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CLEVELAND AXD RELIGION. Gratifl?vi bv the Prayer* of the Pious, Bat Hating Everything Like Hypocrisy. ( Washington fatter to Pittiflnirg Lender.) : 'i Tr*?T?v- ?*>r of the Deo- i pie throughout the country seem to bp bent oti evangelizing President CievcUud," observed one ot the Chief Expcaiive's raosi iutimute friends to-day. i "Mr. Cleveland wa* telling" me the other <1hv that he ?oinetitueft though: there wmsau impression in the mind* of too many good folks that he present id a rare opportunity lor the mi? j sionarics. 1 asked him why he thought j so and he laughingly replied: 'Oh,; if the advice given me wa.s cor.cenA Um if nrnnlrl ! 11 aicu VH Zlilivaj ti ff wU.<? V> . ( Christianize that whole wild ami i wicked and dark country.' I had to ; laugh, for there was so much serioas- j ness and yet dry bumor in it all. j Cleveland realizes, as he is reminded so often and so forcibly, that in a cer-; tain way he sets an example to the world, bat it worries him a little, I j can see, to be told by hundreds of peo- i pie, sometimes in one week, that he ought to let his light so shine, etc. He ; believes that these people must tl ink ; he is very wicked, or else -that he is j the guardian of fifty million of people, j SDeakinsr of this point he said to me: i 'A President or king or other hi^h anct national officer should recognize the supreme power in every act committed. A man or woman should never get so exalted as to fail to do this. Now, few public men have as little opportunity to disseminate personal views as I have. If I were ever so anxious to "I make people believe I was the erabodi\ inent of goodness it would be up-hill ; work to create that impression, for a ' President cannot cry his wares from ^ i the housetops. If this advice about j ..M .u?. ~ } being a unnsnan aim mi mm, b?iuu>g v > in every form and from every directioii, is fur my own guidance, verv well. If it is to change the genera! course of my public career, it is ill giv^n. One thing I am bound shall never l>e made?the charge that I was a hypocrite. I like Christians; they are the salt of the earth. A hypocrite, to my mind, is the basest of sinners."' "The President must be a little annoved bv these importunities', is he not?" I asked. "Not in the least. On the contrary, he is gratified for the interest shown in him, if it is respectfully shown. He doesn't seem to comprehend the fact that all Presidents have had to withstand this ordeal. The letters he receives arc not the only evidence given him of a de>ire that he shall be a moral man. You would be surprised how many Christian peopie breathe an audible praver for him, howevei, when they grasp his hand, and it all has a very perceptible effect upon Mr, Cleveland, for he said he didn't think any man or woman with sense and a heart could fail to be . affected by the pi-avers of an earnest \ people, when he or she knew they fit were so constantly deiiverea. *ic is sx>met"hin^ like love in its physical effect,' said Mr. Cleveland one day. 'Xow, if one is very earnestlv and sincerely loved that affection is sure, ii kept up and demonstrated, to have its way, unless the suitor is absolutely offensive. The mere (act that so much confidence and affection is persistently bestowed will touch a heart of stoue. So the intense interest shown by su many in a man's spiritual welfare mu M eventually touch him, if he thinks, And the man or woman who cannoi u be reached by (he prayers of a nation is a strange being indeed.'" "In hi> private life do yon think the President observes any utandard of Christianit) ?" 4,Yes, he doe*. In all tny intercourse wish him I do not remember tc hare heard him say anything im proier. He sometimes becomes ven perplexed, bnt he doe?n?t sweat aboQR it. >lr. Cleveland believes tha [ honoi^ between man and roan is th< ^ iouiiflaliion ox v-nrisiiaimv , uioi uiiga Q^SMs^Tt^e ,r^h apd^a>^^hi^*^ THE \EW l aCAM)AL. Wholesale Bribery of City Officers?S'~0,OOO for an Alderman's Vote?Twenty. Indictments Given Oat. The arrest of Jaehne, a New York alderman, on an indictment charging him with bribery in the matter of the charter of the Broadway Surface Road, has had an efiect on the politicians tairlv comparable to an earthquake. Inspector Byrnes claims to have wormed himself into Jaehne's confidence, that he acknowledged having received $20,000 for bis vote on that measure, and told who besides himself were bribed, and who paid the money to them. Jaehne is perfectly composed, nud says Bvrnes's story of a confession is a pure fabrication. Byrnes says that amone other things jaehne described how one of the'alderman had employed a lawyer and skilled accountant to 60 fix his books as to account for the large accessions to his bank account adout the time when this bribe money was being distributed. It was currently reported that Aiderman FnlgrafF would be -arrested, but if he has been it has not become known. More indictments were looked for, bat although twenty indictments were banded in by the grand jury they did not embracc any agair?t the aldermen. Alderman Pearso.:, _ /" _ _ .. .. _ I .. J _ _ _ _ t 4 one 01 loose uncter me cioua, was caned as a witness before the Senate Committee on Investigation, hut failed 10 respond, and this added a fre^h impetus to the report that some of Jaehne's partners in the bribe-taking have absconded. Rumor is busy with the names of a!! who were in the Board when the Broadway franchise was passed. Inspector Byrnes was interviewed upon this subject. Fie refused to say who had, according to his information, been ^niirv of bribe-taking. bnt sairi he could absolutely exonerate two members?Alderman GrautaudO'Cori^ ner?one a Demcrat and the other a , liepublicati. Stolen XilSfflM Recovered. Hamilton Cole, referee, in the action j brought by George Holt, assignee, j for the benefit of 'he creditors ot j Ferdinand Ward, 8gaiust Wm. S. I \Varnert has filed his report with the clerk of the Supreme Court in New j York. It is in favor of Jntiau T. j Davies, receiver of the firm of Grant & i Ward, and finds that the payment on all money made by Mr. Ward, either by his individual check or by the checks of Grant & Ward, npon socalled contract business were fraudulent and void as against the defendant, Julian T. Davies, as receiver, and that i Warner must pay over to Davies, as | receiver, all monevs received by him from Ward over and above the amount! paid by him to Ward. This snm the referee finds to be $1,255,361, which, with interest thereon from May 6, 1S84, $140,391, aiakfs the total amount to be recovered $1,395,752. He further directs that defendants, Warner and hiR wife, execute and deliver within thirty days from the filing of this j jndgment snch deeds of conveyance! and release and qrtit-claim as may be i necessary to satisfy this judgment. The Georgia Campaign*. Ex-Governor Jas. M. Smith opened ; the St8te Gubernatorial campaign last J Thursday with a speech at Talbotton. \ He is not a candidate, bnt urgred the people to sustain the railroad commission and elect no man to the Legisla ^ r 3 a cure wao invoreu carKUiing its power. He charged the railroads with attempt- \ ing to bribe the Legislature. illrtiTi i"j a wmi r ?rrWlf>^JriWtfW'rir' JPi r1" i~ ~r fr'TU^V*1fy1;Vr-iiy PilESE-NTIMEXT OP DEATH. | i r* o.wT Incident ill tho j'ainily History of the I5ajar<!s. T!;c subject of presentiment roncernimi" death and fatality in fun dies i spoken ol in Hancock's c.ise reea!!* ; some >ad [> tints in tne B-t\ard hi*toi-?. i Fe w iamilie.N have been inore depleted by >ud<ien death than the !>:?\ard-, and i:i mail} instances there haw l>et*n forewarning- and presentiment!-. Ir is Sititi that ilis- Ihnard Wi'wte a h'tter indicating her appro,tching death. Tnere are now in Washington many ; old navai officers wJji? remember the ifiti-re-iini? circumstance attending liie | ileal li ??f Mis- Ba\ aid's cousin, v hurl<:> C. Bayard. at Mount Ve.-uvius. 11c was tli? favorite son of Richard Bayard, of Philadelphia, whose father and Secretary Bayard's lather were brothers. In 1S43, while on bo.ird the United States s.liip Congress, in comI any with several voting Irrends, he made the ascent of Mount Vesuvius. It was the same Congress that went down in Hampton Roads before the Mcrrimac, and in the party was the same Joseph Smith, who as commander of the Congress had his head taken off by .1 cannon ball and of whom his fither said, when he heard that the fVvnnrvoca crOS tfllcrn: "TllCl! Joe IS dead." In the party aI>o was Lehman B. Ashmcad, of Philadelphia, wit!) ; whom yound Ba\ard afterwards went : to Jerusalem to visit the Holy Sepul, chre. While there they both had tat; toocd on their arms by an old drajroj man the heraldic arms of Jerusalem, ! with the date of their visit. In the J case of young Bayard the tattooed ! cross developed virulent features, fes; tered and finally he became sick and j the arm became ? really swollen, lie continually declared that he would die, and even after it appeared to grow en. tirely well he was i.i the ha At of say; inv to Mr. A>hrnead and other friends: j "This arm will he the death of ine I yet." Ten years afterwards young : Bayard left for u erui?e in the Columbia as flag lieutenant of Commander i Morris. Before leaving he took a sad ; farewell of all his tY lends here ami i and declared to one and all that "thev : would never see him again." He was ; very rejected and despondent. Ten ! years to a day from his previous visit, | in company with young Carroll Tucker, ! of Maryland, and a few incnas, me i Columbia being then at Naples, he j made the ascent of Vesuvius daring : at) etupriot:. With him were Rear j Admiral Simpson and Hear Admiral j Calhoun, who were then lieutenants, i Ho had the arm of a Prussian army j officer. lie was quite gay. Just near I the Hermitage, where he had halted i ten \ears before, the party stopped, finding it would be dangerous to go I nearer the crater. As they wcre turnj ing a mass of lava and rock struck i vonng Bayard on the arm where he j had been tattooed, cutting it fearfully ; and obliterating the cross, and before ! the party could reach the foot of the , volcano he died. His mother is still i livincr. imwardsof ninety vears of age. ; His bodv is buried near the foot of I Vesuvius. ? ntm A WHOLESALE LYXCHIXG. ! Thirteen Xeffroes Shot Down in a 3Iisti?sippi Courthouse. 11 a ?nr^iai to the Now Orleans Picay \uney daied March 17 says: N^wsota i terrible tragedy enacted at i.arrollton. ! an interior town twenty-four miles 1 j southwest of Grenada, was received ?: there this evening. Fifty men rodt j into town and repaired 10 the Court ! house, where thirteen negroes were ! awaiting their trial. The whuefinei > j walked into the Courthouse and ! ten negroes dead and andv*55-"'^} ' | wounded the other three. shooting *; grew out of the *^*ptcd assa^sinat1 tion of Ja?*" a prominent *i ciiizep- ',K) shot and seriously w4r^-fr.?ued bv these negroes several Tweeks ago. particulars of the slaughter. New Orleans, March 18.?A spccial from Winona, Missiasippi, to the Times-Democrat gives the particulars of the circumstances leading: to the tragedy atCarrolhon, Mississippi, yesterday nnd of the tragedy itself. The trouble began some month? ago in a slight altercation between a white man named Moore and a colored man named Brown. J. M. Liddeil, a friend of Moore's, afterwards ?\)t into a dif i ficulty with Brown through reference ! to Brown's treatment of Moore in whice Liddell struck Brown with hi* fi.-t, and was shot in the elbow by Brown, and was fired at by several other colored men. In the further course of this difficnltv Liddell was shot a second time and two colored men were shot slightly. Following this the negroes made affidavits against Liddell ami others, charging them with asaault with intent u> murder. These cases came up yesterday for trial, and were called at noon, when trie u<>unnotise was immediately uneu with negroes whostationed themselves aiour d and about the Brown brothers, j The attorneys were proceeding with I the cnse, when there suddenly ! appeared about one hundred white ! men all well armed. Perceiving ! their entrance, Edward Brown j drew his pistol and fired in the direci linn of Liddell, who was between his ; attorneys. Thereupon the firing bej carne general. Ten negroes were inI stantly killed and two others have since ! died. M.inv pscanerl hv iumDin? i through widow? a distance of at least I twenty feet fi? n the ground. On ; most of the (lend bodies arms wer5 ! found. The room was completely filli ed with smoke. The Judge's bench i* | on the north side of (he mom and the 1 benches facing it are toward? the south. : It is a very large court room with winj dows all around. On the south tide j were counted 135 shot holes, in the i wall of the passage leading down i stairs ten holes, and in the benches : thirty sho' holes Ouc shot struck the ! ? . a ? l.nopf rnl nrlanr oooK unH rrUn/^o^ ; liiM invuito ?? KIUI/?V cctcu atiu ^muvvu into the wall. Five others show on the north wall from the direction of the benches. Lnrge pools of blool were on tho floor of the court room. The mob left as quickly and quietly as they came in. Was it Cancer ? 1 have been taking B. B. B. for six or seven weeks for something like cancer on my neck, s.nd I would not take one thousand dollaks for the benefit received. I had previously tried various so-called ; blood remedies, but B. B. B. is the best, the Quickest and the cheapest blood purifier 1 ever used. I refer to any mercnant of Griffin, Ga. J. II. BARNES, G'iffin, Ga, Were we so disposed, we conld make a great case of cnnccr cure of the above, but as we do not think that genuine cancers are ever cured, we do not propose to hiut'bugthe pubiic. The above is perhaps only a case or scrofulous nicer, wmcn i B. B. B. cures more speedily than any remedy. It will cure any so-called cancers in one" half the time anil one third the money required by anv boasted remedy. iJLO'OD BALM CO., * Atlanta, Ga The President's Birthday. The.President was forty-nine vears ofasre last Thnrsday. There was no celebration of the occasion at the White Hon^e, but 111 the evening the President, accompanied by Miss Cleve J \TZtse* "\rot>rl I ?TJ T uu v ^ii/UVoii; auu vvi? a;iu i Mrs. Lnmont, attended the "Mikado" j performance by the Emma Abbott Opera Company at the new National Theatre. The Presidential party occupied a private box, and upon their entrance were warmly applauded by the Audience. WEDDED UNDER DIFFICULTIES. A Texas Ceremouy Enlivened by the Element of Dangers (Columbia, Tex. Dispatch to Chicago Tim?*.) An exciting and dramatic incident occurred here last week. Sunday morning two men lode into town. Tm-ir remarkable appearance at once attracted the attention of every one. They were covered with mud and carried a perfect arsenal of rifle-, pistols and knives with t cm. One was a man over 90, with long gray Iwir, and blood in his eye; the other was a man of 3U \ea?-s, built like a giant and wearing a terrible scowl on his face. They were father and son, William Wofford aud Sam Wofford, from the backwoods of Matagorda county. The old man said he was looking for hi? "darter Kate," who hail "lit out5' with her cousin, Bill Wofford. The father and son located the runaway couple, who were occupying: a small fisherman's tent half a mile outside of the town. When old Wofford found out t he location af his erring "darter" a large crowd of cnrions men and boy? followed the ternb'e-looking pair tc the vicinity of the tent, as the old mar kept continually examining his gut and saying: "Sam, I'm go'en to kil Inm, suah!" As they neared the ten I the crowd fell back, while the old mar and his giant son approachcd wit! rifles in hand. Suddenly the flap o the tent was violently thrown opei from the inside and there stood Bil ami Kate, each holding a terrible Win Chester r:fle?one covering the ok man, and the other the son. 01c grayhcad and Sam glared like twc wild beasts on the brave lovers ant Bill called out: "Do yon s'pose I'n gone to give her up arter we cion< tramped it together all the way fron the Colorado to the Brazos? No much; she's mine, and you stan' thei1 now and see us married." The oI< man and Sam, under cover of th< suggestive Winchesters, slowly move* back, all the time facing the bov Bil and his Kate, who had (he drop 01 them. Meantime a courier had gon to town for a license and a preacher and after nearly two hours, dnrin, which time Bilfand Kate never .too their eyes off the old man and Sar and threatening to kill either shouli he raise a hand, the preacher and th license arrived. During the cercmoncy the brid< groom kept his rifle at ? half-coc pointing toward his l;ither-in-lan The preacher was so afraid they woul open hostilities while he was there b cotild scarcely finish the ceremony After the marriage the old man deli? ered a terrible curse 011 both said h( >vould spare their lives now, provide they never set foot in Matagordj county. "If you do," said he, as h shook his long, dirty yellow locks an and violently struck bis rifle with on hand, "if you do, you're both on yot dead soon as you cross the line, fo when I'm gone Sam he's there. You'v got the world before you 'eept (Matj gorda county. Now go!" Witto th philippic the old man and son dejbartc forlorn, while Bill pulled dow^M flap of the (ent. UK DISABLED SOLDIERS. The Comptroller General Seeks the 5ao of all Entitled to Aid from the Stat?. Comptroller General Stoney h ? recently issued the following circuit [ The General Assembly, at its la ' session, passed an Act instructing t 5 Conipcroller-General ";o investigfi and report to the next session of t G**v,al Assembly the names and* ccfi Motion of all citizens of this State wh are unable to earn a livelihood by rei son of wounds or other disabilities ir curred while in the servicc of the Stai <torin? the war between the States." In order to carry out the provisior of this Act, the Comptroller-Genen has prepared blank forms of applia tion and sent the same to the Clerks ( Court, from whom they may be ol lained, and he reqaests" that all citizer of i he State embraced within the pr< visions of the Act, will as soon ? possible forward to him their name with all of the information required o the blank. The applicant must be a citizen c the State, and must have incurred th disability while in the service of th State. He must file the necessar? cei tificates to ehow that he is unable t earn a livelihood by reason of physics disability, and that this disability i the effect of wounds (or injury) re ceived while in the service of thn State As the Act provides for & list of snc persons only, it will be a waste c time, resulting only in disappointmen! to any others who may take the troubl to send their names. \V\ E. Stoxey, Comptroller-General. the xkw parjlia3iext. Changes in its Elements Slake it a Yer Different Body from the Old. (Cablegram to the New York Herald.) The change in th-- Lemper of partie in the House toward home rule is du 10 a profound change in the constirn ent element of the House of Common itself. The new Parliament is essen tiaily an assembly of working men, ii the perse that its members attend seri oasly to their business. The Scotch Welsh and English Democratic mem bers emulate by their constant am unremitting attention the Irish mem bers, and except for the hours neces sary for sleep they seem always pres ent. Hours before the House meet they are in tne library attending t< correspondence. After 4, when thi business begins, they seem to be al way: on hand utilii 2, 8 and even 4 o'clocl in the morning, when the House ad journs. The old time aristocratic din ner hours have been abolished. "Count: out" are things of the past. There ii no more talking to empty benches. A nil hours there is an audience for any one having anything to say wort! listening to, and what is equally im p?rtant, an audience ready pmmpilj to suppress bores. The Governmen ha* lost its grip over members. Th< word "ministers" is no lonsrer a law Ancient etiquette and precedent arc a a discount. The new men are th< masters, and they will not stand an} mi. 4. ^ nonsense, xney voie agmnsi me unn istry with refreshing independence Already they have established a Par liamentary reign of terror in a mile way. Ministers are compelled to b< consistent. They no longer dare t< follow the old time custom of speaking in office against the reforms they advocated in opnosition. The sltehtesi indication of a disposition to do sc immediately provokes ominons howls of dissent and dissatisfaction. Olc time politicians are in dismay. Whig and Tory alike fear that with the nexl Parliament will come the deliure. ?Captain James I. Waddcll, com mnndcr of the Maryland fishery force? and formerly in command of the Con> federate steamer Shenandoah, which caused such loss to the A nerican merA^onf mortnA /Inrino f-Vm Txrnr rlioH in Annapolis on Thursday. He was a native of North Carolina, aged G2 years. ADVICE TO MOTHERS. M-rs. Win slop's soothing Syrcp should always fee used for children teething. It soothes the? child, softens the gums, allays all pain, caivs wind colic, and is tbe b^st remedy fox einrrhcefi. Tweaty-flye cents a bottle, JulyULtyl ?About forty per cent, of Inst year's grain crop is reported to be still in tbe bands of the farmers. ?l ?W^T?PB*^?gO??1? j I GKXEBAL SEWS ITE31i>. of tnt^rent, Gnl'.iored from Various I as Quartern. 1 Mi'"- Maucroli, wile of the liistodicil last week. j&?Tliere' are over fifty thousand w<M)rkiiien in the Miike> in AiU'-rioi. ? Dr. J. J. Caldwell, one ?>f thy oldt physician- of Atlanta, is dead. ? It is ;t?rain rumored that the I'resint i- to he married tl:i< summer. ?The sale of (he Morgan art i-oiiei>n in New York realized $1,205,400. ?The treaty of peace between ^ervia d Bulgaria has been ratified. ?Prof. Friz Heider, editor of the ...i ?... xt t r i : 1 tiiusui! CHUM \ouiu ituiy miiuiuI la-l week. ?It i* learned that the health of ex. resident Arthur has lately become a fitter for serious concern. ?J. O. Polk, a supposed horse thief as lynched near Copperas Cove, exas. -Ex-Governor ILthn, Keprcsentarc in Congress from Louisiana, died st week. j ?Earthquakes have occurred in Ger nany and Spain, but no serions d?uiI i ige was done. ^ i ?Of the seven thousand bills introII < inccd in the present Congress but I I I liUftrt Kft/aAtllA 1 AW^ I 1 .IJIUU imvo udA/ujt; ia?o. ?Fonr cadets have just been dis! nissed from the Xaval Academy at | Annapolis forihe offence of hazing. i ?Dr. Armstrong, of Atlanta, is now I issociate editor ot~the Sunday Tele: gram and his congregation has gone jj to pieces. ! ?Diamonds worth $200,000 were ijsaTed from the snnken steamer Oregon Jbnt the owners have not appeared. jjSmuggled goods, doubtless. ? I ?Lonise Michel intends to make a I jj tonr of America. She is mobbed \ jlevervwhere she attempts to speak in 1 1 ; -Li: _ j 1/puuitc. ^ | ?Express Messenger Nichols was c j killed on a train near Chicago and tlie . I safe robbed of abont $30,000 in money ?<i and jewelry. Ec !j ?The unknown schooner which coln j lided with the steamer Oregon had her cl <j bows stove in and stink and sll on e ! board perished. f ?All the United States prisoner? have been removed from the Fulton k| county, Ga., jail, but not until four of r.'j them had died of mentingitis. flL-The farmers in the northern sec ^ TTon of Ohio arc much alarmed over j the appearance of swarms of young "I grasshoppers. ?Ex-Attorney-General Brewster is j," said to attribute his wife's death large| ly to overwork in discharging social ^ dGtics. e ?Police Sergeant Brooks, of Richi inond, Va., was shot while attempting r. to arrest a burglar who was trying to t> board a train. L- ?The Duke of Portland, with a s million and a quarter annually from d J ground rents alone, is (he richest p nobleman in Britian. ?No settlement of the labor troubles on the Southwestern Railroads is in sight; the striking contagion seems to . be spreading. ?Henry Scott, a negro, sentenced to LS be hanged, at Wilmington, for rape has had his sentence commuted to iinprisl ment for life. ?Miss Cleveland will not rcsnme tolher lunches to wives of Congressman be 1 until after Lent. The stag dinners fefssji! "0 on a'.i UoutM^e. . g&ggr-110 ?"Git!-Sorrel", Stonewall Jackson's l* war horse, is dead; the skin is to be 1_ stuffed and the skeleton moantcd and :e kept in the Confederate Soldiers' Home in Richmond. ?The linseed oil mills of Varnev, Taylor & Co., Toledo, Ohio were buna last week, involving a loss of $100,000. An explosion occurred which dumaged buildings several blocks off. j. ?John Gillespie, colored, murdered t3 the wife of Capt. Thos. Cray, near fg ' Lionaon, lenn., stole a norse and ran n off, but was overhauled and lynched ? Mrs. Mary Wileman, a comely >f womati of forty, has been convicfed of e poisoning her husband at Lit tle Valley, e X. Y., and sentenced to be hanged on r- the 30ih April. 0 ?It is said that Secretary Lamar reccntlv rebuked Colonel Ingersoll for 13 his aggressive infidelity, and expressed a hope that he would some day become a Christian preacher. 'ii ?L. G. Dewilt, a New York drum! mer, fell from the ice mound at Niagara L' Falls and was killed, but his body e could not be recovered for two davs>, although plainly visible. ?A six-vear-old child of Joseph Taylor, in Clay county, Tennessee, accidentally killed her father wluie handling a pistol in his presence last y Fridav. ?Emma Norman, a young woman, shot and killed Ilenrv ArnoJd,a grocer s in Memphis, Tenn., whom she charge? e with her ruin. Arnold has recently married another woman. The mar3 deress was arrested. ~ ?Canada has 1. ; first colored lawyer, V. Delos Davis. lie could not reach the bar in the regular way by ' reading in the office of an attorney, as j! no attorney would t<?ke him, but a special act admitted him. ?Mrs. S. A. Co.xe will in a few days - receive the keys ot her handsome dweltiiirr rr>(v>nftv prfftffl 5i? Orpprivillo Ir 3 is in the Queen Anne style of ar:hitece ture and is said to be the OnesL dwell- j s ing in the np-conntrv. i ?The building in Salisbury, N. C., i - occupied by Bauerbannt's book store | - and I he Jsorth Carolina Herald was i s J partly bnmt bv a hall-witted negro' ? called "Crazy Bill," who was mortally j t wounded by policctnen while tr\ ing to ! - escape. 1 ?The Republicans are being worsted " ??i t VlO > It fVin rtofirtn Iw* 1 Ill L14 V/ liltvi UlrtUJVU WJiUV?CIC> LfL" r tween the President and the Senate.! 1 The Duskiu case on which the fight is j made, is a rotten one, and the trap of Edmunds was well concocted. ?The officers of the steamer Oregon are showing up badly in the accounts of the wreck. The New York Times thinks that the saving of nine hundred people from the disaster was owing more to good luck than to good management. ?The House committee on educa-; tion has agreed to report favorably a i ' bill introduced by Representative I t Smalls, of South Carolina, to provide : > for the redemption and sale of school ; farm lands now held in Beaufort cuun| i ty by the United States, r ?Dr. Ansiin Flint died of auonlexv 11 at his residence in Fifth avenue, JSfew ; [ York. He was born in Massachusetts in 1812, bnt his professional life was I mainly passed in New York. He was, ' perhaps, the most eminent physician in the United States. t ?McCormick, Abbeville county, is in a mass over its recent municipal [ election. Only thirty-five votes were i cast, ami since the election twenty-two t men have made affidavit that they I voted for a certain man for iniendanf, I onrl etill TC<1? not. IVPPfwl- 1 " "" i ? Business failures throughout the ; country during1 the last week, as re, ported to R. (i. Dn:i & Co., number ' for the United States 190, Canada 35, total 225, a<jai:i*t 239 last week and 246 the week previous. The gradual dc ; cline in this country srin continues, but in Canada failures seem to increase j as spring opens. Ensilage fur Stock. .V EEMKDy F.ili HAKU TIMES? LET OCR FAS* M fclli) 1 ill# ati0U?IIU.>0 WJ! TAIN ED HEISEiy. I We wish t<> n'^e most carefully tip! on our farmer friends tiie imtmrtauce | of putting up ensilage every year, | with which lo feed their 3tock. ExI perionce bus proved it to be the beat and cheapest food that can he fed to cattle, and every farmer ought to use j it. The silo?, :ire buildings, formerly pits, in which the green food (called I ensilage) is kept. In order that our I i- * 4 y ? j limners ni.iv Know now 10 maKe meir j silt 13 <.ve copy the following letter j writlen to the Richmond Dispatch by I .Mr. C. \Y. Garrett, of Halifax county, I North Carolina. He relates his own i experience anil his letter ought to be I carefully read, and every farmer j ought to build one or more silos. The ! following is Mr. Garrett's letter: Enfikld, Halifax County, N. C-, December 3,1885. My Dkar Snt:? I am just in receipt of your favor of the 27th ultimo, inquiring about my experience with en silage. I gladly comply: I Lave been catting up ensilage and my experience causes me to value it more ami luore highly as I learn, how to talce care of it more cheaply. Yvhen I built my first silos, in the summer of 1SS0. the idea was that only those built of cement or biick, 411 the ground, would answer the purpose, and costing at least $5 per ton to build. Now they are bnilt upon the top of the grouud, entirely of ! wood and earth, and at n cost of 75 1 " \#. >.? cents to $1 per toil. These keep the. ensilage as well as those constructed of cement or brick, and much more convenient, and involve less labor to feed from. I Lave two wood silos, built in 1881, above ground, and holding 180 tons, both costing not I more than $125, which are now in good order and full of ensilage, and have been filled every year since they were built. The contents, without exception, have beep fed in good condition. The silos I built in 1880, (of cement below ground), held 125 tons, and cost me about $3 per ton. These also have been filled every year since ?sometimes twice a year?and the ensilage was not any better preserved i K -i? Unilf n f ttTAA/1 Qin/IA T. UltUJ 111 t UUOC UUilb VI VVU. . k/iu wv A be^an to make ensilage, in the fall of 1880,1 liaye fed my horses, mules and cows almost exclusively on it, and. have yet to see any bad results from it; on tbe contrary, I have beeu able to keep them in much better condition than before I commenced its use. In the year 1879 I had nine mules and horses, and about as many cattle, and besides the long forage I could * ? P T VI conveniently maue on my lann, i pai? out over $700 for hay, bought by the car-load in Richmond. I am now feeding fifteen head of horses and mules and thirty head of cattle, and pay out nothing for hay, and my farm is no larger than it was then. The extra manure I now produce pays me fully, I am persuaded, for the cost of the ensilage. I use corn and cow-yea vines exclusively Jar en-, siln.ge ?the former I use is cheaper; the latter makes the best ensilage. For the past three years I have used corn constantly for this purpose, after it was sufficiently matured to - 1. ?? ?L. 1 sustain no injury, wuen uie uxaaes were ripe enough for fodder. I pull the corn, then, cut the stalk down to the ground?blades on?haul and cut them in three-quarter inch lengths, and pack in the silo; then weight as usual. This makes a very desirable food; the stock all like it, and I have never seen any bad effects from it. During the three veal's named I have put up 100 per year from this source, 3Iv experience is that land producing five ban els of corn to the acre will make five tons ol ensilage, or a ton to | the barrel. I regard the ensilage as : more valuable than .the com, and the I cost of outline it into the silo is less J than seventy-five cents per ton. I grow 110 corn exclusively for ensilage; most of it made iu tbe United States 1-- / *1. _ i is irom corn grown expressly ior iue purpose. I am of the opinion that at the time I cut it it is as valuable for. ensilage as at any period of its growth ?her.ce a great saving in making a crop of corn and ensilage?I see th it j others are adopting this plan to advantage. My great plant for ensllag? is tbe ordinary field or cow-pea. Of this I put up ahout 200 tons yearly, and it j is greatly preferred by .mv stock to J that made of com. . This pea crop I grow chiefly after wheat and oats. I j break the land as s?oon as the wheat | is taken ofi, then plant in drills tliree ] .'eet apart, eight to twelve peas'in a j lull, using the Eureka corn planter, I dropping even- twenty mctoes; side i them up once or twice, if need be and i grass is troublesome; jdant from the [ 25m of June to the 10th of July,which tiives ample time for the maturity of i the plant for ensilage, producing fbona five to ten tons per acre, at a cost not exceeding $1.50 per ton, worth 25 per cent, more in feed value than, com at any stage of its growth. With this plant properly utilized witli tbo system of ensilage, the South can feed and raise sheep, cattle, moJes and horses as cheaply as any portion of the United States, except tLe-very far West. This fac will be demonstrated someday. I have often seen published a statement that-corn stalks or any other suitable mateiial made good enRi'ln<re without chonnincr ud fine with O ' ~ 11 W 4 a cutter. "For fear of loss I have been afraid to try il. A neighbor who built a silo three years ago had his silo, machinery and cuttrr burnt up List winter. The silo was rebuilt last summer and filled with corn stalks, pea vines, uncut. This ensilage is as. good as any I have ever seen?sweeter than mine, which was cut fine, and is little more trouble to take from the silo than that cat fine. I shall put up a large portion of mine next year without cutting. This fact renders it possible for every former who makes a one-horse crop to put up ensilage, as the great bar of their doing so was the outlay of money for cutter, machinery, kc. This may all be obviated now. The only outlay required is the building of a silo, at a cost of not over $1 per ton. and which anyone can do, of mechanical c&pacitj*, without the help of a skilled mechanic. Knowing its emit value. I earnestly hope the O ' t. r ? Southern people will adopt this system. It is an outrage that, having such advantages, we should be so dependent. That oar friends may not go wrong in the construction of tb? ' above | ground silo I will, here give a de-1 I c/>rir>firm r?f if. m flptail; These silos I ! were built in 1881, and have been fillj ed four time*, the ensilage beiog j well preserved. First, I dug a trench | for foundation sills 43 feet lori>*, 14 i wide and 8 inches deep. Into these 11 put the .sills, of white oak, all he'irt, j 10 inches square, framing a sill of the | same size across the midcHe. This j i makes the foundation for two silos, ! inside measure 20 feet long by 12 teet ! wide. I put studs of heart oak into i l fan foat liiricf f a*ii hv kit \ t near oiuo, wvu *\-w V *? ?? . inches, two feot apart, intending the j silos to be 10 feet deep, then with, j i one-inch plank boarded up each side,! studs being 10 fc** 'ngh,fill the spaces ; between the stui.3 and inner and out- [ er walls "of plank with sand (paw-dust will answer, as well), thus making an air-tight, wall, which is all that is necessary. bpwever it fhay be done. The 6 feet of studding above the walls or 1 body of the silo is necessary for the j puipose of filling, tramping,, weightj ing, &c. I have one "door to each i silo at the outer end, made l>v having tiie two muldie stuas axeez apart. 10 these bang two doors 18 inches wide, 5 feet long to the inner edge of ituds, the doozs to open outward. Then close the' doors and nail on boards to outer edge of studs, and fill between! doors and boards, with earth, and voa j have the same wall as the other parts ; "of the silo. When you wish to open.i the doors rio off the boards in front." when the earth falls and tlie doors! open outward, exposing the ensihige.! Of course, the studs are framed into I plates &)x>ve, which should be done j in a substantial maiiner, jis th&pres-f sure from weighting the silo is quite I Mvere. My roofs extend 3 feet be-j 3'ond the sides and ends, to prevent j rain from being blown in on the ensilage. "After filling the silo I first cover the ensilage with inch-plank, placing of tliem down lengthwise; then cover these with pine or wheat | straw to' prevent earth' or sand from J getting in; then cover with earth 18 : inches deep and you may rest ussorect r that yov$ ensilage is safe. I prefer j 'common earth for weighting, for two reasons?first, it is.more easily handled; and second it excludes the,air. better than anything else.. When : feeding fhe ensilage first take out the J front doors from bottom to top, ' about two feet; then on each side, [ .until the end is taken out; then put: in good substantial props to hold the i planks and keep the weight from bending them down, which repeat, propping every 3 feet as the ensilage i is takeft out, .until the whole is exhausted Care should be taken that this propping be well done, otherwise the plants above may give way and j endanger the-safety of the feeders. , It has been well said that "our ] people must learu to grow everything! for man and bea-i before tbey can j claim to be self-Bast aining;" and more, they must learn to make it without ; runnin*":in debt. No general pros- ] perity can "prevail until we can mate] what we consume be/ore we consume i it Easy credits will destroy, any j people; ft demoralizes the thrifty and "makes paupers of the unthrifty. Very truly yours, To Mr. John Ork, Secretary, &c. Richmond, Va. Two Brothers Murdered. A special from Salem, Boauoke county,. Virginia, . says: A horrible double murder was committed on BackOeek, this; county, Wednesday night. A man named Griffey, who has a wife living ?u Back t;reek% liad j just returned from Texas,?where, it is allejyedjbe served, a.term, in the penitentiary. His wife refused, to recognize him, and learning tbat John and PickeH MetZy-sons of William . "Metz, had been vifitibg his wife, in his absence, Griffey went to their home, called one of Uie ypung^en, out and shot him through the lieart. . He then entered thehonseand ehot the other young man through the. right breast. The murdered youtig men *were aged respectively about seventeen and cigaxiccu *CU:SL? ?iTiDg Ludwig.of~ Bavaria ha? again raided a storm of indignation by ordering the erection of two new. VaUoear. A STATEMENT OF FACTS FOR THE PUBLIC TO CONSIDER. Atlanta, Ga., Janaery 12,1885. Emerfjinir fioma swere and long spell : of typhoid ferer, X dfcfcorered that the r 2? i~ t.:~K locr iizm sebucu JII caused it to swefl to an enormons siie, | remaining so .quite three years, resisting! ail treatment. A small juicer finally made its appearance a little above the ankle which refused -toheal to any and allextern&l application and the use of the iuosL<~ at-ted bl' Od poison remedies. 'She ulcer. continue! to enlarge, frequently discharging perhaps, as much as a enpfut o/ pus'or "matter per day . The sfee of the'iileer was about two inches in diameter, extending, to^a-depth; near the I bone.' At one time ft appeared, that, the ! flesh in a8 contiguous parts, " would surely become a running 8or^_ as its peculiarly flabby, spotted "and unhealthy condition j : dearly iudicated, and it was intimated i that I nUjgit lose~my ie? My condition | becoming so critical* and the ulcer ehlarg-j ing so rapidly; we sent for Dr. J. P. Dromgoole, whojmade a thorcugn examination, and said that the flesh, on my leg for six. Inches around the sore would soon sloagh of if notremediedj^hat I must have'my h leg bandaged daily and commence the use oris. B. eT^' - ? -*~7."" " X acted according to his instructions, and ' after usuing the second bottle, the ulcer looked fresfi and healthy and commenced j healing. I Continued: the use of B. 'B; B., and to the greatest astonishment and. satisfaction of myself and friends,-the ulcer ! continued to heal rapidly; and is now en uiviy wen, ana i am ?nw;KQingTO my ouai- _ ness at W. H. Brotherton'g store. I do j not hesitate to recommend B..B. B. as a , wonderful, speedy and. effectual Wood purifier, far superior to anything else I J ever used/* 1 refer toW. IL Brotherton, W. B. Cone, Major D. A. Cook, Dr. J. L. Pinson and others of Atlanta W. M. CHESHIRE. CONSUMPTION. Ite??*w8treieiaeti#er?i*e>ernllee?ie;6Tlu- I ma* rtiKoiTi?f jroot tisd^ai of Ions dv*o?trongUttyfidtfa'i laiu*aeaex>tuui win nmhu kuulm rn&t. torttiut wttfcVf* 1-5 UUiTJULinSX on thl* Claw to%nj taSt'm. Glr?w?r?fnd T O.iMr u. ?XT-A.K<?CWrUVr?Ml8C?X?*X?t*_ I I 3 : Did you S?pwvs> Mrt<ttancr: Liniment onlv ffOOd i 2 jr.?- ?r - = - ? < v . I lor horses? - It is* for inflanima- ;, t?oa-o? all fiesSfc.. | ! FOR COUGHS AND CROUP US? TAYLOR'S mulleiikr, Tl? HMt pnn. u gathered frra a tree of the ?kbo axme, growing along the cn?H itreanu in tie Soothers St&tei, eontaiai a edrnn'itlng expectorant principle Out iooseni the phlagra prodraiag the earl* morning cou^h. and ?ttaulates the child to throw off the false membrane in croap and vhooplnj-cocgfc. .When combined with the healing crcc!iaginoni principle in the mullein plant of the old Selda. prelect* la T*tio*'* Cxxzoxxx Bxvxsr or Swrxr Cm axd Mcusnr the flne? kco*n remedj for Conehi, Crcup, VhooplB^Coosh and Cotuuraption; and so paUtahle. any ehild is pleaaed to take it. Ask rosr 4rneci?t for it. Pries, 2ge.?ad$l, WALTZRA. TAYIQB, Atlanta. 6a. Uh DR. BIGGEHS" El'CKLESEREY CORDIAL tot Wcrhcea. Dy*eaJery and Children Teethiaj. For tale tj '^4rucciJi8e j ? T , I Trade Mark. | iaihel^lnc ?roy.m?Coun!ries of Europe, j ftertSB cfthisMsdicaledWncis universal, j It is composed of tlio most approved VEGETABLE TOH'CS, | which, areintrcducedinto a pure , generous"Wiuc. The very finest | | L(KiCIM:S?X.43A2S,! "being its medicalbasis.ilis conndemdly i recommended as a euro aad preventive of i FEVER and AGUE,. andali other diseases originating from - malarious causes **s" ' j For purifying the BLOOD mdimproving the Secretions,Chronic, Rheumatism,Bio odpoisonini.a certain; I enrB-fbrDyspepsia,Crafflp inthe stomach.! ?- n j O-i:-, i ailimmeuiaiereuei jwr uy3Siit,ry,uuiiu,i Cholera-morbus and kindred diseases, i General Weakness,Nervous and Mental .. Debility, a souvcreignreme<fyfcr Liver j C9mplairrt.and diseases of the Kfdnles.an ! excellent appetizer; and a TONIC without a rival;* j? in shortvTcr invigorating aiiihe functions j ofthe system,it is unequalled, j ?JD O S 23 ? A small Wine-glassfull.three times a day. I ' Sold by all Druggists and dealers generally.! TOPAZ CINCHONA CORDIAL CO., SaleJjc^^^^^^^^^cjuzfacturerf. i ^*J5rst, <S Treas^ SPARTANBURG. S.C. ! Price per Bottle -$1.00. j NEW AprmisMENii L.1 ^T-*3tf?iiD t0 work fQ?,JJL;.AifUiP'J. own homes.. % . 55!Wr,f^ ~Ji easily m^d^no ouhv-fssinsr?fasrtnatlnsr aod s.eady employment. Par ileum rs and saiBDleof the work senrfor sfoinp. Atlu'ress HOME M'F'N CO., P. O. Box 1316, Bostou. ilass. WE WANT SALESMEN* pv.^rywh^re, local aad tr.i.v?::a3'. to sell our poods. \V1I* p-iy jr?od salary and expenses. Wilxc lor terms at once. :ia:i state salary wanted. A : dress STANDARD SILVER WARE COMAANY, Waslii gioa Sir--et, Boston, Mass. : XXT A \TT I? 1 -LADIES lo work VvAiN 1 iiJ . f?r us at their own homes, S7 toSlO per w?*k can In* quietly made. No photo painting; no canvassing. For full particulars, ph-ate address at once, CRESEXT ART COMP-.NT, 10 Central Street, Boston, JIass. Box 5170. DEAPIESR itM CAfST'S and CriiE. - by'o*>e wbr? was den? twary-?lcrht years; Treated by west or noi.-d .-oeolalk-ts of tile flay with no besen*. C?r<?1 himxeff In tlxree mouths, urid biace 'hea liu::<Javls of uiu?y rviunr ]'i.i oiiiipj-- <11111 succassiul horn;* trf.jiinf.ar." Art'irr-ss T S. PAGE, 1*8 E.-t -2>:tU S;.. X w york Cir.y, TTube~fIt1T When I ?ay cur? I do rot mean ?crcl7 to ttop tfcea for a ttee and then bare th?'t: rrrrin sr.-!n. I jnein aw^irsJ cure. I have made the disease oCPlT.-. tPILEPoX or TALKING SICKNESS a life-low:study. I warrant wr renc tv to core the worst cues. Uecacic others Lave iaiVi Is r.o nvion for n t now rcrelvlns a cure. S-n-1 ?t fr-oe for a treatise end a Free Buttle of my inf.iUU lc rrnsc'.v. S.ra Expres* *nd Post OCire. It rivets too n*tfctas !'<iv *1, and I will cure j oa. CK. K. G. UOOT, US Pc-rl at., Faker's Tonic A Pure Family Medicine That >"e\\r Intoxicates. HISCOX A" CO., - ~ 163 William Street, iew York. Sold t>y nil Dni-'cl^rs iu ?u-^-: bottl .- a' o.oe Doll ir. * ' M. ashley Sbkj / ' : r r t / i: i The Solubk- Guano is ;v highly concentrate irailc Fertilizer for all crops. * . ASHLEY COTTON ANO COHX COilP two cropl and also largely us d by the True ASH LET AS II ELEMENT.-A very che; lilizer for Cotton, Corn and Small Grain Or Vines, etc. ASHLEY DISSOLVED BONE; ASHLE arcades?for use alone and in Compost heap For Terms, Directions, Testimonials, and publications of the Company, address THE ASHLEY PHOSI Nov25i,ly srCUBES?Diphllieri*, Croup, Asthna, Broachitia, aoarseaess. Infltteasa,' Hacking Conch,WhcoptasCo Dl^rrticea. Kldaey Troubles. andSpi:-.al Jiscaaee. Par woaidorfal discovery, No other Js* Tii2 infomatlon arosi sllla. Find out about them and you -ccili alxays be rroe. Sold everywhere, or scat by m.ii 1 for 25c. In s**r* |he?daa'a ^Conuirion?- g If ^ g ^ s? jrivea with food, isl 3 8l k t* ?3 BBI Sola everywhere, or sect by mm} for 25 cent: in stam six cans by express, prepaid, for SO.CC. ' V\ 3 li /^1 Ol ^8 *^iear d&m ^ is only a part of beauty; ; but it is a part Every lady i may have it; at Jeast, what looks like it. Magnolia Balm both freshens and beautifies. r ... . . . "M0TE1ES' " . j BmagasmM ! FE.I33MD!" fgggBBgaBBHBSBgai NO More Tenor! I.2** 03l!/. it-lie t'.ir.e of labor and jlessens the intensity danger to life of both 48** 1 W?a t mother and cliiid, and j iter? -anger. jeaves the mother in a condition highly fa vuriiuie w ic* ! ,r ,, covery, .and far less ; Mother or vflliu. -liable to flooding, coi. "vulsions, and other . lalanulngsymptoms incident to slow or ! The Dread of jKiinful labor. Its i _ - ... t _ , tiuly wonderful effica; Mothei* nooa;cy in tliis respect en" titles it to be called Transiomn-d to jTHE MOTHER'S FIJI END and to be E* 1? .'Kinked as one of the W St life-saving remedies " ,of the nineteenth cenx * ' itury. ?nd From the natnre of ! c. -the case it will* of i ?^ r course be understood III V V/ that we cannot pub: V / I . ilisli certilieates concerning this Remedy , without wwundinjr the the writers. ' ??.,i have hundreds j Sa.etj and:Easetestimonials on j ^ _^rr^- ' ^ie? 2U(* D0 mo^ier -?~ who has once' used it ! __ wiii ever ayain be Sufferinc Wonan without it in her time \ jaf trouble. ^ i A prominent physician lately remarked ! to the proprietor, that if it were admissible _ ttto nuke public the Tetters \ve receive, the "Mothers' Friend" would outsell anything | on tho market. j Gknti.i:mkx:?During my career in the i practic-- yl nieuicine I us?-.. your "MOTI1: BirS FRIEND" in a areat number of f'casesy witlrtise hapniest results in every instance. It-makcs labor easy, hastens deI liveiy and recovery, and insukes safety 1 to ijotii motheh A5D child. No woman i pan be induced to^ro through the ordeal . without it alter once using it. | ! - fours'truly, T. E. PENNINGTON, M. D. Palmetto, Ga., June 10,1S84. Send for our Treatise on "Health and i Happiness of Woman," mailed free. L ; ? Bkadfield Kegulatob Co., [ 1" " Atlanta, Ga. 1 Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta ff. K SCHEDULE IN EFFECT OCTOBEB 4, | O 188.},?Eastern Standard Time. ! 1, GOING NORTH. I NO. 53, MAIL. AND EXPRESS. Leave Augusta 9.10 a. m. Leave W. C. &. A. Junction 1.12 p. m. . Arrive at Columbia 1.22 p. m. Leave Columbia.. 1.32 p. m. j Leave Killian's 1.58 p. m. Leave Biytliewood 2.13 p. m : Leave Riil-reway 2.34 p. m. j Leave Sii!ip3<aCs 2.47 p. m. 1 I r~ ~r rrir<sTitta%> " flv r> m Uiiite.3.22 p! in. Leave Woodward's... JN?- 3.4:5 p. m. ' Leave Biackstock .'? ^ 3.50 p. m. Leave Cornwall's s^v3.58 p. m. i Leave Chester m;y~- v Leave Lewis' 4.3?p?lfl. Leave Smith's 4.40 p. m. , Leave Hock HilJ 4.56 p. m. Leave Fort Mill .5.20 p, m. _ Leave Pineville. 5.40 p. m. : Arrive at Charlotte 6.00 p. m Arrive at Siatesville 9.35 p. m ! - GOING SOUTH. ; - HKJ. , A1 AILAniLSJ. Leave Statesville 7.45 a. m. Leave Charlotte 1.00 p. m , Leave Pinrville 1.27 p. m Leave Fort Mill 1.44 p. m. ! Jjeave Rock Hill 2.02 p.m. \ Leave Siaith's -r. 2.22 p. m. Leave Lewis' 2.30 p m. Leave Chester 2.44 p. m. Leave Cornwall's .".03 p. m. T.c.lVP Rl;iri;xl<vL- __ :iT>n m Leave Woodward's 3.18 p. m. Leave White Oak. 3.30 p. m. Leave Wmnsborn. 3.48 p. m.- W Lcavy Simpson's 4.03 p. re. " Leave Rt< leeway .4.1(5 p. m. Leave Blytliewobd 4.3-2 p. nu Leave Kiilian's 4.49 p. m Arrive at Columbia 5.15 p. m. iit-ave Columbia 5.25 p.m. Leave W. C. & A. Junction 5.57 p. m. Arrive at Augusta 0.38 p. m. Connection is now made at Chester (by trains 52 and 53) for Lancaster and intermediate points on C. & C. R. R., and for ? _ all points on C. & L. li. Li. as far as Newton, N. C. C. W. CITEAllS, Assist. G. P. A. J G. R. TALCOTT, Superintendent. D. CARD WELL. A. G. P. A. Wo-clitim.to iiave Uvken more premiums with our Jacks, -J^nru-ts and Saddle-stock than any breeders in Tennessee. Fair Ground,"Kashviile, Tenn. Da. L. \V. KNIGHT, SON & CO. Mention this paper. Febl3L8t jble Guano. sd Anmordated Guano, a comnlete. TTi<7h OUND ?A complete Fertilizer for ihese kers near (jlnricaton for vegetables, etc. ap and excellent Xon-Ammoniaied Fercps, and also for Fruit Trees, Grape Y ACID PHOSPHATE, of very Hifrb for the various attractive and instructive >HATE CO., Charleston, S. C. , Steurolgia, Bheaznatism, Bleeding at the Lanes, ugh. Catarrh. Cholera Morbus, Dysentery, Chronic aphlet free. Dr. L S. Johnson St Co., Boston, Maas. MAKE fi I 1 E SEW, BICS g& 1 1 | BLOOD. I 1 la is W sjs^ssassa--Jsafaj?'.,a?s \?"?*.&Sfg?$&ic?!g&i?S&? ' ? .???ct.>"r?g ?n ???rth B n ? P g3 ? fSxein mnXti hens las B ^ R K8 W all dissaae^of fae;?. <w mm* m tm doojs oy mail tree, ps. 21-4 lb. air-tigbt tin cans, ?1; by mail, $1.20 SB. ITS. JOa^SOlJ L CO.. Boctoa.