will of ; -5- s~\ * j bourse be understood I I i B V we cannot Pul)" . I \ J \ lish certificates conI ' cerningthis Remedy without weunding the jdelicacy of the writers. ~ ~ ^ Yet we"have hundreds i safety auu^abC of such testimonials on file, and no mother T0 who has once used it | . will ever arain be Suffering Woman without it in her time !of trouble. A prominent physician lately remarked | to the proprietor, that if it were admissible to nuke public the letters we receive, the | "Mothers' Friend" would outsell anything | on the market. Gf.xtlemex:?During my career iu the i practice of medicine I used your "MOTHi EE'S FRIEND" in a great number of ; cases, with the happiest results in every ; instance." It makes labor easy, hastens dei liven* and recovery, and insures safety to r.oTii mother and nriLD. No woman V ! can be induced to yo through the ordeal | without it after once using it. i Yours trulv, T. E/PEXXINGTON, II. D. Palmetto, Ga., June 10,1S84. Send for our Treatise on "Ilealth and , Happiness of Woman?" mailed free. Bradfield Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga. ' i Charlotte, 'Columbia & AnsrastaJS. R< ' SCHEDULE IN EFFECT OCTOBER 4, 18#*.,?Eastern standard Time. GOING NORTH. NO. 5:{, MAIL AND EXPRESS. ! Leave Augusta 9.10 af^A ! Leave W. C. &. A. J unction.... .1.12 p I Arrive at Columbia .1.22? jA Leave-Columbia 1.324 cofl i^vcKiUjnTi'fii j Leave Biytiiewood 2.13 p. tp ? ; Leave Rid^eway .2.34 P* in? Wm Leave Simpson's *r12.4T p- m- p| Leave Winnsboro *3.02 p. S I^ave White Oak 3^22 p. m* f|? Leave Woodward's.. .\ ?&3 p. pa. M | Leave Blr.ckstock Leave Smith's 4.40 p.'ln/g| ;.uc;v 111;; twp.m. hh Leave Foil Mill - .5.20 p, m. H ! Leave Pmeville 5.40 p. m. I i Arrive nt Charlotte 6.00 p. m j Arrive at JStatesviile 9.35j>. m I GOING SOUTH. KO. 52, MAIL AND EXPRESS. W Leave StatcsviHe 1 7.45 a. m. Leave Charlotte 1.00 p. m fl : Leave I'ineville 1.27 p. m H ' Leave FortMiil 1.44 p. m. S j Leave Kock Hill 2.02 p. m. 9 Leave Smith's 2.22 p. m. Leave Lewis' 2.30 p in. Ml Leave Chester 2.44 p. m. Leave Corn wall's 3.03 p. m. S Leave Blaekstock S.12p. m. Leave Woodward's . .3.18 p. m. i Leave White Oak. 3.30 p. in. Leave V.'innsboro .3.48 p. m. s|| . Leave Simpson's 4.03 p. m. M Leave liidgewav .4.16 p. Leave Blytbewood 4.32 p. a?. I Leave Kiliian's 4.41) p. m fl Arrive at Columbia. 5.15 p. m_ H j Leave Columbia 5.25 p. ni. Leave W. C. & A. Junction 5.57 p. to. H ; Arrive at. Aujrusta 9.38 p. m. ffg Connection is now made at Chester (by H trains 52 and for Lancaster and inter; mediate points on C. & C. R. R., and for all points on <J. & L. R. R. as far as New C. \V. Oil EARS, Acting G. P. A* M G. R. TA LCOTT. Superintendent D. CARD WELL. A. G. P. A- M FOR SAILE, B We claim ti> nave taken more premiums j with our Jacks, Jennets and Saddle-stock t!:a:i any breeders in Tennessee. Fair 9 Ground, *N"ashvitie, Tenn. ?>rt. L. W. KNIGHT, SOX & CO. 1 3Ir>' ;ion this paper. Febl3i.8t - j UBL.E GuaM ed Aiaaioniated Guano, a complete 'OUNI! ?A complete Fertilizer for kers near Charleston for vegetables, e^^H :ap and excellent I\on-Ammomaied FeiP^B :ops, ami also for Fruit Trees, Grap?,s^B ;Y ACID PHOSPHATE, of very for the various attractive and instruct^BLO PHATE CO., Charleston, S. cj?0 > a isiiniiiiF , Kenralgia, Bheumatira, Bleeding ai >c?h. Catarrh. Cholera Morbus, Dysentery,iH|ni saphlct free. Dr. ?. S. Joimgoa & Co., EostoH^MSBi yaw, iiiuJ? BLOOD. | 1 |sa S like then is. the world. Will pOftitivaj^Sfi^W ad coca bos is worth tea times the cost dKjS&gSg ; thsalcful. One oill a. dozs. Cl^stnttMjHHSI ip3. Dr.i.s.josrysoy&co.. L t i ^ ^l-iFcliicJetS eholcr URiiB Vfe%, gi Kg B5 aiiciseases or | wj M {&?I Sa la worth its vc !?. E K! fr.i i ?a 3 12 COM. nins* 22a w ?22 is iA ta book by mail 1 ins. 21-4Ib.air-tigh!tiaicaas,SIs braail. HZL X. S. J022TS0K & CO., EC