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LION AND TiGEIi STORIES. Herr Driesbach's life was full of remarkable incident?, and he frequently took pleasure in relating events of hi< life. The following i- in his own words: *I was exhibiting in Ti>?>; city of Baltimore. We were playing a piece in whicii one 01 my tigers was to suuuemy leap from above upon me as if to kill me. After it would jump onto me we would roil around on the floor, to all appearances engaged in mortal 'combat. The theatre in whicii we were playing had a large pit. and it was iilied almost to suffocation that evening with boys and men. This time the tiger jumped over my head and was flying for the pit when I caught him by the tail and hauled him back. I needn't tell you that standing-room was made mighty quick in that pit when they saw the animal coming. They rushed out pell-mell, yelling and screaming for me to hold on to him." While Edwin Forrest was playing at the old Bowery Theatre in New York City his piece was followed by an exhibition of lions by their trainer, Hcrr Driesbach. During their stay thereForrest remarked one day that he had never experienced the emotion caused by fright?that he was never scared in his life. Driesbach heard the remark, and one evening took Forrest home with him. They entered the house, and after passing through long and devious dark passages, Driesbach opened a door and said: "This way, Mr. Forrest." As Forrest entered the door was slammed behind him. Forrest felt something touch his leg in the darkness and reaching down his hand touched what he thought was a cat's back, which he gently stroked. A rasping growl greeted the motion and he saw two lierv eyeballs glaring at him. "Are you afraid, Mr. Forrest?" asked the lion-tamer, who was invisible in the darkness. Forrest replied, "Not a bit," when the lion tamer said something and the growl deepened and the back began to arch. Forrest held out for a few minutes, when he exclaimed "Now let me out, you infernal scoundrel, or I'll break every bone in your body." The lion kept him there and iic did not dare to move a linger, while the lion kept rubbing against his leg. Forrest finally promised a champagne supper if Driesbach would let him out, which was done and j the bet immediately paid. Tho Lion King was to some extent a practical joker. On one occasion when he was exhibiting in Broadway, New York, he had entered a den of animals, and was going through the customary performance one Saturday night, when he was suddenly stretched upon his back and a large Brazilian tiger was on his throat, and the other animals were widly dashing about the cage. Driesbach's voice was heard calling for aid in a hoarse manner. The audience became excited, and women shrieked. Several keepers ran to the prostrate lion-tamer's aid, and he was dragged from- the cage. He came from behind the cage with his face and tights covered with crimson liquid like blood. He was hastily taken up stairs where a physician, who was conveniently near, examined him and said that, although seriously injured, the lion-tamer would live. The next day Driesbach appeared on the streets with his face covered with strips of court plaster and his arm in a sling. His friends were greatly excited over his escape, but their sympathy turned to disgust when they learned that the gore on the lion-tamers face had been squeezed from a sponge nlled with rose pink, and that the affair was an advertising dodge arranged by the management of the menagerie. While traveling along the Ohio Iliver one season Herr Driesbach was wanted in Cincinnati to give an exhibition at the old Wood's Theatre. He was show-, ing in Zanesville when he received a HnffpTiricr rvTor Ivr -ir>r! lio ic cepted. Hastily caging a tiger ir. an ordinary store 5ox he proceeded to "Ttxes Oixio RiVer and started for Cincinnati der" was, although he was assigned to Driesbach's roonT in the boat. After the boat put off the passengers became jolly from frequent center shots on a black bottle. It was decided to visit Driesbach's room and ascertain if he had anything good. The lion-tamer assented, ' and taking his companions thither opened the door for them. A bottle was found, and Drie'sbacii excused himself to get a pitcher of water. The tiger was not visible when the crowd entered the room, having crawled under a bunk to which he was chained, as his tamer had removed him from the store box. Presently those inside the room heard a scratching and growling and ''Colonel Alexander" emerged from under the bunk and prepared to leap. The crowd rushed headlong for the door, through which they scrambled in their hurry to leave the room. Driesbach met them outside and laughed heartily - at their fright, and taking the tiger's chain led him around the boat for passengers to fondle.?-Pittsburg Dispatch. The Doors of Our Homes. Yet, there are no articles, of furniture in a room more conspicuous than its doors, or more difficult to keep out of . sight, excepting, of course, sliding doors that are never closed. We nii^ht, in deed, do them up in brown linen wrappers with red tape trimmings, as tidy housekeepers sometimes serve their piano legs when they are too ugly to be exposed; and the chairs, when the upholstery has become faded and shabby, ?but such a broadside of canvass or cambric would be worse than the native pine. That beautiful design*, rare and ele' gant materials, should be lavished or. chimney pieces, book cases, cabinets and other stationary furniture, leaving the doors in the stilt* and formal ugliness of common machine-made shop work, is among the unaccountable inconsistencies of house building. We do, indeed, sometimes see the outside of the entrance doors to r. pretentious house, laden with : ornaments hung on at all available : points, and this is the very situation < when they should be avoided. The main entranc may properly be distinguished from the rest of the outside finish by liner workmanship and richer materials: but it should not hold out promises of elegance which the interior ' fails to fcllill,?like a rich and artistic j corner on a volume of cheap wood cut* ' and literary trash. The rule that the front hall should strike the key note of the rest of the house uoes not apply to the outside of the front door.??. C. ? Gardner, in Hood Housekeeping. Economy ia Dress. ' IT licit tl'.uiuivo CV-UOIUAV ?i ViilVU are in times when business is drill and the > times are hard! How the dear things will i scrimp and reduce their expenses "to the * minimum that their overworked husbands may not be deprived of their pleasures and 'z recreations. An article iu a Xew York * paper, showing that a lady can dress well t on *o-30 a year, has brought out letters to 1 that paper from several fair or.es who de- t clarc that it is no trick at all to dress on t that amount; that any lady can dress well t for much less money. 1 hat's the. way to a talk. Let economy be your watchword 1 ladies. We men can stand it. c i i "Pray tell us, ladies, i: you can, who :s e that highly favored man, who, though he's ; < married many a wife, may be a bachelor c all his life?"' *A clergyman. s 0 Ah He was arrested in Portland on suspicion. Xow if somebody would arrest "Ah there!" and keep it out of sight and j n hearing for a while it would be a rest for j t: everybody. 1 d A WHITE BUFFALO BI LL. An Asi-il Patriarch Killed l>y John Gsytor, a Hunter. i From Lander, Wyoming Territory, i comes a story which is of curious interI est to the sporting community. It ts to ! the effect that John Gaylor, u -.veil known I hunter and trapper of the Wind lUoun j tains, nas slam a winte bultalo bun or ; | one so giav that it can very easily be j called wliite. Jack secured his game i about two weeks ago while on an elk 1 hunt in ihe recesses of the "Wind Monnj tains. By the merest accident he stumj bled upon a small but deep basin, one of : ! the most hidden of haunts. In this he j found the gray or white buflalo. When the hunter came to examine his prize he found that it bore all the marks of very ; old age. The horns were worn down to j the skull, and presented the appearance of bald, smooth spots on the head rather than the natural projections. The teeth ; were few and fragmentary, and were al- j most even with the jawbones. Though living in the midst of the richest and | most succulent grasses and herbs the patriarch hoar and gray was very poor in flesh. The appearance of the basin indicated beyond* doubt that the bull had in that one spot seen many a summer's sun and many a winter's storm. In the course of nature his race was about run, and the snows of the coming winter would have covered his age-worn j carcass. Many hunters think that the trusty rifle of "Hunter Jack" has slain the famous white buflalo of Shoshone and Arapahoe Indian tradition, and that the tradition has thus been proved to be a fact. THE CIRCUIT JtDUEsi. now tne supreme ^ourt nave ireaieu iiieir l)eci>:oaM. Tlic twenty-third volume of the South Carolina reports, which has just been published, contains a schedule of recent decisions of the Circuit Judges on appeal which have been passed upon by the Supreme Court. Forty-nine cases were considered by the court, twenty-eight of which were affirmed, six merely modified and fifteen reversed. The showing is creditable to the Circuit Bench, considering the small percentage of cases reversed. The distribution of the cases is as follows: Aldrich?Affirmed, 5; reversed, 1. Pressley?Affirmed, 2; reversed, 1. Fraser?Affirmed, 4; reversed, 1; modified, 3. Kershaw?Affirmed, 4; reversed, 1. Wallace?Affirmed, 2; reversed, 2. Hudson?Affirmed.-1; reversed, 4; modified, 1. Cothran?Affirmed, 5: reversed, 1; modi: fied, 1. Witherspoon?Affirmed, 2: reversed, 4:; modified, 1. A .\cw Discovery by Which Rats Can he Turned ; Out. The rat terror in nearly even* household is more to be dreaded than the rat .terrier. Everybody who lives in a house, aud especially those who own stores or warehouses, know too well the ravages and annoyances of rats. Thousands of schemes, traps, poisons and other devices have been introduced to rid the world of this species of vermin, and our neighbor, Pete Backer has devoted more time, c;re and attention to raising cats than any other man in the State, and his crops have been wonderfully prolific at ail times and at all seasons, lie has had as many as forty cats, kittens and midnight serenaders in bis store room at j onetime; but still the rats remained masters j of the position?in fact, held the fort." }Ir. Rucker has given the rat question close and untiring study, but has at last stumbled upon an exterminator which he confidently j believes will rid "him of rats, lie lias ; found that attempts to catch rats by trap i or poiauaiuij mem buutiemy \\ m iuu. kjiu rats know too much, and can only be caught by kindness. To destroy them give then a good meal every day. Do not put any poison in. the food but simply prepare a "dish for them daily, as a frc-c lunch, composed of corn meal moistened with milk, into which an egg and a little salt (to 'SBasuiij iias beea I'tnttcn. At lira thev inay j -not \ouch it, but keep it before "them, ; it fresh daily. They will soon try ^^itf^and if not injurious their suspicions I ^Paliayed. In a week or ten dav$> B*-i]l expect it, and every raWfff^he i BWfflTviil be at the appointed sjjfc for the ' treat. Givepiewy cf induce ail ! the rats in the neighborhood to join in. Do ' not be in a hurry to poison them. If they ! cat all the food, give them a larger quantity next time. As soon as they have thrown off all suspicion, go to your druggist, get some phosphorus paste or other rat poison, mix it with the food and be sure you give them enough and something to spare, so as j to induce all to eat. They will cither be i killed or become so suspicious of all other j food as to leave, and not a rat will remain. Hence, to destroy ra:s take plenty of time, gain their confidence, and finish them when the}' least expect it. A Xew Postal Card. The new postal card design, adopted about a year ago, will soon be superseded by another, which lias been prepared at the bureau of engravipg and printing, and which has been formally approved by Postmaster General Vilas" When the last change of design was made there was some occasion for haste, and tliere was difficulty about getting rid of certain notions about the card that experience lias removed. Mr. Vilas last year took the best of the designs offered. It was an improvement, but still not entirely satisfactory. The new design will at oncc be accepted as an improvement upon that now in use- It consists of one piece of engraving instead of two pieces, as on the present card. A head of Jefferson, a miniature portrait after the original in the State department, occupies j a central place on the upper third of tbe I card. Over this head in light letters are the words "United States.'' In panels supported by scroll work at the left and ( right are the words, "postal card" in distinct letters. Under the head are the words "one cent," and beneath the border line, inclosing the designation of value, is the ' line "Nothing but the address to be on this ] side." The design is graceful and light, and its advantage over the old one is that the idea of putting the stamp off at one < side and the designation of the article at < the opposite side is abandoned to secure an i exclusive desigu with the strongest feature of it in the centre. The Postmaster General may decide to print the new cards on j white paper and in black ink, for the reason that white paper furnishes a better ground * for written characters, helping the post office clerks who are compelled to decipher ' addresses, and for the reason that the 1 brown ink is complained of by the printers r who use it as more troublesome to obtain t Tood work with than the same quality of black ink. As there is a stock of about 12, ( 300,000 postal cards now on hand, it is t probable tiiat the new cards will not.be out a for a month or two. a Total !?oIcr Eclipse. j A total eclipse of the sun occurs on the ?0th, which will be visible as a very small , martial eclipse in the southern part of Xew England and the Atlantic States. The , xath of totality commences at the isthmus 5 )f Panama, crosses the northern part of j; jouth America, and sonic ot the adjacent 1 slands. crosses tlie Atlantic ocean in a 11 southeasterly direction, strikes the coast of Yfrica near Benguela, and ends in Mada- a cascar. The conditions for observing it c ire more favorable than they were in the v otal eclipse of 1 SS3 and when the tj ines of totality passed almost entirely over he Southern Paciric ocean. Doubtless asronomers will be on hand at many points !j o observe the eclipse. The eclipse bescins * it Oh. 16m. A. M., (a little more than an iour after sunrise,) continuing 22m., and 1 nds at Cu. 3Sm. A. 31. It is so light that a t will hardly be noticed, unless attention s directed to it. The magnitude of the -? clinse is only 0.01S of the sun's diameter, a .nd it is on the sun's south limb. The limit a' >f the eclipse is 1 degree north of Boston, y 0 that we must be contented with a touch S 1 the phenomenon. Never spread an ill report about your ii eighbor until you know positively it is h rue; and don't do it then if he is a great ai eal bigger than you are. 11 GE.NERAL >E\VS ITEM*. Fact* of Jjitere^t Gathered from Various ; Quarters. Forest fires are still raging in Michigan. \ The visible supply of cotton is 1,-3-30, 233 bales. It is said that Minister Jackson has re signed. The first new rice has been received in Xew Orleans. Davit;, the Irish leader, arrived in Xevr | York Sunday. Fit z-John Porter has at last been placed ! on the retired list. The iirst bale of nc.v .cotton has been re-1 ceived at Savannah. The Xew York banks now hold ?i>,Gi7,-? 200 in excess of legal requirement. A severe epidemic of cholera has broken I out in Japan. A dissipated teamster voluntarily starved j himself to death in jail at Jersey City. ben. L. C. Ross Las received the nomi-: nation for Governor of Texas. St. Louis and Xew Orleans companies' won the prizes at the Galveston drill. Edwin Alden & Bro., newspaper advcrtisiug agents, have made an assignment. Cholera is on the increase in Italy aiul j Austro Hungary. Argument in the anarchist trials in Chi- I cago was begun yesterday-. Rev. Moses A. Hopkins, United States ; Minister to Liberia, is dead. There were lo2 new cases of cholera in Burdella, Saturday, and 42 deaths. Grand Master Powderly is expected in Augusta shortly. Forty miners perished by a mine explosion at Leigh, Lancashire, Friday. Christine Xeilsson was married yesterda}" to Count DeCasa Miranda, of Spain. Cutting has been sentenced to one year's imprisonment at hard labor and $600 fine. The Duke of Argyll is prosecuting the non-paying Scotch crofters to the extent of the law. Texas is ready for war with Mexico, and public meetings favoring war are being held. Volunteer companies arc being raised in Georgia for service in case of war with Mexico. A railroad collision near Ashland. Ky., j on Saturday killed four persons and fatally : injured two others. A great storm prevailed on the Jersey coast on Saturday, wrecking vessels and i washing up railroads. It is reported that the Maryland tobacco crop will be cut slrort by half this year, in consequcncc of two much rain. Mrs. Robinson, of Boston, poisoned 11 relatives to get mouey from benefit associations. Robert L. Taylor was nominated on the loth ballot the Democratic candidate for Governor of Icnncssce. The flavor of Kansas City lias stopped the street cars until ?1.100 back taxes due by the company are paid. The Codorous, of Baltimore, with a cargo of coffee from Rio Janeiro, was sunk on Hattcras Shoals on Friday night last. 1 Five persons were drowned by the cap- j sizing of a yacht in Boston harbor Thurs-. day. T Treasurer Jordan is about to resign be- j cause bonds arc called against his judg incnt. Three little daughters of Henry Wyman were drowned while bathing in Jamaica j Bay, L. I., Tuesday. Patterson, colored, a fugitive from South Carolina for burglary, was killed near Lau rinburg, X. C., for defying arrest. Ail the mills in Augusta, Ga., are to stop work unless the operatives of the Augusta Factor}- return to work. Samson, the French executioner, l>e- j headed 7,143 people in his official career, being 217 a year. The World considers Samuel Washing ton, the brother of George, the bravest of the family; he was married five times. Two men passed r-ver the Niagara rapids safely in a barrel yesterday, in" the presence VI IS,OvO ~| The Po^fejfl two fainting spells Satur-! day. J/C is much exhausted, but his phy- j sifcyrts have no fear of a fatal result. The annual convention of the National ; Association of American Bankers convened in T^nctAn The Democrats of the First Virginia Dis- j trict have renominated Thomas Crofton l'or j Congress by acclamation. Cholera of a most virulent form prevails ; among ihe French troops in Tonquin. The chief of the medical staff has succumbed ' to the disease. J oh r Cardwell, who was released by his friends some time ago from Wilkesboro, X. C., jail to cheat the gallows, has been recaptured. 31 r. Tilden was buried on Saturday in the village cemetery of New Lebanon. X. Y., where lie his ancestors for several gen-; orations. It is said Gen. Black. Commissioner of Pensions, is to be made Minister to Austria, and that ex-Gov. Giick, of Kansas, will succeed him. James Moore, white, was lynched in j Macon Thursday night, lie wrs hung in front of the house where the alleged outrage took place. Business failures throughout the country during last week: United States 141 and ' Canada H>; total 157, against 154 last week and 11)2 the week previous. Friday 131 new cases of cholera and 63 cases and 0 deaths at Ravenna, and fc'l new cases and SO deaths elsewhere in Italy. A desperate attempt was made by four \ Iowa convicts to escape from the peniten- ] tiary. One was killed outright and two t badly wounded. ~ ! c Congressman Beach, of the loth New ' t York District, died on Tuesday night at t Cornwall, X. Y. lie was a Democrat, and * had served three terms in Congress. 1 The Catholics and Protestants arc arrayed r against each other in Belfast and the city ^ is an armed camp, with innocent bystanders in great danger. " ? Thursday, at Chautauqua, X. Y., Presi- e lent Carlisle, of "Wollord College, S. C.. a ielivered an address on "Christian Ethics" I: :o the Assembly Sabbath school. z Capt. R. AY. Andrews, the famous pedes- -1 .rian, reached "Washington Thursday, and j1 lis money giving out, he solicited trans>ortation to Boston by rail. Arrangements are being made at the a Treasury Department for a large call of I n >onds ia addition to the usual monthly call n >f $4,000,000, to meet the requirements of i< he sinking fund. c At a meeting in Philadelphia Thursday $ >f the Jersey Central Railroad Company c he joint traffic contract between that road n ind the Baltimore and Ohio was formally Cl Lpprovcu. O" The purport of the meeting of tlie Em (* )erors of Germany and Austria at Gastern 0 s to .strengthen, by means of personal and :ordial intercourse, the friendship of the wo royal houses and peoples. As the operatives of the Augusta Factory ailed to return to work yesterday, all the . nills were shut down, in accordance with !! >revious notice. This takes < 10,000 per J1 uonth out of circulation. ?} ri The forest fires in northern "Wisconsin 0] re dying out. Public meetings are being ailed in various parts of the Stale to pro- Si ide immediate relief for the sufferers in lie way of food and clothing. It is reported that a heavy force of Mexican evolutions crossed the Rio Grande into 'exas 011 Thursday night, and a troop of r< lie Stli United States Cavalry was ordered & rom Ringgold barracks to pursue and dis j ti rm them. i in T1)< lotncf nowrc frnjn TVocliinrrtnn iv*/J i T lexico docs not indicate war. It is hoped j nd believed existing difficulties will be j it. micably adjusted, but only by Mexico | ro ielding to the demand of the United I th tates. I J. The Jacksonville Herald says that Gen. j . B. Gordon has sold his railroad interests : si 1 Florida for $700,000, and that $200,000 ! ru as been paid in cash. The rest of the mount has been secured by bond and tortgage. ca Oscir Fulleur, Secretary of the Glassworkers" Association, and Schmidt, one of his companions in the strikers' riots, were both condemned to 20 years' penal servitude for leading the attack 0:3 the Baudaux glass works at C'iialeroi. F. ?-J. F. Bradley, ex-manager of the Pullman cur works, mysteriously disappeared about a week ago. Tuesday it was discovered that J. C. Atchison, manager of the Hotel Florence, of Pullman, Nebraska, had also disappeared. Two freight trains on the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg Railroad collided near Fails Creek, Pa.. Thursday. Both trains were badly wrecked, and Engineer Edward Arms was instantly killed. The conductor and brake-men escaped by jumping. Thomas Bondy, son of a Baptist minister at Graysvillc. Tenn., attempted to whip John Davis, a voung farmer, for visiting his sister. Davis crushed Bondy's skull Avitli a stone, and then the father of Bondy interfered. lie and Davis fought "with knives a:;d both were mortally wounded. At Bird's Eye. Indiana, recently a man named Foultz was waylaid and killed, and another named Waller mortally wounded by I lodge and his son. On Saturday last citizens <>f that neighborhood huntc-d the two Hodges from their hiding place and hanged them. A young man at Brodhead, Wis.,'injured Lis arm slightly on a barbed wire fence, and to slop the bleeding he wrapped a red silk hankerchief about it. lie is in a precarious condition now from blood poisoning. caused by the coloring matter of the handkerchief. Col. Swain, one of the most popular candidates before the State Convention at Galveston, Texas, declared in a speech that if he received the nomination and was elected, if war was declared, in 24 hours he would lead a forco into Mexico, ami every man would have a hacienda. The delegation from the Irish Parliamentary party, consisting of Messrs. O'Brien, liedmond and Deasy, which is coming to attend the Chicago Convention of the Irish National League of America, tn !).- lipid mi Autrust IS and li). sailed on Sunday from Quecnstoivn. If the weatuer is favorable the ship will-be in Xew York next Sunday. During a storm Tuesday night at Otter Dam Creek, Richmond. Ya., a water spout burst over and w;ished away a long stretch of the railroad between Petersburg and Wehlon, and carried away the abutments of the iron bridge spanning the creek. Yesterday morning a through train from the South d:ished into the washout, carrying down the engine and several cars. Nobody seriously hurt. Ar.onton StrokcJy, the noted pedestrian of East Saginaw, lias matched himself against George Hecks's bay horse, George II., for a fifteen days' race. ?;o as you please, for a purse of *1,00!>. The race began Thursday at the PonliacFair Grounds, Detroit; racing from 7 A. 31. to 7 P. 31. each day until finished, Sundays excepted. Each contestant made 5S? miles the first day. Strokely ran the last mile in 0.03. Commercial circles in Dallas. Texas, we:e great h- agitated Thursday In- the receipt of. a telegram by a large mercantile firm from their agent in .Mexico, advising i!:e firm not to ship any more goods to that country as it was injudicious to do so. "The feeling is too bitter," he said, "and" the majority of Americans, particularly from Texas, are in great jeopardy. The bodies of two dead Americans have just been found on the public highway, with all the evidences of having been murdered." The agent said he would leave the country at once while he could do so with safety. While Th re i? Life There is Hope. i Many of the diseases of this season j of the year car. be averted by a small amount of care and at little cost, by ! the timely use of E\v bank's Topaz Cinchona" Cordial. It cures Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Ciiol- j era Morbus and like complaint^ JVo traveler should be without a bottle, as i it will prevent any disease that would no doubt arise from the change water, food and climate, withouL*^ ?nl':,z v:.-A , m-jmoV'g in the world, contains all the bes&nd most curative properties of ail other Tonics, Bitters, etc., etc., being the greatest. Blood Burilier, Liver Itegula- j tor and Life and Ilealt h-3 lesto ri ng , Agent in existence. For I\Ialaria, Fever and Ague, Chills and Fever, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sick iiead-1 ache, Nervous w Headache, Chronic i Rheumatism, etc., eic., it is truly aj Herculean Remedy. It gives new life and vigor to the aged. For ladies ju i delicate health, weak and sickly chilnnranc nmllifi-5 >stV> O.i 1 V.H 1 rlt'S 1 wrapped with bottle. Charleston, S. C., Sept 1, 1885. II. ft. Ewraxk, Esq., President of J The Topaz Cinchona Cordial Co., | Spartanburg, S. C.: Dear Sir?I have | used a case of your Topaz Cordial in j my family, and as a Tonic and Appe-1 tizer I can cheerfully recommend i: to j all who arc suffering from Debility ; unci lack of appetite. 2My children,j especially, have been much be.nelitted j by its use. .Respectfully, IIutsox Lee. ! Ask your druggist for Ewbaxk's I Topaz Cixchoxa Cordial and take | no other. Tiie Tor.vz CixciioxA Cordial Co. , i * Spartanburg, S. C., U. S. A. i 5:i a Aut.shc!!. Secretary Bayard seems to regard the id verse criticisms which have been made jpon the demand for the unconditional re ease or uuuing as "partisan uusrepreseiiations," calculated to embarrass the gov rr.mcnt and encourage Mexico in its attiude of resistance. It is not a case for parisanship. but partisanship cannot, alter the acts. If the case were precisely as stated >v Mr.' Bayard, that Mexico claims the ight to try and to punish ail American j liti/.en for a crime committed against a Mexican -within the United States, an.l if it lad acted upon such a claim in Cutting's ase; then there would hardly be a di'Vcrncb of opinion upon the subject. But when n American living in Mexico crosses the . >order to print a lii?l upon a Mexican citi- 1 en and goes back to circulate it to the in- 1 ury ot the latter there, the offense is com- : nitted in Mexico, as all law recognizes a i ibel as committed where it is circulated, "he claim of the Slate Department is in i ITect that Mexico has no right to prosecute nd punish an American for a crime com- ! littcd within its own jurisdiction. AVe 1 lay well maintain the doctrine-that Amer- ?' ;ans cannot and shall not be tried in Mexi- * o for crimes committed in the United t tates, even tliough their victims are Mtxians. but in maintaining that doctrine we ;1 eed a better case than that of Cutting. Of f ourse everybody will agree with Mr. Bay- -l rd that Cutting's character has nothing to o with the matter and that it is a question c f principle.?Neic York Time. c fl cm.i T n? It is unlawful for any person in tin's tate between the first day of April and the < rst day of November to catch, kill or in- 1 ire or pursue with such intent, or to sell '' r expose for side any wild turkey, part- 'J di?c, dove, woodcock or pheasant. Fine ? r imprisonment for violation. v The deer season opens on the first of eptember. a A Fasting Gir!. V In Cincinnati a sixteen-year-old girl 13 >cently died after a last of fifty-two ? iys. She had been attacked by some- " ting like paralysis which rendered it Ll apossible for her to take uourishment. he human system cannot thrive withit good food and good ability to digest . Weak and impaired digestion is j ctificd by Brown's Iron Bitters?better j ^ tan any other tonic in the world. Mr. * > E. Freeberg, Pomeroy, Iowa, says: o [ used Brown's Iron Bitters for dyspsp- i i and poor appetite, completely cured S e." It will cure you. * j is ? sf Eveiy time a man does a cood act G >d A ncels'one of that man's bonds. c: BRIC-A-BRAC. A fool race?Chicago girls. ' Born to blush unseen"?Negroes. Recognized rank?Boarding house butter. The height of fashion?A dude's collar. This too torrid temperature truly tries the temper. A girl may have plenty of bustle and still ' be very lazy. A handsome woman pleases the eye, but o tmrul /Mi-irmc t!ir? I le that cannot forgive others breaks the bridge over which he must pass himself. A girl does not want a chaperone who i has a chap of her own on a Sunday afterj noon. A question that is often asked but seldom j answered?"How do you do, sir?" Frost is predicted between the 3rd and 10th of October. You can get your phiz at the photo: grapher's or the soda counter. i The Mexican Ilea is becoming vicious ' and shows a decided inclination to bite. The sins an old man confesses with the i greatest relish are those he never committed. The candidates are abroad in the land, i The woods in every county are full of them. Very possibly the child is born who will be the*first President of the British repub! lie. j Many a man is the architect of his. own | fortune, but never sets money enough to j build. A poodle dog and a boodle husband are all that many young ladic-s require to make them happy. The only time a young girl will excuse her lover for treating her coolly is when he j sets up the ice cream. It is a curious fact that the sun never j shines so hot on the base ball grounds as it ' does on the harvest field. ; _ If fifty men in the United States engage i in a violent outbreak it is called a local dis1 iurbance; in .Mexico it is a revolution. Any bntchrr tv&o derives aTargeTncbnie . from his sausage machine might aptly term : it his "revenue cutter." The weather prophets say that the exi tremely cool summer which we are having means an equally mild winter. The advocates of female suffrage are so consistent that at a recent banquet they had their bill of fare headed "womenu." Sonic darned Yankee has invented a new | patent stocking darner. It can never take the place of a nice little woman, however. Some portions of South Carolina are now ! so rigidly temperate that they object to ; storms brewing in the neighborhood. The Knights of Labor and Labor Unions | arc distincf bodies, but there is a "striking" resemblance between them. The boss painters have met in PhiladelI phia, but we presume there will be no i change in style for coats of paint at present. ; It is curious that a wrecked steamship is always in command of "one of the most experienced captains in the service." The difference between a buzz saw and j a bull dog is that when the former is most dangerous it never shows its teeth. We are never more deceived than when we mistake gravity for greatness, solemnity for science, and pomposity for erudition. A California woman while splitting wood i ]*/ ? in ftr-r* ie n/~v mrvro 1 ; oil nci t'./iii: nv; xli i>>vvy. AJV ; to this. Women don't split wood this side of California. What is more pathetic than to see the simple faith with which a bald headed : man will buy an infallible hair restorative : from a bald headed barber? Mciocipede is the new name of a musical bicycle so fashioned that the rider can kick out melodies, waltzes and reels as he travels :ilong the road. A pistol-carrying, threatening crank has become an adjunct of Gen. Logan's Presidential booming scheme. Anything for notoriety, you know. The new ?1 silver certificates willjjeat^r' copy of the Stuart portrai^^T' Martha Washington. Aj)Qtf?5ut of Gen. Hancock widay^r^fce ^^certificates. ^^ryrtune is like a collar button; when it flies from you you have to ?et on your hands ana knees and work hard to get It back. "Harmonious coloring gives a feeling of v/.tvac/i Jn ll>A l>r?rnr? " covg r.n ?>rt innrnol Therefore if you have a red headed -wife, furnish your house in the same tint. Women can talk a great deal with their eyes, but the trouble is in pinning them down to anything they say in this rather vague and romantic form of expression. "Do you know the nature of an oath ma'am:'" inquired the Judge. "Well, I reckon I ortcr," was the reply. "3Iy husband is a baggage smasher on the C. & G. railroad." French women consider carrots .as a specific for the complexion, and good judges in such matters can tell at a glance how many carrots fine a woman's complexion is. "You can always tell a bachelor by the way he handles a baby," says an exchange. On the contrary, you can always tell a bachelor bv the way he doesn't handle a baby. An advertisement in a Western exchange reads: "IIow to act successfully on the liver." If the chap who put the ad. in would only produce a medicine that would teach people "how to act successfully" on tne sia<re mere wouiu uc some sense aooui him. "When a man is in his own house, and settles down to dinner or his quiet smoke, it annoys liim terrible if the children do much talking or if his wife plies him with numerous questions. When, however, he takes up his residence at a seaside resort the babble of voices in the dining room or in the parlor gives him not the slightest concern, and he answers the numerous questions?either pertinent or impertinent ?put to liim, in the most gracious manner. This is the one time in a man's life when he lays aside the rigidity of home manners. An Outrage Perpetrated by Or. icemen. Belfast, August 13.?The cxcitement occasioned by the riots has been revived by an outrage committed by Orangemen of " Queen's "island upon a Catholic named T.ilirwnTi Tlir> lntfpr wnc rpfnrnina' tn luc home from work, when be was seized by Orangmen and given a coat of tar and 1 feathers. The Catholics are very indignant it the outrage and vow vengeance against J Ibe perpetrators. \ Five hundred additional policemen ar- .rived to-day. j Since Saturday fifty seriously injured salients have been treated at the Koyal ^ [lo.spilal, and 200 more have been cared for f it private surgeries. It is estimated prob- a ibly that 300 others received wounds in ? he riots whose cases are not reported. The military have control of the city- c i:k1 their presence has inspired a better S celing generally. Rain continues to fall, a seeping the streets clear of people. The .uthorities ordered all taverns closed at 5 'clock this evening and will keep them losed until 10 o'clock Monday morning. ^ Better Prospects. Business is better than it generally is at e !n'? sr-ncon rmri mprr-hnnts nsiwrt, n. finp. C nide as soon as fall begins. There was a S ,ue and cry about bad crops a month ago, ~ nit pcoplc'have about come to the concluion that the crops are better than they rcre last year. Cotton is looking well and > heavily fruited, and there will be an ventre yield of corn. In the river swamps or some miles below Columbia the crops 1 rcre utterly destroyed by the spring floods, >ut that which is one man's loss is another j ian's gain. The rain, while sweeping i way everything in the bottoms, greatly ; nproved the crops on the highlands, so < .Kit the general average will be good. Eclipse of the Sun. A total eclipse of the sun occurs on i kugust 29, which will be visible as a very nail partial eclipse in the southern part of " ' -in- Vonr? the A tlontif* Th/> ath of totality commences at the Isthmus s f Panama., crosses the northern part of ii oiiih America and some of the adjaceut lands, crosses the Atlantic ocean in a ' utheasterly direction, strikes the coast of e; .frica near Benguela and ends in Madagas ir. j SjOLTH carollw news. The Lexington jail is finished, except the painting, -which is now being done. The Town Council of Georgetown is contemplating having electric lights. The first car load of watermelons ever shipped to Prosperity arrived there hist Tuesday. The first bale of new crop cotton has j been received in Charleston from Barnwell j county. The Knights of Lal>or at a meeting in Charleston endorsed the action of the Augusta operatives. Internal revenue collected in this State for the vear ending June 30,1SS6, amounted 1 to $100,014.30. 31 r. J. X. Roberts, of Turkey Creek, j Yorkville, killed a moccasin that had 00 ; young snakes inside of it. From our exchanges we learn that the , rams ol juonday last were pretty general, and helped the growing crops considerably. A fox caught a goose the other day that was 21 years old,"and belonged to 5lr. J. H. Moody, of Barnwell county. It is understood that the Gr.:enville and Laurens trains win be runninr, on regular schedule by the 10th of September. Lightning struck the colored Methodist Church at Anderson last Tnursday and set the building on fire and killed a yearling ; grazing near by., There will be a reunion of Company Iv, 20th S. C. V. Regiment, in Lexington C H. on August 26th, and they will participate in the ceremonies of the unveiling of the Confederate monument. On Thursday night last the residence of Mi's. Jane Curry, near Yorkville, was entered and robbed of three or four hundred dollars. The survivors of Orr's Regiment will have their reunion at Sandy Springs next week. They are to meet in camp on Tuesday next and remain until Thursday. A neero infant was left on the platform at The depot at W elirorargpm u.**--?? i. the 7th. Ann "Wilson, the mother, was ar-; rested in Greenville yesterday. Several ambitious members of the Lau-1 rens Guards are seriously considering the | situation on the Mexican border, with a I view to volunteer their services. The vacancy occasioned in the Senate by ; the nomination of Mauldin for Lieutenant i Governor will be filled by either M. L. j Donaldson or J. Thomas Austin. An assistant postmaster, T. II. McMillan, , of Graham's, Barnwell county, has been i detected in swindling in the post oHice and j bound over in the sum of ?1,000 for trial, i The Oconee County Convention passed j resolutions endorsing Judge Cothran for j Congress and Col. J. J. Norton forjudge of the Eighth Circuit, in case a vacancy shall occur. The freight depots of the Air Line, Spartanburg and Union and Ashevillc and Spartanburg Roads, at Spartanburg, have been consolidated, undrr one a^-nt, at the Air Line depot. R. P. Ezell, an intelligent colored man of! Spartanburg, has just returned from Ar- \ kansas and Texas, and is of opinion that j the colored people of South Carolina had j better stay home. A difficulty occurred at a barbecue near : Lewiedale Thursday between Mr. C. Sivy- j gert and Mr. D. U. Addy, in which several shots were fired. Swygert received three shots in his bod}'. It is thought lieis mortally wounded. Mr. George Smith, of Abbeville, reached Puckett's ferry, on the Saluda river, last Thursday, driving two m^les to a bug gy, on his waj* to Newberry/ Qu crossing the mules got off the Ihty and one was drowned. i The family of the Mioses McWhjte, one ; of whom was killed an<fl the other perma- ' nently injured in the S/untee trestle calami. ty, have instituted sui'<s against the Northeastern Road for SS^OO damages. Mr. T. MouJjjoa ^[uraecai is the attorney in the 'case. During the stock show at Ninety-Six a white man and a negro got into a light in which the white man was hit with a rock, and he cat the other several times severely. In the effort to get out of the crowd Brown, which was the white man's name, cut several others. The County Commissioners of Lexington heard last Thursday the protest from citizens of Broad river township against the validity of the vote for "subscription" in the railroad election in that township, and sustained the correctness of the election returns for subscription. Bonds will be issued for the amount, unless the authorities are restrained by injunction. Messrs. S. W. Melton and W. S. Monteith have been retained to secure the injunction. Sana in Corpora Si.ro/* in am Established in 1793. -The 93d Yearly Term begins September 8th, 1886. For Catalogue, giving full particulars, addr<?s, Maj. R. BINGHAM, Supt., Bingham School P. 0,, Orange Co., 2s. C. PEACE INSTITUTE FOR YOUNG LADIES, | RALEIGH, NORTH lAROLINA. TnEFALL TERM COMMENCES OX the first "Wednesday of September, 1886, and closes corresponding time in June following. Advantages for "instruction in all the.branches, usually taualit in firstclass Seminaries for Young Ladies, unsurpassed. Building heated by steam, and in ever}- way as to equipment, etc., equal to i any in the South. A full corps of^Firsi- I Glass Teachers engaged for session commencing in September. Terms as reasonable as any other institution offering same i advantages. Correspondence solicited. ! For catalogue, containing full particulars j as to terms, etc., address j REV. R. BURWELL & SOX, AugllL2m Principals, Raleigh, X. C. CHARLOTTE FEMALE INSTITUTE. TIIE rumor that the Principal will remove to Columbia, S. C., i? a mistake. ' Ele has purchased the controlling interest a the CHARLOTTE FEMALE INST1CTTE: has spent ?4,000 in renovating and mproving the buildings, and is now makng more valuable improvements than < iver. The building is lighted with gas, vanned with the best of wrought-iron urnaces, has hot and cold water baths, ,nd first-class appointments as a Boarding G ichool in every respect Xo more experienced and accomplished orps of Teachers is to be found iii the 1 iouth, and the Music and Art Department re unsurpassed. ,. Full session begins September 1,1S8G. ,'r For Catalogue applv to the Principal, v Rev. WM.'R. ATKINSON, AugllL-'m Cliarlotte, X. C. G WANTED- ~ intelligent, to repre- j P' 2111 in her own locality an oid firm. Refernces required. Permanent position and ood salary. GAY & BROS., 16 Barclav t, X. Y. * " ? f - WORLD Cheapest ^^Bnsii^Mncation. | THE Commercial College "^Lexingwn, Ky. J' Highest Honor and Gold Medal over all other CoUc^rs. g at the World'. Exposition, for Systaa of Book-kecplns: and _ General Bimlncfl-* Education. GOOO Graduate* In Bui!. l'j nn*. to Tenchersenip'oye'l. Co?t of Pull Buwine** Course, includinjjTuition.StationcryandBoard.aboutifSO. ShortHud, Typewriting and TVIeeraphjr specialties. So Va- Vr cation. Enter Xow. Graduate. Guaranteed Sucre**. For Voulzi3address W.K. SMITH. Pres't, Leilnston.Ky. a; iprUTPWlNTECMe!?r^?rsl?? ? R Si B II a ? Sample freetothose becomingagents, ra HuLll 8 UN'o risk, quick sales. Territory Riven. nn 5 jruaranteed. Address no DR. SCOTT, 842 Broadway, NEW YORK, ea ca FHRESHING MI? : imploft. Most Durable, Economical, r.:id Perfect u use?wastw ao grain; cleans it ready for market. g i KRESH1NG ENGINES VoffEBS, j || law mil*, and Standard Implements genrally. Send for illustrated catalogue. A. B. FARQUHAR, enngylraal* Agricultural Work*. YOBK. Pa. fi ??m?niTiggt? Combining IKOX Trith PUBE TEGETABIE TOXICS, quickly and completely CLEANSES aad E521CHES THE EI>OOt>. Qaicicns the action of the Liter and Kidneys. Clears the complexion, makes the sliic smooth. It docs net iniorethetvcth, cause headache, or produce conStipaticn-AIL OTHEB IBOX MEDICDTES DO. rnysxians ana juruggiKS evorywaera recoi&iiccu :u Bit. X. S. Ruggles, cf Marios, Mms., says: "I recommend Brown's Iron Bitters as a valuable tonic for enriching tho blood, and removing all dysptiptic Ej-raptoms. It does tot hart tho teeth." Ds. K. M. Df.lzsll. Reynolds. Ind.t says: "I j have prescribed Brown's Iron Bitters in cases of j anamia and blootl diseases, also wfcec a tonic was ' needed. and it has proved thoroughly satisfactory/' | ME. Wx. Bvt.ns. 25 St. Mary St.. New Orleans. La., I says: "Brown's Iron Bitters relieved me inaea.se j of blood poisoniiur. sad I heartily commend it to those needing a purifier." Tiw Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed red iir.es on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by b;:o;yx chemical co., haltimoke, m?. Ladies' Hakt> Book?csefol and attractive. eo:ttainius listofprizes tor recipes, information ?bo::t coins, etc.. jrfven away by all dealers in medicine, os saded to assy acidreas on receipt < 4 2c. stamp. Most of the diseases which afflict mankind are originally caused by a disordered condition of the LIVER. For all complaints of this kind, such as Torpidity of the Liver, Biliousness. Nervou3 Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Irregularity of the Bowels, Constipation, Flatulency. Eructations and Burning of the Stomach (sometimes called Heartburn), Miasma, Malaria, Bloody Flux, Chills and Fever, Breakbono Fever, Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diarrhoea. Loss of Appetite, Headache, Foul Breath, Irregularities incidental to Females. Bearing-down STaOIGEB'S flURflHTll is invaluable. It is not a panacea for all disease^, batrf^gggSE? all diseases of the LIVER, rilWUnB STOMACH and SOWELS. It "changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow tinge, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely removes ! low. gloomy spirits. It is one of the BEST ALTERATIVES and PURIFSERS OF THE ELOOD, and 4s A VALUABLE TONIC. STADiCER'S AU8ANTH For sale by all Druggists. Pricc SI. CO per bottle. C. F. STADSCER, Proprietor, 140 SO. FRONT ST.. Philadelphia, Pa. PllMW: \ BUY THEM AT HOME. THE BEST MAKES [OF PIANOS AND ORGANS / -SOLD ATFACTOEY PEICES FOE CASE j ?OK? EASY INSTALMENTS. B?L5YEEE3> TO NEAREST DEPOT, FREIGHT FREE, Write for prices and terms to^T i X. W. TRFHF, Coln:ubia, S. C. ! JuneSOLly | ECZEMA^ Gentlemen?It is clno ton to 5sy that I thii taken Swift's Specific. I nave been troubled v At the beginning of co!<l weather last fa!! it n has never returned. S.S S. nodosbt broke it a and I ^ot well. It ::!.<o bene. .1! my wife crrent!; eurc of a breaking out c\, niv little three year* Watb-nsvi'.lc, (Jj... Feb. 13,1SS6. Treatise oa Dluoa and Skin Diseases mailei The SV ^ISHLEY pOLU The Soluble'Guano'is'a'highly concentrated rade Fertilizer for ail crops. ASHLEY COTTOX AND COKN COMPOT vo crops affd also largely used by the Truck.?: ASHLEY ASH ELEMENT.-A very cheap Lizer for Cotton, Corn and Small Grain Crop: ines, etc. ASHLEY DISSOLVED BONE: ASHLEY rades?for use alone and in Compost heap. For Term's, Directions, Testimonials, and for iblications of the Company, address THE ASHLEY PHOSPJH Nov25r.lv lese pills vers a ? ezdsrful discovery. No others ! relieve all manner cf disease. The information aro e marvelous power of these pills, they would walk 1 thout. So by mail for 25 cents in stamps. Illnsl s informatk t is very valuable. I. S. JOHNSON & C fiiiiiy nun as ( ! 3>R. J. RSABFIELD^ | Female Eeplator. t | This famous remedy most happily meets : the demand of the age for woman's pecu- ? liar and multrform afflictions. It is a I remedy for WOMAN" ONLY, and for one ! SPECIAL CLASS of diseases. It is a i snecific for pertain rtisoaspd conditions of j the womb, and proposes to so control the i Menstrual Function as to regulate all the j derangements ar.d irregularities of Wo! man's 3IOXTHLY SICKNESS. i Its proprietors claim for it no other medical A property; and tt? doubt the facts that this medicine does positively possess sue!: con- ?? trolling ar.d regulating powers is simply to fl discredit ;he voluntary testimony of thousands of living witnesses who are to-day exuitinc in the restoration to sound health I and happiness. Bradfield's Female Regulator J [ is strictly a vegetable compound, and is A j the product of medical science and practi- ' V cal experience diiccted towards the benefit ^ of Suffering- Woman I It is the studied prescription of a learned physician whose specialty was WOMAN, m* and whose fame became enviable and 1 boundless because of i;is wonderful success in the treatment and care of female ' ' complaints. THE REGULATOR is the GRANDEST REMEDY known, and rich- v Iv descnes its name: W035AX*S BEST FMEXD! Because it controls a ciass of functions thevarious derangements of which cause more ill her!th than all other causes combined, and thus rescues her from a long train of ? afilietions which sorely embitter her life ? and prematurely end her existence. Oh ! what a multitape of living witnesses can testifytoiis charming effects! Woman! take to your confidence tiiis Precious Boon of Health! ) It will "relieve you of nearly all the comJ, in iiVf'TW;"" * Sold by a'l druggists. Send for our treatise 611 the Health and Happiness of Woman, mailed free, which gives all particulars. I The Bkadfield Regulator Co., ^ Box 28, Atlanta, Ga. XEW ADVERTISEMENTS. tST SEND FOE CIRCULAR. ^0 CURE WQ PAY. Jrt W ZSS2&S8B&& dsM W tSSSBB&R Dr. Harbin's Mixture tor I>iarrlio?a, Dysentery. ?Se. Send for circulars to F. Xiclto&a ?Si Co., Greenville, S. C. ~ ? - i sjss -a. rasa Sample Package of W K H, H. *>*i- MAKBLVS ds is'^cwxaa Celebrated LIVKX FILLS. Address P. NICHOLS ? CO., GreeaMUe, S. C, DO fiO MORE WHITEWASHING ~ "ST** ,p& ??> ** N ,r&3?2s.??~? AV ^ Can be had so cheap. fenct ror pamphlet and color card, and learn its merles. O 3IAXWELL. iLlZLETT ?Jfc COI' D McElderry's Wharf. Baltimore, Md., and C'.'tt Washington Ave.. 'Philadelphia, Pa. Parker's Tonic A Pure Family Medicine That Never j Intoxicates. HISCOX <fc CO., 163 W illiam Street, New York. Sold by all Druggists in large bottles at One Dollar. ^tet>yspaper" advertising"' dauchy & co., 527 Park Place and 24-2G 31 array St, Xev/ York. ?.Iake lowest rates on all newspapers lathe l". S. and Canada. jK?stablisheii ;SS*. SPKCLU OFF-:it.- We win insert a one-lueh advertisement one niontliln our selected Jist or 2-25 Dailies and Weeklies, covering the U. S.. tor $ .Go Circulation 6,9S0,292 copies per monthSend for Catalogue. Parties contemplating a Una or advertising. Largp. or small, are tA Conrj fnr p<r?mirp nf AU?4-4'.V RADICATED, I ik I am entirely well of eczema after having nth it very little in my face since last spring. iade a slight appearance, but went away ar.d jj p; at least it put my system in good condition ' in case of sick headache, and made a perfect old daughter last summer. I " i:s?. jamhs v. m. | f 2 free. ? i-;ft Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. ble Guano. Ammoniated Guano, a complete High A J2>D?A complete Fertilizer for these rs near Charleston for vegetables, etc. and excellent Xon-Amtnoniaied Fer5, ar.d also for Fruit Trees, Grape V. ACID PHOSPHATE, of very the various attractive and instruct ve [ATE CO., Charleston," S/C. ^ ^ [iss then in the arorlcL "Will pesiiirely euro und each box is worth tea tines the cost of a ,00 m Jes to get a box if they could no^behad j crated pamphlet free, postpaid. Send for it; 0., 22 Custom House Street, BOSTON. 2IASS. j J,