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W WBB W^W BIRTH OF THE CONFEDERACY, j"? A GLANCE BACK TO THE DAYS OF P1 iTVl' VVAt?? 1^11 I !' ' i >1 X>_^ A l-ll ? I> 1 ?V >/ . . | e> Scenes at the Inauguration of President ! ?J^?Terson Daris?Tlie First ConCciIerate J Money, the First Flaj;, the Firs>t Sf?i<liers and the First Cruiser. i ec ()!/?/<. Letter to the _Yetc York World.) : s> "2io, sir, I was not with Mr. Davis T at Montgomery this week to hear him ; hi pronounce what you are p'cased to-cnll : ~ th~ funeral oration of the Confederacy. j j'j I was tfcerc witn mm twemy-uvu years j u ago and heard hiir. m?ke a speech j r.i much more cheerful. It was Lis inau- j gural as President?the baptismal scr-1 ^ vice you might call it?of thc Con fed- j j!( eraey. I was one of thc marshal's1 aids on that occasion, and represented j South Carolina." j Thc speaker, chatting with a group I tj of his friends ::i the parlor of the ! ^National Hotel, was Col. Henry D. ^ Capers, of Georgia. lie has beer, here j for several months and his erect figure ; a ar.d gallant bea. iug are much re- j marked. He was private secretary of j ^ the fust Confederate secretary of the j treasury, and his reminiscences of thc ; < babvhood of that short-lived Govern-j ^ merit arc an interesting' volume. The i " bitterest Northerner cannot begrudge the pathos in the spectacle of Jefferson Davis, a solitary old man, grey and h feeble, standing up to speak in the e memorial service of the rebellion, t upon th? steps o? the very Capitol S where he first"stood forth its chief, in e the prime of his manly strength and a the iirst flush of its hopes, on the 18th t February, 1861. Iio*v many he must ( miss of the high-hearted, hot-blooded i s Southern chivalry who stood proudly t around him that day! i rnu- 10il. 1CC1 tt-oc o t J. lit; -lorn Ul A'cuiucn>, iuv ij uno n | v beautiful Southern clay, says Col. 1 Capers. The sun beamed down on t the natal occasion like a happy father, t and a soft southwest wind was lifting c the leaves of the magnolia that twined s with the laurel in many a large festoon 1 about the Corinthian columns of the ( capitol. An immense concourse of f people gathered to the inauguration, i but so solemn were the ceremonies i and so earnest were the people, that < Col. Capers, sitting on horseback in 1 the outskirts of the throng, heard dis- i tiuctiy every woru 01 cue eioquem opening prayer of Dr. Manly. The I venerable divine and Vice-President- ) elect Stephens rode in the carriage 1 with Mr. Davis, and llowell Cobb, ; president of the convention, adminis- i tered the oath ot office. Mr. Davis *poke his inaugural quietly, but dis- 1 tiuctiy, and upon taking the Oath ] raised his eyes towards heaven and i repeated the concluding words, "So < help rue God," iu a tone so strong aud clear that they could be heard by * every one present There was a re- ! ception that night and a brilliant ball. < C. Or. Memmiiiirer, of South Carolina, 1 was appointed secretary of the treasu- j1 rv, and on ihe 20th Col. Capers, whom j' he selected as his private secretary, | opened their office in the Commercial building. The accommodations were limited, but convenient There was a banking office on the ground floor. The ^tate, treasury, war, navy and law departments of the new government settled down in the twelve rooms 1 ou the second story, none of them very : large. Young Capers took possession of their office, swept out the cobwebs J ; and dust himself, got in a few articles 11 of furniture, tacked a card ou the; door, hired an office boy and waited ; two whole days before anybody carrie : to do business. Then came a tall, soldierly-looking man with uii eager step and the unmistakable air of business. He wanted to see the secretary at once upon an im***?= ?' portant matter." lie Handed the young private secretary an official note and hurriedly said: " "I am Capt. Deas, sir, late of the ( United States aj-mv. I have been in- 1 structed by President Davis, whose 1 note I hand you, to provide rations | and blankets for one hundred men who have reported to him for duty in ; the army. 1 want the money, sir, to 1 carry out the order of the President." : ' Col. Capers assured the Captain that I he was both willing and anxious the < aieii should he filled and covered, but l he added, shaking out a purse that i contained something less than $5: 1 "I have been on considerable of a ! frolic lor the last two weeks in Mont- < goinery, and my finances are at this ' moment pretty low. This is all the ' money I am able to vouch for as being 1 in the treasury department of the 1 Confederate States at this time." s Patriotism couldn't be allowed to go } unfed and uublanketed, however, and after some delay the money was raised 1 ou the private credit of Mr. ]\Iem- ? minger. The soldiers thus equipped were a company of Georgians, com- 1 manded by Capt. George Washington s Lee. They were the first body of ( troops enlisted by the Confederacy. ' When their provisional Congress * provided for a loan of $15,000,000 "to 5 meet, the emergencies of Government," * they thereby provided another emer- 1 geiicy. The Government had no paper to print their bonds, certificates and notes upon. They managed to get the y.l.C/\4* /\K rnAriox* U1J1U1 VI iiivtiv; vivuiv very well, but stuck last a while for ( lack of what is usually comparatively 1 valueless. The paper mills of the < South made ouiy the ordinary news- c paper and the common wrap pi ug i paper of the shops. The finer manu- ? factories of the country lay north of ] the line of separation. G. B. Lamar, i president of the Bank of the llepnblic, ^ in New York, acting as agent for the a Confederate Government, arranged to r have the work done by the American c Bank Note Company, but when the c bonds and notes were all handsomely t ^ printed and ready to be shipped the e ? secret service officers of the National 1; Government swooped down and con- j fi^cated the whole batch. The diffi- t' culty of finding paper and engravers 4 was not solved until after tfte removal j i or the Government from Montgomery I to Richmond. The Richmond paper u mills were finally able to furnish a sort !i ; of bank-note paper, but the first issue i; was printed by a firm of German o engravers in Richmond on paper smuggled through the lines from Baltimore. The first proof-sheet, of eight one-hundred dollar bills, was far a from handsome, but they were in a ]{ hurry and they approved it. It is now v in ioe possession 01 *^oi. supers, anu j t< bears upon the back of it this inscrip- " tion, madeat the time, in the hand- j; writing of Secretary Memminger: "When the money-changers" become # familiar with the peculiar features of jj these uncanny biis it will be as difficult e to pass a counterfeit as if they were j ]: engraved on steel by au expert; may- rj be more so." " g Secretary Memminger seems to c] Lave been both a wit and a phiioso- v. pher. Unattractive as they were in appearance and uncertain in the promise they expressed, they passed at par in sev- 1" eral seaports of Dixie "for at least a 7[ month,'- as Col. Capers carefully puts . J* Koftni. Inm- *' S<-V??rni ! ^ lLy aiUl UiV> ? V4 V. ICCUV\U . ? V?\?. I large biiis of exchange were bought tj, in London and Paris at par. But the ^ financial boom of the Confederacy q, didn't last long. When it came 10 be fr August, *61, the Canal and Citizens' ir banks in New Orleans were the only v? ones handling Confederate money at yc par. On the 9th of August even they suspended specie payments, notifying the Kichmond authorities of their of intention two days in advance by a fo private cipher dispatch. Col. Capers tn l? the- original of this cii>putch, in j the st. louis tragedy. irbuancu ui wniiw. iu? ..^v Particulars of thc Killing of Preller, adc quite a saving speculation for ( Which MuxWcll is on Trial. jeli bv bining up s-all the foreign! iciiair'e it could lav its hands on in j The trial of Hugh M. Brook?, a ew Orleans, Mobile, Savannah, I Maxwell, for the murder of Mr. P harleston and Richmond during the ier began in the criminal court at vo davs of "race. Louis on the 10th instant Col. Capers's recollection of those On January 19, 1885, Hugh irly davs of the war are a continuous Brooks, a young solicitor of Stockp. orv of makeshifts and expedients. Chesire, England, decamped from he" voung Government iived from home, taking with him sundry t md"to mouth. One of the first naval rowed articles, ainohg which wa [Seers to report for duty was Raphael stereoplicon belonging to Mr. 5; t-mmes, afterwards commander of botham. On February 3 Brooks 1 ie Alabama. He was on hand before a passenger oil the steamer Cepkalo lev had a deck for hint to stand on, bound for America, having embar iid worked for a short time in the at Liverpool. On the steamer he casury department at .Montgomery. iiimmncuu, ?i usvcims ea . merchant vessel was soon bought nian for the firm ot J. B. Dixon & ( iid Scmrne?, after inspecting her, Bradford, who was coming1 to named to Montgomery aud announc- United States in the interest of lI to his leilow-clerk, (Jol. Capers: employers. Preller was aesthetic "She is a good craft, sir, a good his tastes, a lovnr of music, dec rat?. When I .have strengthened her j imbued with religious feeling, and mbers and cut her down to lighting a email way a reformer of depra ..-..r Tt-^i-,1 chr> TV-ill fin [ human nature. The acunaints ruve work ' thus accidentally formed on board s She was' accordingly altered and i Maxwell cultivated assiduously, rased and, with Sernmes on her j when the pair landed in New Y< uarter-deck, wade good his prediction on February 22, they were intin j the dire cost of such as went down friends. Brooks represented him ^ the .sea in ships under the Stars and to Preller as a physician, and gave tripes in those davs. The vessel was name as W. II. Lennox M&xv \xq Stimcer. ' From New York they went to Bos semmes whittles for his papers. where they were for some time , , ., , get her. It was at this time that But when she was read} to sail and wejj ^egau looking for a dead b ier register made out, it was discov- alld flirting with the young ladie red at the last moment that the ^rs (;00k'S boarding-house on W reasurv department of the Confederate ct..oof J tales had iio seal. There wasn't an ^^sinessTalled Preller to Phila v.^raver to be found m Montgomery, p],ja {,ut tjje vounor men con espor aid bemrnes was impatient jet his ?verv day. Maxwell always addi ,apers and be off. *o he and Col. ed Preiier as "iMy dear Arthur," ?apcii., aided by a handy yonng aimy gavc him the history of each day. urgeon, and at the expense of two or talked learnedly oflhe cases he hicc pcnknive_s caived^ a lude seal treatinsr. discoursed r.hilosonhicall i,K>,i a piece 01 boxwood, wmcn met t|ie yi-jatioll 0f nature's'laws, .he immediate need. Seinmes got Ins (bo a ?.ip to Australia e^tstet , and the set ^il umlei ab0ut suit him. At this time he he Stars and liar.--. 1 hcie wa> quite a -tu sorri l;ee,i 0f funds, lie wanle line over the adoption of that flag. A ^f h!s bfc , b considerable number were iiiiavor or .he'stcrcoptkon ;ra8 1o1. /a,e at I ticking to the old flag, with slight jgure in the latter part of Mar J left Boston and went to New Y . , i ana irow mat citv ne went to ;ional flag committee, argued at length luU;s ai riving- on" March 31, and n his report against this sentimental at thecSoutheru IIot[.L (lea, and added, bv \\a> wa\ of a Pre]l'er had meanwhile made a 1 ilincher, that Liberia and the sandwich ness tour, visiting New York, P Islands had flags very similar to oui>, jeiphia# Baltimore, Buffalo and lud the committee was not disposed, ronlo# While stopping at the Gc :herefore, l. ior no other reason, to House in Toronto he became acquai iccep, copy or imitate it. fhe\ ha\e with a photographic artist named no inclination to boirow second-hand ZQY The latter took particular n< what has already been pnlered oi 0f poller, and is one of the witni lppropriated by a lree nesrro com- 011 wbom the State will rely to p oiutmy and a race of savages. tljat the in tjje tmn]j au(j tjje The very first Contede:ate fla= thai- jn tjie j10tej at Toronto an ihc Slin e\er saw, CoL Co.p61S tCSt^flC^ eovnp n^rsnn PrMlor woe nnvi vvas hoisted by Judge Chtherall at 0f in Cincinnati and on April 3 he Montgomery. He was in the confi- iu St. Louis, registered at the Sont dence of the flag committee, and as IIoteJ) aud wag assigned t0 a,, toon as tne> told him the design jjaxweu was waiting for hiui am selected he go. his lady mend* to- -r were t0gether UI1tii separate* aether and had one made. On the murder Say the committee was to report to Maxwell's baggage, whenitarri Congicssi he mounted the 1 oof of the consjsted 0f a heavy zinc trunk, a Capitol, fixed his flag to t.ie haz ards vass.covcre(j trunk and a coupl 0 rme a Wfti f iha hall(i satchels. Preller had se1 The recommendation of the com- ]0 trunkg aud va]ises> , mittce was approved. He got his plityed billiards together, freque s-ignai tiom below, and in the l^111 each other's rooms, and appeared ling of an eve the new ensign of the usua!!y friendIy. '0n SunUyt 1 South was. floating pioudh in the - ^axweij purchased chloroform caresses of the gentle March wind. prescription written by himself. The news spread quickly through the &onda? morning he bought a city, and when Judge Chtherall . k R. ? t . = p_ shouted down from bis lofty perch, s3me aay lie bonght a field glas Tbieechceiatoi ucCoi.fedeiatefla Aloe's, a hat at Hart & Ouff's, 2 the crow, answered with a mighty Sa? Fra?cisc0 made greeting that, it was thought at the theuameofH. M. Br00ks He .me, mast have given ancaraeheto , considerab|e in vSn ;,? the dome of the ? That night he took "las can Northern Capitol. covered trunk, a hat>x ami a sa GOWNS FOE GRADOATES. friend Preller was out in the coi Wliat the Sweet Girl Graduates witli and lie WOtlld be back'ill a few ( Golden Hair are to Don in June. On Tuesday, April 14, the ode (From Jennie Juiie's Fathion Letter.) 14i c*use? a" , ,1 here were two trunks in the r Graduating- dresses are always a ^ zinc_covere<j trunk and the source of trouble and anxiety with purchased from Biecfer. The St. I expectant graduates Iroin school and fruuk wa3 on top 0"fthe other< ^ college at this season. A iew may be (|ie zinc.c0verc(j trunk was open a >le lo send or gi\e their order to a <jead bodv, dressed onlvin a Da competent u res. maker, uie lnajomv jrawei-s w?>s found in it, with "worry" over the difficulty of making tj ASo p<,,.ijh a!Urai 01.3 tc an adequate appearance out of made- , ' ."attached to it. quale resources, the best thing, prob- ? imraediatelv inquiry was made ably, that the majority can do is to \v'. H. Lennox Maxwell, the man procure one of the machine embro.d- had occapied the room. Hewasti red white muslins, make ? up with the Sa'n Francisco depot alia, lull open bodice, and wear cream, pale contineIlt. DarU^ his jo? mellow or heliotrope satin belt and tu. ni.;,,. u-j? Ju? ribbons. But if Jy would begin a S'^ of'p Icy Kead ! rear before and embroider in a deli- j c D Auquer, under which , sate, allover pattern or in lines or with he registeredli u 'thc PaIac, Hote SrlSnl^whit a ?&.???? ^ would be obtained, not only at a com- ^ and'on paratively trifling expense, but pos- n ,,,. f ^ f' bl jessing the uripurchasable distincrion Gablt at Atikbnd o jf sepaiate and artistic individuality. ing the arregt ,of Maxw eJI fQr mu Fheie is a fuioie just now in London 'rhe steamer arrived f>n \fav 5 for home dressmaking and to cncour- Hi.L0' , xir-n*?>? iu?A.wcii was anesieu anu uuiuui >p it a ball is to be given ^ Willis s to to the Aukland jail. On Apr Rooms in May, at which the toilet es the extmlilion papers were made worn by the laches are to be excln- d j 6 detectives Tracv lively "home made." One of the n , , ft f A?ckIa?(, wi?b >bstacles to .Ircssmak.ngat home, with cxtl^aitIon paper3. The pl.isoner is, is the fear of'not being like every- tal.?ed over to thero, aH/0? the jodv else. Tin* bondage la a MO.it of. jujv tjiev Paj|e(j for home on ource of weakness. We could afiord Zcla^dia irriviug in San Fran * "fi?? fT'ia " ! " order to 1,0 Od August 10 and in St. Louii ree, simple and expressive. August 16 The Langua^of the Hand. en(\ Of the case had , _ ~ _ ., ,, x meanwhile worked up. Prellor {From Cassett s Family Magazine.) nof retnni from the country. It Dimples, bones and wrinkles mark found that the drawers on the he three stages ot life's progress, were marked II. M. Brooks, and ft ith the wrinkled stages the steadiness a black mustache had recently* >f youth often remains in resolute cutoff. Photographs of the face 1 jnaracier. wnen ine jl>ukc 01 wei- taken and sent to Prelltr's friends ington was a very old man, he could Was found that the left hand o till fiil a glass of water to the last body had a sc r which tallied with >os$ible drop, and hold it up steadily, that Preller had received hut a ? H'itnfnl. The helpful heads keep their time before in a New York ba onthful activity, too, far into the shop. Then came the photogra vithering age. And in nobly loving Fraser, who positively identified latnres there is a sort of immortality body as that of Preller. >f youth; the warmth of affection Las Ainousr Maxwell's effects wa riven more than a royal prerogative; gmall buckskin bag, which is supp he hand is beautitnl always to ' ? to have belonged to Preller, and yes that know it familiarly. Tnt, strings of which were cut. Art atter years Oiily stamp it with the the things he took with him, mpress of a longer past oi tenderness, which were found in Auckland, uitht'uhiess and bounty. Is it not the an undershirt which had been lolc" hand, but the "dear" hand, and from a body, and a lot of Prel t never grows older, but more dear, cuffs and collars?. Ie who doubts the troth of this last Such are the main points in the nystery has yet not found out that markable case. The State will tr .and? as well as hearts, have a pecul- show that Preller was murdered ir place in our knowledge and love of Maxwell, and that the motive ne another. robbery. Forbidden Fruit. The Uuiled states Senators A whole Sunday-school was de- join. I v worth, in round numbers, 8 loralized and thrown into convulsions ?,00 qqq ' ' ist Sunday by a precocious youth ' " . A ? , _ . .. ;aeu a distinguished visitor was in- J???? ,1S talked of in Florida arrogating the school, and asked: the St. Sebastian River, which. What was the forbidden fruit?" Up gtonnds, will cost vlOjOuOjOOO. imped the p. v., and said: "I know." An Iowa newspaper savs' th: Weil, what was it?" inquired the brother of the late A. T. Stewart t ranger. "Pickles!" shouted the boy rag-picker at Cherokee, in that S 1 a stentorian tone; whereupon the _ , , ? , , ntire school broke out i:i a roar of .. ,?)?',e ?!SOI,n' I f n1'aiu^Pa (>1 lighter, in which the visitors joined. J1! a(*-v ot ^e. anc* *? ^ hat closed that part of the pro- b'S name on a piece of paper and n ram me, and it was with difficulty the woith v-iOOjOOO. lo>in:r exercises were gone through The owner of a large Newfound; iih solemn faces. dog lately killed in Utah, has just I mulcted in $2,300 damages for inji Me^neot ^ueak in Towp. ^ inflicted on a boy iii that city. Al Malarial gases jfnwtkca up through the a year ago the owner had to pay $1 aoriy constructed drams an*, made baov to u ]etter carrier in the same war. ?ry sick witlnmuaruu fever. Baby would we died but for timely use of Brown's A tire bug, who has confessed iu on Bitters. There is nothing meaner in diarism at Schenectady, accepte 5 way of coming, nor worse in its effects, sum of money for services at on mp this malaria from the underground the houses he' had set fire to, gions. Mrs. McDonald, of New Haven which the owner handed him as i c>nn., says, "For six years I suffered ward for his heroic efforts to put om the effects of malaria, but Brown s flames> on Bitters cured me entirely." Try it ' hen malaria steals in and undermines _*'ie so-called peanut factories >ur constitution. It will give relief. Norfolk, Va., handle and put on market a million and a half doll Frank Hard, it is said, has been I worth of peanuts each year, rered $25,000 a year to act as couusel I factory is simply a cleaning, polisl r John \V. Mackav, the millionaire j and sorting establishment, and iuer. " I work is all done by machinery. THE RUSH OF WATER. GEXERAL XEWS ITEMS. for J The >Iont Destructive Freshet Since 1852? Fact* or Interest Gathered from Va: I Crops Rntued and Live Stock Drownded? Quarters. ,. Bridges and Culverts Wash?d Awav?Fami- ' , . . , , ... ? . has 7, T, , ? Sumter is troubled with forest fires. lies Driven From Their Homes. rel- (Co'.umb.a Daiiv Record, M<iy ?i) J- c- Malloree, of Charleston, has Su The fearful rains of the past fm days a P""3" for miicd p:tinthave been general over the country, and Beu Dinkins, an old_colored man of ? ! the flood gates of the mountains having ! ter> dead on the 15th. 1 - ?- ?? I -\r^ A W nf M.iwriiurnn j uccu U[^CiJCU, LUC ??iu;i o aiW4Uiii4j^ uunii IV -ujl. *x. tt . iiwuwu, V4 ......... .^.vr bis j the low lands with great velocity, sweeping di<,d on Fridav last of heart disease. >or- away cabins bridges, live stock and crops Mr. H. M. Prince, of Abbeville Con s a ia their wild course. _ . died suddenlv on the 15th from paral iac- Broad River bridge this morning was n . t? . ^ was impassable to vehicles, and those who ven- ?. Georgia State Democratic Con nia tared over the Congaree River bridge look j^10n mc in n_ta ^ ke(| a risk, as the bridge was nearly floating on' Asheville votes the issue of $100,00 met j the angry stream. The piers were covered at bonds for public improvement of her st jes. i 9 A. jVI. and the river still rising. and lights. ?0 j The water has flooded the work on the Negroes are wanted at Panama to\ "the cana1' and serious iuJury wil1 result to this on the canal. The climatc is said t ' <rTi>?.t Stiitr> f?nti?rnrise. o-nnd for them. in PIanti}ti(ins .?^ ^Ir. John C. Seeders, j ^ daughter of Widow "Wliitesides d v r * Jr?n^-, F T' $ S ,? ,T ins new fewon'a. was struck by light I n IDS.?ie brothers, Mr. T. B. Augh- laJt wcek aild killed. 1 1U try, Mr. B. Jb. Gntfin aud others m the i veil lower part of Richland are submerged and Tou.r Perso?s ^ere severelv shocke< mce the cotton and corn rained. These farmers J'ffhtnmg on the farm of II. \\ . Bog:; ship have lost a large number of cattle, Logs Oconee. and and horses by drowning, and the prospects Frank Little, a colored man living jrk, are that the f ontinual rise of the waters will Cheraw, committed suicide by shoe aate entail upon mem still further loss. himself with a gun. iself At the old Arthur place, now ilr. Grif- It is estimated that the losses in nine i big hu's plantation of 1,500 acres, only 100 Counties devastated by the tlood will lelj acres are out of water, and the road to the up $2,000,000. ton! pIaAn1?!,ion is ,fo,T ff dee? j? m}"T; Lawyer Frank P. Gray, of Atlanta. All through the city and County bridges sl,it ??,i V!,M hv Vr:lrsl,:,l H I. .1 [ax. causes a} s Line been swept away, and in a difficulty about some cattle. 1 j the chances are that the few remaining in . . , ,r ody position will follow iu the general wreck. portion of the town of Menden, 'S in The culvert on the C., 0. & A. 11 R sas, was destroyed by a tornado; se ash- just above the city, has caved in, but a persons were killed and many injured, temporary structure allowed trains to go Capt. Hatfield, with a troop of cav .del- out to-day. struck Geronimo's band a severe lick ided A train on the C. & G. R. R. is between captured his horses and entire camp o ess- two washed out trestles, near Peak's Sta- Will Hunt, a young man of 17, el and ti?n- . with Miss Minnie Ferguson, aged 15? A family in Ward 1, renting one of the parties from progressive Spartanburg, was AUworden houses, corner of .Medium and Mr ju]iun j Seville, of Walhalk y on Assemby streets was forced to move out, j,js f00t severely with an axe while cu and yesterday, lock, stopk and barrel, the w00{] rind now moves around on crut water having risen waist deep m the house ~ ,ir ^ t , , ' - r m_. j r_ _ Georire W. Carleton, who for yean ana inreaieninir iue iauiiiy wnu urowmus, , . , ... . . , , was C;iptaiu p H. Bookter says his crop is *** identified wi h American book d t(> inundated and his loss will be nearly entire. au ors' retired from busiuess. and Traius have been delayed throughout the . The eruption of Mt. .-Etna is incre low country on account of the heavy rains, and in proportions and the town of Monte 1 h he the only wonder is that no loss of human is in danger from the flow of lava, ork, life has occurred. Phenomenally heavy rains have fall St. Hundreds of persons wcut to the river the Western and Piedmont sections of 2 reg- to-day and remained for hours, witnessing Carolina during the past two days. the destruction caused by the swollen Eugene Taylor, of Greenfield, 3 Dusi- stream. The water broke through the poisoned his son by sprinkling stryc hila- caD!d banks on the river ?iue and washed on candy and then attempted suicide, away the works for htfndreds of yards. ? TI ,? ,r . ,,. " Upon reaching that portion on which the , R-H. McMurray was run out of hi city water works Jtand the angiy flood 1^, Tuesday bj a wlup snake He i, f seemed to have ail especial mission to ful- h-'ck and measured 8 ft ^ i'a- fill. Tree after tree succumbed to the force o1 ^tice 0f t],e torrent, went crashing down stream Thomas Azey, a farmer in Burlin * -* * J J - - n V T oomrtantiill v shnf. his wifft f jsaca ana inreaieneu destruction 10 me uongu- ?. ? ? ? rove ree bridge. Yard after yard of earth was while endeavoring to shoot crows i man undermined until the close of this report, corn field. j the at 2.30 P. M., when the water works were The Orangemen of County Armai eard carried away. One hundred cords of pine enrolling themselves in military org Was wood were taken off in a jiffy and the canal tions for the purpose of resisting a hern bridge went off as drift wood. rule government. x>m. The cyclone of Thursday morning, after Francis M. Taylor, Probate .Jud 1 the I sPrea(bng destruction through the fields of "Winston County, Ala., has been impe i bv 9eor/e ^ewma"- struck the places of in tbe SupremS Court and deposed - Mr, C. 0. Brown, Capt. J. C. B. Smith, 0gce MiIlcr I*!*** Picked up n?,' , ? m,mifalh^ LT&"> | cabins and "scattered tneru to tne lour "~r v>? , . caiH winds of heaven," shingles going in one young lady to whom President Cle^ e direction, logs in another and chimneys in ~ enraged to be married, died last wc t'eral a third. The roads were filled with d^bri3 County, N. x. fhey of the storm and the branches were swollen Mrs. Margaret Donan, a Wheel!n uted to an almost impassable degree. Piaes of V., widow, while suffering from rel I un- circumference equal to the span of a man's excitement, killed her three duughtei Ipril arms were snapped like pipe stems and wal- then committed suicide. on a nut trees a half century old were mowed E. F. Walker, a respectable citiz On down like grass. Louisville, Ky., while suffering fron new Great damage was done to the brick porary insanity, jumped from a rc The Messrs. Clark Waring and J. Frost 1 rain and was killed. ;s at ^ x t~ii . , . Returns from all over the country nd a i Schuetzen Platz the destruction to catc ^at 192,000 persons are now wc it ill llI7ri f W8f ?r5a5.* , , eight and nine hours a day who were also Throughout the city the washouts have jng ten hours a day last month. <u?u been serious, gardens having been mun . , . , . . )ther j dated and drains choked with the drifting Another fatal storm visited i ranc vncj. f ? portions of Germany on Saturday, c; tchel Mr. Seecers Las 750 acres in cotton and ^rious. ,Ioss of life and Sreat ",lm . his 90 acres in oats under water. property. mtry Several houses on the Lexington side of Dan and Lou Mann, who murderct lays. the Congaree bridge were vacated yester- shal Campbell and wounded Officer 3 >r in da}*, because the water had flooded the mick at Bartow, Florida, were lynci tioijT noors. inaignant citizens. oonv"rr^a,n^ were knocked off the sides of The Orangemen of Australia pron one *^roat* B*ver bridge this morning to allow aj^ Orangemen of Irelaud in th< liouis tke water to escape. deavors to prevent the adoption of Vhen M,r- Chll^ss st?araeF successfully stone's home rule scheme. " used yesterdav and to-dav in rescuing live ^ _. . . ,, v ? & stock from watery craves. Gen. Martinez routed the Yaquu of An ob>erver notes the dates of the peri- stronghold in Sierra Bacatche 1 1 tke odical freshets as follows: May, 1840; Au- J, a ^Ptnring -OO of thc band. > thp nnn:t stKnwHr ififts- Tnnp Mexicans lost 20 killed and 70 woum May, 1SS6?averaging 11+ years. Broad Capt. John N. Mafflt, an old officer ! for River was three feet higher in 1852 than United States Navy, who resigned tc who to day at 10 o'clock. The dates mentioned fortunes wijh the Confederacy, c *aced 'vcre exceptionally good crop years. his home in Wilmington, N. C., yest jross The Flood* Einewhere. A kerosene lamp exploded in the re rnev Charleston, May 21.?There are heavy Dr. J. B. Patrick, Jr., in the Gcorg ' the ^res^ets throughout upper South Carolina. Hotel, a few nights ago, but no s an(j The Pee Dee river stands thirty-six feet damage was done. >iame aboYc lo.w watcr and is stiU ris?r?- Cr?Ps Senator Bobo died last week at his 'I on on e r*ver are a total 'oss* The loss is jn Spartanburg, from the effects of 1 1 u beyond estimate. Considerable diimage juries received by a fall during a , has been done to the railroads and crops in storm ^pr" swen0r""!m "nd WCStCrn PartS "1C A young son of John Moroso, of CI jram CnAnLOTTE, N. C., May 21,-The rain ?%.M1 S rder- stonn. which commenced at .this place rder. Tuesday morning closed last night. Tne "" ?' ? ? ? and total rainfall was eiglit inches. The breaks Alderman Jaehme has been scnten itted the Air Line road between Charlotte and nine years and ten months imprisonir i! 25 Atlanta have been repaired and trains to Sing Sing for accepting a bribe in c< out, day resumed travel. Three breaks oc- tion with the Broadway Surface Rail and cu~rrcd on the Charlotte, Columbia and Miss G. Morse; a great-granddaugt , Augusta road, but they were repaired yes- Commodore Yanderbilt, has stirred i 1 was ^erd;,yand only a slight delay was caused citizens of the venerable town of r. , in the running of the trains. The Rich- town, N. Y., by eloping with her ft . mond and Danville line suffered severely coachman, George Minton. cisco J^tween Charlotte and Greensboro, the Mrs. Alice Penrllelcn, 61 years old, , ' An treslle ?yer Coddle Creek being washed Qf Ex-Governor Pendleton, of Ohio 5 awav and one span of the bridge one hun- preseDt Minister to Berlin, was tl .flon dred and fiity feet long over tne Yadkin from iier carriage while driving in C been R,ver was destroyed This causes a stop- Park New York, aad killed, did page of travel. The break at Coddle Creek was has been repaired and a transfer will be During the presentation of Uncle ' body effected at Yadkin River on Monday next Cabin in Westerviue, u., on ine i that at which time travel on this road will be gasoline lamp was knocked over and a been resumed. The "Western North Carolina ensued among the audience, several sverc ro:M* was on^' slightly damaged. killed and a number injured. . It ^e. destruction of crops is immense and Plim White, the most successful f the n? estlI"a^ can. "e made of the loss Inflict- dence man in the world, has just d; i one 0u tae farmiDS community. Reading, Vermont. During his life 1: ihort "\T '... swindled confiding men and women < rber T / ?f Dr" AVoodrow- fully $1,500,000. He had several ali nher subject of evolution, it is thought, The dwelliatr 0f II C Poore neai thl *? '.?*upy a prominent place in the dis- w^ was Sroved' bv fire S: jS the cussions of the body. A case of anneal u 'O J ? .. an brought by a Rev. Mr. Ram?ey of V?- hour Sunday morning. The family es - J giniaf against the decision of tfo^Synod oif 'L?u^ * ?sed that State, on the quession of evolution, "durance. the will be heard; also, what is known as an Jobn. L- Sullivan and Charles Mi long in thesi deliverance is expected from the ^ave s*?ned articles of agreement t< and Assembly on the same subject eight rounds according to the revised was We notice that the Rev. Dr. Woodrow Quis of Queensberry rules, in Chicas cut has again refused to tender his resignation tlie 14til Juneler's as Perkins Professor to the Board of Direc- Louis Liugg, the Anarchist, for \ tors of the. Columbia Seminary. Making | the Chicago police have been in searcl ...e_ some inquiries into this subject of the two been arrestee, tie is kqowii w iwve to ^>'rectors iQ Augusta, Rev. Dr. Adams and one of those who threw a bomb with - i ^r- W. O. Sibley, we are informed that a effect. : u-v resolution to the following effect was car- Tr r c, , ^ . j -r. was ried in the Board- H. J. Stephens, tae celebrated Er Whereas. This Board, at its last meeting bic>;c.listr ?vho.is ?;,ki,ns at0Ur ?5 requested the resignation of the Rev Dr ?>U h-ls blC-VClC' -h.:lS ^ arreSt.ed b; are Woodrow as Perkins Professor- 'and Russian authorities and impnsonet 162 . whereas, the only reply it has received was Crossmg the Af?haD froutler" 1 that he was not then prepared to give an ^ne ^rm 01 manufacturers in the answer, ince of Ulster has already conclude ?" Replied, Thatwc now repeat the same rangements for the transfer of its mi: with request, and ask for an immediate reply Germany. It is stated that other firm Resolved, That a committee be appoiuted considering the advisability of removi at a it0 wait uP?a Dr- Woodrow at once for his The Richmond and Danville Rai is a , Company have paid $127,000 for the fate. r.0 sccond application for his resig- stone buildin? corner of Pennsylvania nation Dr. Woodrow repl'ed refusing his nue and loth street, Washington, t ftlie resignation upon the ground o. his honor. used for their new ofticfs. is the C: 1 "./.nnlmn nf tlucwnlr tl?. r,.- -*i1 1? .1,^:- Mnrc liornufl Tile Jivvimwu lllc ?? tll? Will W U1W 11HIUUHU. w. -wv.., lake nority of the Board?who are opposed to the JL , continuation of Dr. Wood row?moved a While plowing on the plantation resolution to the effect that the Seminnrv gentleman near Charlotte a nest of land should be closed until its reopening should rabbits was discovered. They were p >een l>e ordered by the Synods. in charge ot a cat with several youi^ iries Tills, however, was voted down by the fens* ftu<^ ^1C whole family are gettin jout majority*, the vote standing 7 to 6. finely. jOOO The majority then proceeded to call to J. A. Henry, a dandily dressed pri two of the vacant chairs of the institution was arrested in Chicago for uttering ii Rev. Dr. LeFevre, of Baltimore, and Rev. diary language and distributing a cai cen- Dr. Latimer, of North Carolina. an Anarchist demonstration. Hecontc ;d a Against this action the minority entered that the recent attack on the police wai e of their protest, and so the matter now stands, tillable and said more bombs will be thr< and We understand that an overture from v _*i n _i- i -i j ire- another Presbytery in this State is to be , ^orth Carolina has provided pensioc out presented to the AWemhlv, requesting them llcIJ="nfederate soldiers. but they mu to take some notion with Wpeet to the "'""V0?3 foOO imd live waluc . Board of Education, inasmuch as some ,X)und-,nes of the Sute to secure it. P members of that Board appear to favor ^ muslc turner nas Deen paie either the subject of evolution or are else ^y Mr. Louis L. White, of Portl rrl8 in sympathy with Dr. Woodrow's attitude Oregon. Now, what is a fellow <roir The in the matter. do for an excuse to stand close to his ling On the whole, the meeting of the Assem- S""1 wllile sIie ^ PlayinSoa the piano? the bly in Augusta will be one of intense inter- It is semiofficially announced that est.?Augusta Chronicle. German Goveriuueat will enforce the as?a?i ii mi ii w*m fhi. ii i iii.i.ii niw j mmiiib jub bgbabbpaggmgrpaessagot j eialist laws more stringently than ever, in r* ? n n g* I order to prevent the anarchy which Great fj&2& ||| p Gjj| gn| rious | Brijain> Belgium, France and America are g||jp? ||S 3 *%}%. p3| I unable to suppress. | Wl? ^8 Ife 11 j 'Olake :marr-hists bow to law." says the the sy?tem ?r?^t c been ! Philadelphia 7//?<? >. Yes. ?r.:i drive theai causes, &t &ii s*.-suozi i r ?pm< t.i t!u-ir mvii r,]:n'-i? Tlir>v Shitt 3S ch? Serves, Impairs 5:;: ium- ^ave n0 *t0 remain in ibis land of luC J-K-v-*eKfreedom. Congress ought to enact a rigid .-gaf30) wi anti-Chinese law against them. f&FW* ? nt-' It is reported that Deputy United Ylht ggf i |i|Jl|jj P shai Andrews and a posse of three we-e all | p%s 5 R*l7> killed by Bill Fids;eon in Eufaula, Indian j|jg | cg| /^rTrFTv ysis. I Territory, while attempting his arrest. Kg I 5^ ' yen- Pidgeon killed Deputy Marshal Iiienardson gp j .some mouths ago. ^ j I '* 0 in! The Legislature having amended the code / reets ; so as to remove the restriction ou women **->? \7'f*>r^y g ! practicing in tl.c court?, the general term few % vork ?f the Supreme Court admitted :-i:>s Kate f?i^ ?3 1* 0 be Stonemau, of Aifoar.y, to the 13ar. She is I?*? gl K3 S3 Sua 5 the lirst female lawyer in New York State. l>fS| || |3 g* " liv- The Dublin L uilcd Irchiful, in a leading B? ? ** EES7? ning editorial, ueclates tnat tiiere are sulheient * Q-iK-viyardcompliifolycar*-^' :a!n*-;: Nationalists in a*n- i<v\vn of Ulster to whip acTi^ic 'of 3p * ? - C If v -t'l i] the "ragtag and bobtail Orangemen" into enriotsa and purities ti? ?3o-'ait stimu; s in =r?.oti !j^-vior- provided the po.'icc bfcuid : ' aside. (^astirerioc ?c.V oth'f Tr<?> i.t, Two drummers, driving from Gravson c-uarlic DivinX"of a rVa.u??s.V-.y-T: S to Pawnee, Kansas. W their way'and 3 stopped at a house, whcie they found a &ni^a=d.ip2^i^^,:,an?i u-' ~Wi: . woman nearly dead from starvation and Gon^a2^~fibo"&tod9raa?kand nr foot !lcr1husbar-d and 5ve children lying dead I Z^g^rnVs&cxZc&nir/r j ,1"' w"'" ! T.?ura' Hass licoi:?-sof-.! ar.ri ? -v- . m , . - r | twining list of prises for recipcs. ir.for _ jNortC'Il Tu?bs, of 2\On, MlCll.. JlftCrfuil- eo:;? rtc., siven av.sy by si! i --alcrn it Oa., ]q(t jn au attempt to murder liis sister, con-; p^ieg to any addrwg on rc-ccipt of 2s. fossed the crime, announced his imention j jfQR COUCHS AND CB< to commit suicide, gave a neighbor $1,000, Kan- and blew off the top of his head iu a barn veral when the deputv sheriff came to arrest W F f f? ?? him. - j titi airy. The talk about Fred. Douglass organiz- _ c=:::5^;> ; and ing a movement to induce l he negroes to \j* u utfit. settle in the Northern and Western Slates | oped does not disturb the Souili. The colored ! -both brother will not, leave a section of the j aF i country where the ^ watermelon crop never j ittin? A colored boy named Jeff Bract on was j ft, [ ches! <?1l0t dead near Bamberg by a trump who is ; ^ s and | father of^ tiie boy ?5 to drive' iooso j rj-.Jic ]argCS? jxcrolitu on record lias just j ft . I been discovered in Washington Count v. Pa. ; len in jt fejj on -j,e 14th of September. ami i O* cs /^"^N sorth \Vjxs found embedded deep in the soil. It j ^ ^ ^ qV is the largest aerolite 011 record and weighs j S? "g3 lass., i fully 200 tons. Its composition is chro- ! ^ ss= hnine 1 minium, nickel, aluminum, copper, mag- j "FT If* B "g* g "jjffig nCSium and tin. The nreet gun. MjiSercd from ?tree ol sfield A severe stoi m pass-, d over Greenville on j g?|? went Saturday, destroying a number 01 tree^ and | tteptiegm protein* the eirsvracniinscc :et in fences and doing oiher damage. A huge IS&htS wfthbtt oak was blown down across the office of . urfo<ra? pricoSpiein the nuUetr. P!m:orti T\ -1 tr T> 1 c? /1 t * sects la Taylors Chzp.ocxz Rxxzdy of ; <rton \\ . K. aiul o. C. Jones, smnsllllllj It to Mcllsxx the flnext known remedy fir atallv atoms. Several hundred dollars worth of e^r;T^^ n his books were destroyed. 25c. ^ si. waiter a. tayioe A wind storm struck Spartanburg on Sat- j 'S rh flr<? urday and ripped the tin roof from the 1 ^'arexsua. uniza- Opera House and partially unroofed the home Baptist Church. Several other buildings NEW ADVERTISE] suffered and many trees were blown down. r? o*> nf -A- Aycock had his head cut bv a brick \\T A \T FITT^~IjAli'i; ' i . j falling upon it and David Sloan Lad one of ..!** **', , !Ii^e"1p' his legs injured. 36,11111 hor.ow1n l!^alir>'an ?w irom _ ? J enevs required. iVrmanent ] John A. Flowers, of Salt Lake, Itah, good salary. (iAV & Bi:Os! of the s^ot w'^e' k*s mother-in-law, Mrs. St., N. Y." 1 j Decker, and in trying to shoot Lester , Decker, his wife's brother, he shot himself j WOkEAFSESS its CAi'SSS XK lU dead. Mrs. Decker died and Mrs. Floweis J_J % ' orJe }v>"' v-'Ss will cot live. Flowers and his wife had j ta^dav witiT^ iSfnem^ ?>." separated and he shot lier beta use she re-' In three months. avj since then unous fus^rl tn return to him. j' othrrs byjictmc process. A r.lui r5! and I * I SUCC'SMiiI uujuc ireaiajruu An old farmer intent on making ins will: page, e:;st 20th sr., x-.w 10 j was asked by the lawyer the name of his! ;en of -wife, when he gravely replied: "Well, in-' S 03 sp "?? 5 atem- deed, I really don't recollect what it is; | j In si E> rJ2 8 til way we've been married for upward of fortv j Ba Bb S3 s years, and J always call her mv ol i wo-1 ?KnTriSS'i indi- man." The lawyer left a blank, to be i Pl?*-E!*11 . . , , , 3 1 1NG STCKNK>& * llMoz# atcdj. I t&arrun >rkmg filled up when the old woman a name was ' cure ibo won; cwi. b^causc o-.^n work- ascertained. j JiinS On Saturday night last, parties unknown ! ^Twuu^V^ii. ? Sw :e and j went to the house of .Mr. J. R. Roberts, j lusing I near the town of Lancaster, and called for i \\J \ \rV 5^ i \ -LABII ige to 1 him. 3Irs. R. told them he was not at ' All JLlu if. f u> , ' home. They then went to the house of a j homes, S7 to SlO ptr \vvek <v.i 1 Ator- negro on the premises and. after cursing , lV:<>b> paint in;?: u< r/Tpor around awhile, fired sevc-ra1 shots through 1 f/''- i;i- J-n*.'(jl>1 ^ ^V- - bv his door and left. Mr. R. is making evefry i^r < 1CCi b} | effort to ferret out Die parties. " * } 5j' Mr. Jas. A. f. iiiaciimon, 01 Lancaster ^ jtn nise to County, ijas iuvented a kind of machine to ? fig $4 \ ? a '<& R J1J,ei}' attach stock to while grazing. Ii is so con- w # ?| w 8?i 9 fl structed as to make if impossible for cattle nso thTasa^fsorea^.t^'iio wf^tc; to get caught in the rope wit a which they are !?aj !^.! r u:o?b i from tied, and can readily be carried by a person togetherwt:n a vaumbi.btkeatjsi rilling from one place to another. It is all arranged j 10 ~ny s jjS! t. a.' s wci:a\"si'kar The so as to afford stock shelter from the hot ^d. sun. ' PARKERS T'*i oi. the Philadelphia Record: As a Blaine boost If you arc wasting away frum r. >share the oilgrimnge of Mr. Jeff. Davis through ^ ' Mat the "South las resulted in Mlare. The ercray "bloody shirt" has gone the way of coon >;u: w-;:i new.- 'r.u^rc 'it. :;> omof skins, log cabins, hard cider, copperheads, d*cds of llvos.it mayors yo:? j. clown contrabands and the like party nick-names, M 0,}j oru^i^ -- ^ erious rallying cries and delusions. Some new trick must be devised to stir up old preju- j f AY o i flirts nnd b;id blood. ! OfiA&SSS3 & B&ft IlOHie; ?esa? !?i ? u ? Lhe in- The cry of a baby monarch is heard in recent the proud li:dis of the late Alfonso.of Spain. and the nose ot Don ( arlos .':nd all tllC rC'l strong and durable; at hnlf thecost oi tarles- ff the Carlists arc again out cfjoi.it. Every i fionr body Wishes babv and motaerwcl!. Every dooble the vre^or <M Clotta. CaUIoj stance bod-v always dow: and now let us wait To W*iLiAY * co>clearn how many names' tiiev will load him MaylSMtv , down with, provided he lives loner enough ~ ^ | lo undergo the rite of baptism. >nnec- cxPrcssinaQ ?amed Hies, oO years road ?^> hanged himself from a rafter in his Tt >r t barn in Chicatro. His wife found him in 1\/I QY\\T ^ ? / iter of this situation "and her screams brought a AvAcHIjr G* JL^Ji lp the Crowd of neighbors to the *cenc, but uoone . , .r , ,, , , Larry- interfered or attempted to cut the rope. IS beautiful, all DUt Q ithers owing to the frantic efforts made by the and nobodv bciS ev< suicide to release himself, by throwing his , , * * , wife legs and arms apart. Alter ten or fifteen HCr liOW C2.Sy it IS , and minutes a policeman cut the man down. bea.UtVOIl theskill irown He was then cold in death. .. . * \T' entral TT n ., n ... T i Oil the Skin IS JYi? The House Committee on Public Lands ~ have authorized a favorable report upon BailTl. fom's Mr. Payson's bHl to prohibit non-resident om, a aneus irom acquiring or noiuing real csiaie panic in the Territories of the United States. The being purpose of the bill is to break up the sys- ? tem of foreign landlordism, said to be in T,|J85E"C?L3i&If* confi- operation to a startling extent in several of I M K 3? ^ H H .fV] jjh ^ 1 ? iod in the Territories, the foreign owners of the simplest. Most Durably Economic.-! ie had land leasing it to the tenantry under about in use?wastes no grain; cleans it rea 3ut of the same system "which is in vogue in Ire- I THRESfiiNGENGINES' * Saw 91111s. and Standard Imp! Due The report has reached Eufaula, Iud. erally. Send for illustrated catalog early Ter., from the interior that Deputy United A. 3. F A 5SQ U caped S'ates Marshal Andrews and bis "posse of Pennsylvania Agricultural Work* 1,500; three were all mortally wounded by i>il] *DR SC Pidgeon while attempting his capture. aCl"HT? 1 E,?c.tf tChell flu=eon lia.a K,IJua uifo. ai.u mere |jyy-1 sali.i;. T D ]J0X has been a large reward offered for Ins cap ^ja^_ ture dead or alive. Andrews and his poser- DR. SCOTT, S42 Srocciwav, 1 ro ou were a^ter rewart'* Widgeon killed ' ' Deputy Marshal Richardson some months A ago. A posse of armed citizens are scour- 4\ OUT ~cp "V 1 ha.; countr^' ^or Pidgeon. j -i-Oiii-y JZ/ i d ar- ' Grades?for use alone and in (. gSar? For^Tcrai.*, Directions, Testii I ip i Most of the diseases which afflict mankiad are origin- ? gm m ally caused by a disordered condition of the LIVER? .C ,? ? jgs fi I Kit For all complaints of this kind, such as Torpidity of ?V^ 33 28 " OH the Liver, Biliousness, Nervous Dyspepsia, Indices- <^V0V g S3 tion, Irregularity of the Bowels. Constipation, Flatn- v> K5 ?? lenoy. Eructations and Burning of the Stomach ?\\\ ^3 nter, (sometimes call?d Hoartburn), Miasma, Malaria, \\> ^.tCvv^ ?3 |3 ireil- Bloody Floz. Chills and Fever, Break bone Fever, Cy^ ? r Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diar- \ . . II [0i' rhcea. Loae of Appetite, Eeldacho, Foul Breath, ?^^^37^f&raM^acldS?Couc3 nded Irregularities incidental to F^r^es._^anng-dOTm Diarrhcsa. Kidney Troubles, and Spin !*? SE^STflOIGEB'S AUHfiWTil i 3W11. Is Invaluable. It is nota panacea, for all diseases, ! Sja ??? NT-. |g s|l ?g r? but /f\g soar ail diseases of tho LIVER, j jg?f ?a SEE $3 89 a iSIOr rilVUKS STOMifiH and ROWFLS. | Kj &gp 3| HJ9 gj St DC It changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow I Sral fi ??. vesi' ?3 L tllC tinge. to a ruddy. healthy color. It entirely removes These pills -were a wonderful discos low. gloomy spirits. It is one of tho 8 EST AL- relieve aU mannerr of disease. The m; . , TERATIVES and PURIFIERS OF THE | s^dcv^rU^cre.orsentbySS] nted BLOOD, and Is A VALUABLE TONIC, j shonda-'a Cc-ut-.ongg, m and, ' i ii j powder is absolutely bSj <3 to iff to STADiCER'S AURANTil j centrated. OneonnccBsjj|g |ni ?&? Tv>ct I is worth a pound of BSgW o KWj Far salo by ail Druggists. Price SI.00 porbottlo. j any other kind. ItisBSa g$g3 |b iMKawaan strictly a medicine toB & h B o w W the C. F.STAD1CER, Proprietor, i erefor s?3t by m?il Tot 2 SO- WO 80. FRONT ST.. PhllMWta, P* 1 ??? *?** , prep** ftp $8.08 > ? HI [In LliltUOWU Su?.?j j Men Think ? ^ fSi l ^ 7S&K ijgTJ ; v . they know all about Mustang Lin- ' iment. Ferr do. Not to know is _ j not to have. ! A \ ' -pi ~~sj& !. I J. 3s3SA2*F?EXJ>9& dfs ||?opip]p Porrplptnp t :.-.3<i{'Uul3 ! V 5;: [ J H ?* h U 5* I fl I ' * ! 1 -vers,r.ws- ii. L'iiitiiU jJ 0.> (?<;'- ?!. it j -**> ? LaTe3 cho CO' I td n. rr-\", i fc??/i.-.'-he. or j : * 'flirt i"-.* " " md scicla/iy itb the cro*t- ! f1 T!;-s f:;niplL! osl l^l?pny meet* pwrootivo of j t!>'* u? mand of t.ie a^c f<?r woman s pecu7s keep it on { Ij -.r cr.d i?ultrf.?viii' iifliirtinim. _ It is a Ksedradlir.es ! !y for WOjIA.V < >\LY, and for 01)8 |22?J:.bS? j Sl'EOlAL CLASS <.f diseases. It is a iffl# ir&:tivo.c.n- i spec;?c for curtail! diseased conditions of 3H kbout j the womb, and proposes to so control th? I Menstrua: Function as to regulate all the ^ ? j derangements and irregularities of Wo- ~ 50P USS ! mail's ! MONTHLY SICKNESS. i Its proprU-tors claim f<-r it no other medical property: and to doubt the :aets that thi* W1 nuV.ieino does pc-it'veiv possess such con, * C/} & tri-Minc regulating powers is simply to S^5v riism^dit thi? voluntary testimony of tuousands of living witnesses who are to-day ex:;Itinc in ih? ivstcration to sound health 1 fei m and happiness. ? *' \5?| Brad:'; eld's Female Ilegfulator IpiS yVb is .-tvictiy a vegetable compound, and it Spa Ml the product of medical science and practi row H ' t'^l^iience directed towards the benefit IpF jfilj SnfTorhiff V/oman! ^ y kltfj It is the studied prescription of a learned Jm AvWr j physician whose speofasty was WOMAN', $y//7 i anil whose fame luviiiue enviable ami ^ j boundless brvau-e of 3ii?v wonderful suc> j cess in the treatment ai.d cure of female i complaints. THE KhXiUl.ATOR is the GliAM)EST KKMI'DV known, and riclily deserves its name: ^ I " WOMAN'S BEST FKIEND! Z3?sr? Because it controls a class of functions the tie rvnenire, ; various cl? ramicmonts of which cause more ^ jon:fc?ra sffite*. ! ill health thar. all other causes combined, j ami thus rr-.s'*ues her from a long train of ilSia croup and i afflictions which sorelv embitter her life %ofdceidfpre* I a!:d prematurely end iivf existence. Oh ! 5wErrGc?A!fn i what a multitude of living witnesses cast CouBhl. Croap, : s.e VI, '.Inn I U'.nfiv I 0 ptUtabls, ao7 1 , *',, . is: for it. Pre*, s take to vu;r coiuMier.ce this , Atlanta, Ga. 1 cordtal rot i Precious Boon of Health! 3g. For isle fcj J i It wiii relieve yon of nearly all the com ? I plaints })?-finiar to your sex. * lieiy upon it v__ SIENTS. ; as w-;u- safeguard "'or health, happiness --.-T=rr^= ; ar.i'l ions life. . , active and! SoM by ail drujrinsts. Send for our ent. torepre- j treatise on the. Health and Happiness of 1 firm, lli fer-! Woman, mailed free, which gives all parposition and j ticubvs. ., l<> Barclay | Tiis Bradfield Regulator Co., Bex 23, Atlanta, Ga. iandtXCE, ~~~ JJJ |% Bieaa a radical ?i * * ' "* JH EP5Y or TALL- I C^V V/a t my rtncSy to II C-^ | ^ ;V? l? no t t /* ftrpirr j V"V\ ? j Tradh iiH8s Mark- Pe*rl St., >\X, i | vy -HJ1 a(H jJZZ/J u C7alT5S^T 3 ' " Ti i J ^ is to work j 5 ' s> * j ? it their own > j lhfheT7k<}grownt Counties of Europe, j ' ,'!""-et^v j the use ofthisMedicated\Vuieis univEcsal j - " "" i Itis co2rpcs?doi?lieni5sta2proved ?_ ,10 c,;,tei j (| VEGETABLE TONICS,! ^ : |i -tvhich. are inlroduce&ir.to a pure 'i&SJ genercns'NVme. The very finest [j i U lis i; $m. ISG39$kBAi^' rai!!soaso;t>ylt? > _ 'I rr<'.n~ii.<!rarfa?f ! oeia? ztsmedical basis&isccmfidenify! ottI.y s"ruE*z, it recoiamendedas acune andpreveniive ofj s on tMs ?i incase II ? _. . _ . , _ ).?ccrtx. ?: fever and aguc. lac., >V* Yort. jl ?? : r| an&alLother diseases originating from I moianous causes ~e. di-stpnt ion For purifying the it*Si I BliOOJJ ! h< v^lY ^n. > tcidinprcn-ji^ the Sacrelions.CFironIc, Vf,' - $i. For* ; Rhsumatisr^Bioocpoisonrng,a certain u, iwrk. | cjrefcrDyspapsia.Crarrip in the stomach, 1S66 i' aninmediatercMfcr Dyssntiy,Colic, go-p..^' jj Cho! era-inorLus and kind rsd diseases,' * f lw 0 !! 6er.8r2jWsakr.Gss,Kervous and Mental t7nori?.S? il Debility.ascrarcrcignreinefyfQrLiver : easy to ajjpiy; !j Csrnpiairit.anddiseases ofthe Kidnies^a Jfe f tin. Is also a ! r ?. , ,. , **** ati!aifth? || excencrrjtapcatizerj anaa. some materia}, ;! , . ,? *. rce and rarapies | 3 N I C? LMDiix,>.4. jj without a r:val^ ! :! ir? short:Per invigorating allthe functions P! -l U*? ? I A M i I I A tj UI UlC CJ'OVtHi, U IO UIICUU CI I GJV-O I ?ID OSES' Asmall V/ine-^lassfull.threst'mss a day.; 3r\rT ; ('Sold by all Druggists and dealers generally.) ~^V ; ' TOPAZ CINCHONA CORDIAL COJ 4 i ' I vote Proprietors d. Mcrjufacturcrs. i :rsKin; I j#\ 2r told | Qitfv&sT'wiL, j to put f .. <e 7>?as?I SPARTANBURG. S.C. Beauty ; j pr?CG per Bottie $1.0 0. i ignoha ^ - ? -K q r /??w T T T T?\ -r "T~ \ i ? TT X > T S yJUL,\J&L,h; JUiUAiMU. !y concentrated Ainuionlateu Guano, a complete Iligh COMPOUND ? A complete Ferti'i/.?r for these I i y Truckers iu-ar Charleston for vegetables, etc. ? A vfjy cht-ap arul excellent Xon-Ammoniaied Feral! Or.:i:i Crops, ar.d also for Fruit Trees, Orape NT: AS II EE Y ACID PHOSPHATE, of very Ei?b oiupost heap. in )ni;i!s. and for the various attractive and instructive " v ukiress a, i Y PHOSPHATE CO,, Charleston,'S.#. - ma. Bronchitis, Neuralgia, Eheumatisra, Bleeding at the Ltmgs, l, whooping Cough, Catarrh, Cholera Morbus, Dysentery, Chronic al Diseases. Pamphlet free. Dr. L S. Johnson & Co., Boston, Mass. it gli | MAKE Hl| 1 * * new, aics Is |t >| M W BLOOD. | | Is 1U rery. No others like then in the world. Will positively cure or formation aronnd each box is worth ten times the cost of a box of tH'1 nlrxrftrra Xa ?-> /)a?a I for25c. in stamps. Dr. X. S. JOHyspy fcCO.. 22 C.H. St.. Boston.