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THE KMGHYsS OF LABOR. Cardinal Gibbons Declare* that the Order w not Under the Han of the Church. Baltimore, August 19.?The American ' will print to-morrow an interview with Cardinal Gibbons, who says: Cardinal Tascbereau's condemnation of , the Knights of Labor should noVl>e taken | as the sentiment of t!ie Church. I am not! fa?-*-?Tl'ltli tli/. r.nr.inv/ol liliiiituii " mi v/x^aui/.auviio (Quebec, but it is certain that the Cardinal's hostility grew out of some local laws or conduct of the Knights which are contrary to the doctrines of the Church. As to the Knights of Labor in the I'nited j States I Lave not thorough' examined their constitution or studied their purposes, yet i from the newspapers and Powderly's statements I infer that their objects are praiseworthy and not opposed to Church views. The Catholic prelates will to a man declare I in favor of the organization of labor. There j can be no wrong in it. Organization is the i basis of all progress, political, social and religious. Only when it is abused does the t Church raise her voice. I have no knowl-, edge of the local societies in Canada. ! Whether or not secret pledges arc taken by i the Knights of Labor there is a question j on which more light should be thrown by their leaders. Vicar General Conway, of Chicago, assured me that it bears no resemblance to the Order of Masons, Odd Fellows and other organizations which th^ Church has always antagonized. A distinction rrtnet oc- tr\ thr* cor?r/>t pledges. Wc hold that if a man joins a society swearing never to reveal any of its orkings. and to obey the dictates of its officers blindly, lie surrenders his personal liberty. On flic other hand, if a man joins, swearing to keep secret its workings, with the proviso that nothing shall be contrary to the laws of the land, we hold he is perfectly justifiable. The whole question depends on which of these oaths the members take. If the latter, and in accordance with Mr. Powderly's statements, then the Church says to the Knights of Labor: "God speed you.*' If. however, the absolute blind pledges is taken, no matter how laudable the object of the society, the Church can never countenance it. and will call on her children to withdraw under pain of excommunication. So everything depends on the proviso. A Hl.VTER SHOOTS A MOAKEV, Aud Keels as Bauly as if a Child had Been Killed. Nyack, X. Y.. Aug. 19.?A singular incident occurred in this region a day or two ago. A party of gunners from this ii. TT ?_ ^ r 4. _ .1 *. jnacc were oa uie hook iuouuuuu, uuoui two miles north from liere, for a clay's sport, and their attention was attracted by an animal in a tree some distance away. The animal had a strange appearance, and they were at a loss to determine what itwas. Finally one of the party said he would find out its species, and raising his gun he fired. Au agonizing cry went up from the animal. The next instant it fell, and it proved to be a badly wounded baldfaced monkey. How it ever came to be on that mountain rfo one could tell. As the beast lay on the ground it acted, one of the party said, exactly like a human being. It put out its hands pleadingly, as a child would do, and when one of the party lifted it up the wounded animal put its arms around the hunter's neck and sobbed. The man hastened to his home in the hope of saving the monkey's life, but the wound was fatal, and the animal, still clinging to the hunter and moaning until its cries sank to a whisper, died. The hunters were deeply touched by tho incident. One of them said afterward that he couldn't have felt worse if a child had been shot. In the Sweet By and By. The opinion is expressed by many leading journals of the country that we are on the eve of a lively revival of general prosperity. This paper has published oa several occasions recently articles containing these views and giving good reasons as the af oro,n7v>fj'ntc tine af VIWW VX U'vil Ul ?Utl?ClUO, i iHO IVVii 4i?, Vi hopefulness appears to generally prevail in commercial circles. TheXew York American Grocer, which is conservative and well informed, in its current number says "There are many signs that coosunuadHS has again caught up with producf^^SR? " " an n |W)| that we are now on the eve of jfS&Taer peof pood times. Railroad }}.,? j niLfc^g again; our st^i raii"mills j are not able for rails, and orders are agaih'beginmBg-iO be j placed in Europe; general manufacturing j and business is improving, as is shown bv j the improved demand for money from all j sections of the country, which has drawn j A r\-TT~? T-r\1?i o rs f t iW? Vmr V Arl" l^O-nL'C i UUWU IUC OUipUO C-LAV AUin, V?M?^ j over the legal reserve from sixty millions i last year to eight millions this year; stocks of manufactured goods are generally small, and prices so low that any change must be for an advance; many items in the grocery line are firm and tending upward, so it looks as if we not only were likely to see a steady trade, but as if another boom was coming. Indeed, this is inevitable every few years, for the ground swell of increas- i ing population is sure to catch up with over production. The railroad Gazette of August G shows that since the census of 1880 our population has increased 9,S00,000, or nearly 20 per cent., and that on July i it amounted to ."50,9(51,000. "With i the emigration for the next four years no I larger than last year, and the same" rite of natural increase in popoidation, it would bring it up to G6,:J00,000 in 1S90, or about 16,000,000 in ten years. With such a tremendous increase of population a business boom every few years is certain.'' Tiiis is encouraging, ana our people have cause to rejoice over the fact that we arc about to witness the dawn of a vigorous revival of business and a return of general prosperity. ReaKMembling of the En^llih Parliament. London, August 19.?Parliament reassembled to-day. The Queen's speech was as follows: 3Iy Lords aud Gentlemen: 1 have summoned you to meet at tliis unusual season for the transa'. Lion of indispensable business. The session of the hist Parliament was interrupted before the ordinary work ! of the year had been completed, in order that the sense of my people might be taken j on certain importaut proposals with regard i to the government of Ireland. The result ot the appeal has been to confirm the c^r. elusion to which the lute Parliament had come. The provisional nature of the arrangement made by the last Parliament for the public charge of the year rendered it inexpedient to postpone any further consideration of necessary financial legislation. Gentlemen of the House of Commons: The estimates which were submitted to the last Parliament and only partially voted will be laid before you. My Lords and Gentlemen: At the period of the year usually assigned for a recess, and after the prolonged and exceptional labors to which many of you have been subjected, I abstain from recommending now for your consideration any measures except those which are essential to the conduct of the public service during the remaining portion of the financial year. I am confident that they will receive your prompt and careful attention. A meeting of the Paruell members was j held in the House of Commons before the | meeting of that body. Paraell presided. ! Members who were present at the meeting decided to discuss Irish affairs, especially ! the Belfast riots, during the debate in the j House of Commons on the reply to tiie Queen's speech, and also to endeavor to learn the intentions of the government in regard to Ireland. Caught l?y an Oriopa*. A diver who -was trying to lind pearls ; off the Alaska coast found none, but j found himself, all of a sudden, in the { grasp of an ugly octopus with arms i twenty-seven feet long. Such an ex-1 periencs is rare: but there are thousands I of people who are caught by dyspepsia, j which is quite bad. An octopus hates j to let go. So does dyspepsia. Brown's j Iron Bitters settles dyspepsia, and makes it loose its cruel grip. * j On Saturday, the 14th instant, the turpentine still of Mr. S. W. Gowdy, in the Hebron neighborhood of Williamsburg, was burned/ About 300 barrels of virgin rosin were consumed. The tire was of accidental origin. Mr. Gowdv''s loss is about ?1,000. No insurance. Hard-Earned \Ya;;e*. All artist, employed in repairing the j properties of un old church in Belgium. ! being refused payment in a lump. was ! asked for details, and sent in his bill as : follows: Corrected the Ten Commandments.!? "> 12 j Eml>elHshed Pontius Pilate, and put a riubon in his bonnet 3 02 j Put a new tail on the Rooster of St. Peter, and mended his comb 3 20 Replumed and gilded the left wing of the Guardian Angel 4 IS ; Washed the servant of the High Priest, and put carmine on las chc.'.-k 5 13 Renewed Heaven. adjusted two stars and cleaned the moon T 14 Reanimated the llaincsof Purgatory and restored Souls 3 00 Revived the 1'ames of Hell, put a new tail on the Devil, mended his left hoof and did several jobs for the Damned 7 17 Rebordering the robe of Herod and readjusting his wig 4 00 Put new spotted dashes on the son of Tobias and dressing on his sack... 2 00 Cleaned the ears of Balaams Ass and shod him 04 Put ear-rings in the tars of Sarah... 2 04 Put a new stone in David's sling, enlarged the head of Goliath and extended his legs 3 02 | Decorated Noah's Ark 3 00 Mended the shirt of the Prodigal Son and cleaned his nose 4 00 *59 12 Threatened Masonic Exposure. The local Masonic fraternity of North Adams, Mass., are excited over the antics of one F. Spalding, who threatened to expose their secrets and also to confer the degree in his house for $2 unless his appeals for help arc heeded. Spalding came to North Adams from "Water!owa some lime ago, and has one son, who is a peddler. The local lodges, to neither of which he belongs, have helped him: Lafayette to the amount of $78 and Graylock live dollars. His further demands being refused, he has issued a handbill offering to expose the I order, and oil'ered an advertisement to the same effect to the local newspaper. These handbills he has sent to Masons in the locality, threatening to distribute them if he is not aided, and his demand is in the nature of blackmail. The lodges have investigated him, and lind that he is not entitled to assistance, and some of his letters .i ; LL> muiviuuui IlILlll i'Ulo JU Lacui U j smack of threats similar to the Morgan ex-1 posur<\ The lodges will oiler 110 opposi-! tion to his course, and it is understood that he is getting: ready for conferring degrees surreptitiously at his house. On Woman. What shall be done with the women? is a question asked by an editor. Better not try to do anything with them, kind friend. The very best course for a man to pursue in regard to women is to let them have their own way. That man who dares to try to boss a*.spirited woman will find his hands too full for comfort. Of course i you might brow beat a timid, tender, clinging, trustful little thing in calico, but when it comes to the get-up-and-get woman she will get the best of you every time. Indeed, we have known women of force and nerve to mop up the floor with grumbling sticks misnamed men. Aud the millions of bald heads throughout the land are mute but ever present reminders of woman's power and influence. Yes, i you can tackle the business end of a hornet with some little hope of coming out unhurt, but a real prudent man will never attempt to boss a wide awake woman. "The thing can't be did." Denouncing Cremation. i a decree oi uie sacred irtounai 01 me ; Holy Roman and Universal Inquisition, under date May 19, 1SSC, now first made j public, declares it illicit to Catholics to become members of societies having as their : object the cremation of human bodies, and ; when the said societies arc affiliated to the I sect of Free Masonry they fall under the 1 I excommunication reserved to the Pope, j j The decree furtiMg iah:;rits the *fuhifcI:!i*ffiywiCe f-fl^ipatimj" m or promoting the" act of cremation, whether in leaving directions to that effect or in any other way. The Holy Father, in confirming and "sanctioning this decision of the Holy Office, has ordained communication of "the same to the entire hierarchy of Christendom, in order that they may earnestly endeavor to deter the' faithful from following Into the abominable abuse of cremating human remains. How They Do Oi:t West. Those Western editors are determined fellows, and the man must be smart indeed who gets ahead of some of them. Iiecentlyan editor of a newspaper in Illinois brought suit against forty-three men who would not pa}' their subscriptions and obtained a judgment in each case for the full amount of the claims. Of these twentyeight made affidavit that they owned no property in excess of what the law allowed them, thus preventing an attachment. Then, under the law of Congress making the taking of a newspaper from the posttcirhniit navimr for if, thr-ft. thftV were arrested for petit larceny and bound over in the sum of *000 each. All but six gave bail and the others went to jail. Father Gossani's Family. David Gossard. of Washington County, Md., has been celebrating the birth of his twenty-fourth child, a bouucing 115-pound baby girl, who has been named Frances Folsom Cleveland Gossard. Xo. 20, a boy, born the day President Cleveland was inaugurated, was named after the President. There are 1 <5 boys and U girls in the family, but they rre not the children of one mother. Fourteen were by the first wife .??*! in 11 l?v flir? I'awins Away. The great men of this country are passiug away. Since tlie election of Cleveland some of the brightest lights in the political firmament have been extinguished by the hand of death. Yes, the great men are passing away, and we don't feel very well oursclf this afternoon. Yes, we are all passing away, and. it is a cause of alarm to the j country as to who will fill our places and direct :is we ail did its grand and mighty destiny. Crime Xot fcoctionnl. Let's see: Mary Stannard, Jennie Cramer. Rose Ambler, and Mattie Randell. four beautiful girls, were l'oully murdered during the last" few years in that lawless State of Texas. Oh. no, in the highly civilized State of Connecticut. A pretty good record. And now that lovely old State comes to the front with a revised edition of the Preller trunk mystery. Truly Wise. An old axiom says that "he that expends gold properly is its master; he who lays it up. it's keeper; he who loves it. a fool; he who fears it. a slave; he who adores it, an idolater: anil that the only truly wise man is lie who lias none in his possession." From which remark we are reluctantly led to believe that we are a wise man. Fashion strictly demands that when 3-oung people marry they shall go away on a wedding trip, which means no small outlay of cash. A couple recently married felt this pressure, but conceived a scheme by which to thwart the process of custom and save the item of expense. They went to the station, accompanied by a" partv ' ' - ' i .. OI Il'iUIlUN. auii uviuuvu <i uai u, nnu the usual good byes, well wishes, etc. But the couple didn'tremaia on the train. Oh, no: They walked through the car and out at the end opposite that at which they entered. and sped down Water street around to their home, where they remained in seclusion for a week.?Springfield ll<me*icad. ?C O- ?. "All things come to him who waits." At the same time it is well to tip the waiter occasionally. The things will come quicker. 'Aerial railway in Georgia" is an English editor's translation of the "Georgia Air-Line." GENERAL NEWS ITEMS. Facts or Interest Gathered from Various Quarters. Quiet has been restored in Belfast. Train wreckers are again at work in Chi- j cago. The report of the marriage of .Mine. : Nilsson i- denied. There seems but little doubt that Secre-: tary Bayard will resign. The new silver certiticates are not to be issued before Xovemlx-r 1. Tin? President has gone to the Adirondac Mountains for his summer vacation. Dolores Fosta, widow of the famous Mexican General Santa Anna, is dead. In every part of eastern Texas complaint j is made of the cotton shedding its forms. ~ Since the riots at Belfast every Catholic ' workman has been hounded ofl of Queen's : Island. James Ojseiil i a tally stubbed bis wile and mother-in-law, in Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday. Lock Langley murdered Thomas Monroe and his son" Allen, last Sunday, in the Cherokee Nation. Andrew E. "Warner, manufacturer of silverware and jewelry at Baltimore, has made an assignment. Pittsburg, Pa., had a *10,000 tire last Sunday. The Black Diamond Steel Works were burned. On Monday night the business portion of Tulore, Cal.,"was destroyed by an incendiary tire. Loss $2-30,000. in Chicago, Monday, Dr. F. L. Trowbridge was struck by Prank Packard, with his list, and died in two minutes. Frank Shouse, of Savannah, a brakeman on the Central road, fell from a car Thursday morning and broke his leg. A terrible rain storm occurred in West Virginia Monday, which turned brooks into torrents, which drowned several persons. The Secretary of the Treasury at Washington Thursday issued a call for ?15,000,000 of bonds. The call matures October 1. Parnell's banner for home rule raised by tlin fVinvnntmtf "Poawwhlv if \vv? can, otherwise if we must." The Michigan Democrats, in convention assembled, adopted a resolution approving the policy of the Administration. Compulsory attendance by students on religious services h:is been abolished in Harvard University. John Boyd shot "\Ym. 1). Johnson, a prominent citizen of Rock Yard, .Mich., through the heart Saturday. A double elopement occurred at Concord, X. H., Thursday, two married men eloping with two married women. Willi all her talk of war, Georgia has a militia force of ~,S87 all told, white and colored, infantry, artillery and cavalry. Central Russia, and especially the Moscow district, has been devastated by tornadoes and water spouts. An unknown tramp was lynched by indignant citizens of Indiana for stabbing to death Davis, the station agent at Huron. P. II. McCarron, a barber in Providence, R. I., cut the throat of J. Crosby, Wednesday, while shaving him. Death ensued at once. Because of sundry perfunctory convention resolutions, the President is satisfied that the South is a unit for his civil service reform. It is suggested that if the cutting in ocean steamer rates continues, a steerage to Eu rope win cosi ;i goou citai icss luaii suiyimr at home. Fred. Douglass removed the last feather from tJie Presidential camel's back when, in a public specch, he called Mr. Cleveland "Grover." Mrs. George Deakerhort and her child died at Bakerstown, Pa., Thursday, from eating toadstools, which they thought were mushrooms. It is reported in London that there irs Chinese army of 40,000 men quartee'd on [ the Sungari river, in JJLaocfcTia, near the I Russian boundj^rr : A tln^^apo I i s, hist week, lightning where a man and his wife ana iiu.iut .Jere in bed asleep and killed the wife; the other ttvo escaping unhurt. The Irish delegates to the Chicago Irish National League Convention?Messrs. O'Brien. Deasey and Kedmond?arrived in New York Monday. Six thousand cigar makers went out on a strike for higher wages at Havana, Monday. The manufacturers have united to resist the demand. By advice of the Civil Service Commission, the President has amended the rules so as to prevent appointing officers from knowing the politics of applicants. A heavy wind and rain storm occurred in Aberdeen, Dakota, Monday, and swept over a oO miles radius. Four persons were killed outright. There has been a move in the court at T?ir-1)rr?nn/l Y:l vllU-li oivpj; rise to the be lief that Cluvcrious, convicted of the murder Lillian Madison, will have another chance for his life. The Chicago anarchists have been adjudged guilty of murder. Spies, Parsons. Schwab, Fielden, Fischer, England and Linng are to be hanged, and 2seebe to serve 15 years in the penitentiary. The father of the two Taylor brothers, iu Tennessee, is neither Democrat nor Republican. lie is an ardent Prohibitionist. He can take the fence between Alf. and Bob. Chief iutercst in the Chicago Convention centers in the fact that the Irish delegates have resolutely set their faces not only against dynamite, but against violence in any shape. The Boston Advertiser says: "Georgia men are burning with a desire to whip Mexico. What they ically want, perhaps, is to get into a country where there is no promuiuoii. The "old soldier' racket liad no force in Tennessee. Bob Taylor, who was too young lo go to war, easily defeated Gen. Dibbreil, the hero of a hundred battles, and a statesman of a high order. The London Times of Thursday gives prominence in its columns to a letter suggesting the prosecution for treason, on their return to their homes, of the Canadian delegates and other British subjects who figured in the Chicago convention. The magistrates of Belfast are in a quaudary as to how to proceed in view of the verdict of willful murder found against nine policemen, committed during the recent riots. The report is confirmed that Ivrupp has secured a contract to supply 1,500 tons of steel rails for the construction of railroads, to be used in the development of mining industries in Tientsin, China. The Convention of the Irish National League at Chicago endorsed Parnell and his party despite the opposition of Finertv and his followers. Gladstone's efforts in r.r Tr/iliml \vorf? nnnrnvci] The brother of Miss Belle Clayton, daughter of a wealthy merchant at .Maud Creek, Tenn., lias been arrested for burying alive the illegitimate child of his sister. Miss Clayton has fled from arrest. There is a new labor-saving basting machine now on trial in Boston which the operatives of the large wholesale clothing manufacturing houses are preparing to make a light against. On Saturday a remarkably rich strike was made in the Rudisill gold mine, Mecklenburg county, X. C. Twenty-five ounces of gold were collected from the plates on Saturday's run. There was a terrible wind storm at Galveston last night. Families living along the beach were driven from their homes by the water, and the street railway was torn ; up. The wnole southern and southeastern portion of the city is inundated. Brother Bonaventure, of the Order of St. Francis Xavier. at Lowell, Mass.. lost his life in Lake Nabonassett in endeavoring to save from drowning some parties whose boat had capsized, lie was seized with j cramps and drowned. The mutilated body of Miss Mabbit, who was abducted a week ago from her home in an Indiana town by Amos Green, was found four miles east of Lafayc-tte. Her head was beaten into a jelly. Green is stil at large. Dr. Frank II. Hamilton, one of the most distinguished and accomplished physicians ' ami "surgeons of the country, died of consumption in New York on Wednesday. He was one of President Garfield's physicians. Yesterday's cliolera returns for Italy are as follows: Barletta, i>9 new cases, 43 deaths: Venice. 19 new cases. .S deaths: Treviso, 4-"> new cases, 1 f; deaths: Ruvo, 24 new cases, T deaths: elsewhere, 02 new cases, 2-) deaths. The English government intends to introduce at the next session of Parliament a measure giving local government to Ireland on the basis of a plan prepared by Lord j Randolph Churchill. The Ilartington party j will support the scheme. Sunday evening there was considerable' excitement in Macon, Ga.. over the finding : of a ball of waste, carefully wrapped, sat- : urated with kerosene and supposed to con- , tain dynamite concealed in a growth of weeds immediately in the rear of the Brown House. I About 40 people were poisoned at the Coulton Cottage on Brighton avenue. Long i Branch, Saturday night, from drinking I poisoned milk. They will all recover. Dr. I Ezra S. Hunt, Secretary of the State Board 1 of Health, has been sent for to make an j official-analysis of the milk. Sheriff A. S. Armstrong was shot by Ben. C. Thompson and he died in ten minutes. Armstrong, on meeting Thompson after a political meeting held in Tuskegee, i Ala., called him a scoundrel, whereupon the latter drew a revolver and fired twice, both taking effect. A special from El Paso suites that the Cutting case is in ctatu tjno. Envoy Sedgwick has not arrived. -Medina, the person who had Cutting incarcerated, has published a card announcing- that he will not proceed against Cutting in a civil suit for damages, "as he is privileged to do. Gray, the defaulting treasurer of the Atlantic and Indian Orchard mills, committed suicide. His boiy was found yesterday morning at Blue Hills with a buliet through his heart. Gray's defalcation has caused the failure Samuel R. Payson. one of the leading business men of Boston. As the President of the Republic was ent/?i*?nir ill/. -it "M<-?ntov?cl<.n Tnnsrluv night, some miscreant fired a revolver at bis head, the ball entering tbe President's cbeek, inflicting a slight wound. An infu riated crowd attacked tbe would-be assassin and maltreated him so terribly that he died. In JSryan county, Ga., a negro cutoff a piece of a Miss Lizzie IJacon's tongue lo prevent her from informing on him for criminal assault. A posse captured the scoundrel, but he tired on bis captors and succeeded in getting away. Another posse is in pursuit, bent upon lynching him. I)r. Carver, the champion ritie .shot, seems to be in misfortune. An auctioneer last week sold his personal effects by order of the court. A handsome watch given him by the Prince of Wales sold for s-100. a diamond pin, said to have been presented to him by the Emperor of Germany, sold for ?300, and 18 line guns sold for xl.lOu. Mr. 0. L. Tilton, of Savannah, was accidentally shot Tuesday by his live-yearold son. lie had been gunning, and when be came in the house he laid the gun on the bed, and while attending to something else the child approached the bed and was playing with the triggers, which caused it go off, s'riking Mr. T. in the back. About 25,000 deaths from typhoid fever occur in this country annually, says the Medical Record, and this represents fully 150,000 cases of the disease. Statistics | show tint there is no disease so easily pre J vented as this, and it is safe to say that full j one-half of this mortality might be saved ! by greater cleanliness and more attention j to sewage. i Officers are looting for Dr. C. C. Beers, j supposed to be implicated witli 3Irs. Sarali j J. Kobinsou. the alleged Sometville pois; oner. District Attorney Stevens has grantj ed permission to exhume the bodies of all : of -Mrs. Robinson's supposed vkffijs. probably not more than o i v i 11 be j j taken up. ? f^Teltrnau cholera reports for Monday ; are: Barletta, 00 new cases and 30 deaths; Tiivo di Puglia. 21 new cases and 7 deaths; i Bologna, new cases and 5 deaths; Treviso. 18 new cases and 10 deaths; Verona, j (> new cases and 2 deaths: Legagno, 12 I new cases and deaths: Venice. 7 new i cases and 2 deaths; Bisceglia, V-l new cases i and 2 deaths: Acquiviva 14 new cases and ; o deaths. The Treasury Department is prepared to | carry out the provisions of the recent Act of Congress authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to deliver to the rightful owners certain articles of jewelry, etc., captured by the U. S. army during the civil war and deposited in the Treasury Depart- ; ment. One box contained a lot of articles ! captured by Gen. Sherman's troops in Cam-! den, S. C.,"in the early part of 1SC5. They ! consist of family plate, jewelry, ?fcc.. which j had been deposited in a bank at Camden ; by }Ir. McRae and other wealthy residents 1 of that section. ? ! J ? While Th re is Life There is Hope. Many of the diseases of this season j of the "year can be averted by a small amount of care and at little cost, by I the timely use of Ewbaxk's Topaz l Cixciioxa" Cordial. It cures Diarrhoea, Dysentery, UUoi- ; era Morbus and like complaints. Xo ; traveler should be without a bottle, as ; it will prevent any disease t-hat would ; no doubt arise from the change of: water, food and climate, without its i use. The most valuable medicine in the world, contains all the best and j most curative properties of all other ; Tonics, Bitters, etc., etc., being the ; ! greatest Blood Purifier, Liver Regulator and Life and Health-Restoring; Agent in existence. For Malaria,1 Fever and Ague, Chills and Fever, 1 Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sick Head- I ache, Nervous Headache, Chronic Rheumatism, etc., etc.. it is truly a ! Herculean Remedy. It gives new life j { and vigor to the aged. For ladies in j delicate health, weak and sickly chil-; drcn, nursing mothers. See circulars ' wrapped with bottle. Charleston, S. C., Sept. 1,18S5. II. B. Ewbaxk, Esq., President of 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-! tizer I can cheerfully recommend i:io all who are suffering from Debility and lack of appetite. My children, especially, have been much benefitted | by its use. .Respectfully, Hutsox Lee. Ask your druggist for Ewbaxk's | Topaz Cinchona Cordial and take no other. The Topaz Cinchona Cordial Co., * Spartanburg, S. C., U. S. A. | Ready Tor the Templars. Sr. Loins, Mo., Aug. 19.?The prepara-! tions for the great triennial conclave of the j Knights Temrlar, which is to he held here | next"month, are rapidly approaching completion, and they will be as complete and I satisfactory as it is possible to make them, j The Vice "Chairman of the General Com- j mittee reports that ho already has positive I advances'that 30,000 Kniglits, accompanied ' by 20,000 members of their families, will j be here, and that fully 100,000 other per- [ sons will be present to witness and share : in I he great demonstration. Good quarters will be provided for everybody who desires ; to come. The accommodations already at j the command of the committee are more i than ample to meet the present demands, and they can be greatly extended. The (>rder of the Eastern Star, which holds the snmp relation to the Masonic fraternity that the Daughters of Rebecca c'o to the i Odd Fellows, will hold its annual conven- i tiou during the conclave week. Mot Knrtnonioua. j There may be some eases on record, but! after a careful reflection we think we can ; say positively that never of our own per- j sonal knowledge have we known of a! case, where a bald headed man was con i verted duriug lly time. Perfect equanimi ; ty. perfect repose of temper, and an active set of flies don't move along in perfect harmony and serenity. Where flies abound ' cuss*' feelings doth much more abound. End-m en?Ad vent ist s. BRIC-A-BRAC. U mbrellas have a widespread popularity. ! This is the harvest time of the ice water i fiend. . I The past week lias been the hottest of the : season. A suit of armor was the old-fashioned Knight dress In a few more weeks the fall business will open up lively. The man who borrows trouble is never able to pay it back, llemember this. The fool and his money are soon parted but this is not true of the fool and his hair. There is a place in Pennsylvania called Economy. It is not a summer resort. The school boys of the olden time used to know something about the "switchman's strike." Halifax is to have a steel railway.?Jour ml. There are several steal railways in ; this country. Love is that golden latch key "which ' hangs on the outside, and lets in happiness ! to every heart. By actual count it has been ascertained ; that a man can shoe a horse quicker than a : woman can shoo a hen. Sixty thousand cards are used in the i Brooklyn Library.?Ex. A new pack for every game, we suppose. "It's a wife's duty to be pleasent," says i an exchange. Yes, and it's the husband's ; duty to make her duty easy. | Hotel T urtle is the name of a Dakota j hotel, and we presume the people who stop ! there find the motto to be, "Shell out." | Actors are too much given to quarreling, ! considering that it is a part of their busii ness to kiss and "makeup." I A Buffalo girl never has her wedding dress made in that city, for fear some one , will say she was married in a buffalo rol>e. Appearances are deceiving in this world. The nicest man you ever met was a bunco, stcercr*. First love and first shave come but once in a man's lifetime. And neither usually has much result. "Above all, Arthur, dear, mind 3*ou buy me a thick engagement ring; the thin ones can't be seen under the glove." A Columbia girl is developing a healthy heard around her rosy mouth. She will i not tell who she caught it from. 1 The art of using moderate abilities to ; advantage wins praise, and often acquires i more reputation than real brilliancy. When a man falls in love he courts his sweetheart. Afterward she sues for a : breach of promise and courts her lover. Many a man doesn't realize that he has i had a swell time at an evening party until i he tries to put his hat on the next morniner. i The conqueror is regarded with awe, the ; wise man commands our esteem, but it is i the benevolent man who wins our affection. A lady whose husband indulges more or : less at the club, says he is a kind but in: dulging husband. Xew England ice cream must be made \ for export to Canada. It kills at shorter I range than Jersey lightning. Cincinnati has discharged two policemen i for inability to read and write* They ! should be eligible forjury duty. "I know what the nights of labor are," ; said the mother of six boys as she sat down I to repair the pile of trousers and jackets. It is one of the easiest things in the world to make a blunder, but how hard it is sometimes to repair one. Gath sententiously says that though the great reformer died the great purloiner still perpetuates himself. Who drank the first julep? Why, Nebuchadnezzar. He was the first man who ever mixed grass with his liquor. Only four months before Congress will i assemble again, but the 49th can only last tur\il?*wk 4U), which is some consolation. ' Wc want a circus, anu-wo~.-a.aut it bad!" exclaims a Western editor. We siiox.ua think he would want a good one while he j was wanting. A physiologist has written a three column j article on "When to Eat." Eat wlien you j are hungry, we should think, is the best j time. It doesn't look well when men spend i more money in burying their wives than j they do in supporting them while they are j alive. The proper course to pursue on being in formed that somebody ii^s threatened to | pull your nose is to procure some tallow j and grease it. When a poet sings from the innermost ; recesses of his soul, "I listen for the com- j ing of feet," in all probability he's a chiro- i pod 1st. There is nothing a certain class of men j will not forgive, if you will accept their j views; and nothing they will forgive, if I you do not. The exhausted daily worker gets great strength from eating the onion.?Ex. He does "indeed. Sometimes he gets strong enough to clear a car of all the passengers. Some one remarks that "lace is what ruffles the men now-a-days." But he is wrong. Lace ruffles the women as usual. It is paying for it that ruffles the men. "Women drink liquor," says a writer, "and yet they never see snakes." Guess I'AII lirtT'An't for luivgu t juuiotu guuu^u back. Did you ever hear of Eve? "Home again! Not dead ikz injured! You even smile! Is it?can it be true!" Thus spoke the umpire's wife. To be continued. A Connecticut editor called the local court the Lime Kiln Club, and was promptly fined $.1.57. About six jokes per week ;tt that rate would bankrupt most Connecticut editors. The new word "jawsmith," introduced by the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, is an ex pressive and valuable addition to the English language in these days of workmen who ; labor with their mouths only. Elizabeth Rose Cleveland says: 'An j acorn in the mind is worth a forest on the ] end of the tongue." But, dear Elizabeth, 1 neither is the object of such tender care as ! acorn on a pet toe. The man who invented the "chestnut j o Tiffin 1 trill tr\ r?orrr (11(11 ill (I libkiv UV/11 I.V V/U1 i J VViiVV/UlVU) I and to ring when a stale joke is told?must j have had Tennyson's line in mind: "Ring j out the old, ring in the new." They were speaking of a young lady ! who sings beautifully, and one of the party j asked: "Is she a mezzo soprano?" "No, j I guess not; I think she is a Swede," was j the innocent reply of a high school girl. A gentleman in Georgia having suceeded in artificially flavoring watermelons during growth, the inhabitants ot Rhode Island are anxiously awaiting the advent of a brandy and watermelon. A gentleman in Athens, Ga., 33 years old, never fired a gnn in his life. There is a gentleman living in Schley county, Ga., who shingles his own hair, and does it as quickly and as tastefully as the best skilled barber could. The little cutler Clara was sailing through the water like a frightened cat.?Ex. A frightened dog, now, might sail through the water because he owns a bark, but a frightened cat sailing through the water would astonish the old salts. The year in which August has five Sundays is called ministers' leap year; for, in effect, a week is added to the usual vacation season. The present is the third successive year in which the pastors' holiday has thus been prolonged. Tn Montana the editorial rooms of newspapers are entered by a door with a spring lock, and handle on the outside. If one desires to enter lie must first rin<r a 1x511. The editor then goes into another room, : where he can sce^his visitor through the j window, and if he is not a belligerent armed with a revolver, he admits him. ; Owing to these precautions a Montana ! editor has not been shot in his office for ; several month. A Connecticut constable started with a ; prisoner to Iladdam jail last week, and on ' the way both got so drunk that the jailer j could nol tell which was constable and i which convict, and had to lock them both ' up until they had sobered off. And this j all happened in the "blue law state" where 1 everybody is good by statute?where on ; Sunday even tee roosters refuse to crow, ; the hens neglect to lay, corn ceases from j growing and water hesitates to run down hill. It must be that the story is a lie driven out of Rhode Island by thirst. feOl'TH CAROL I.\A XEWS. The work of clearing the right of way of the Blaekville and Alston railroad is pro- j grossing favorably. The dwelling house and kitchen of C. 15. ' Hammett, Jr., nearGoucher, Spartanburg, | were burned Friday. Deer are reported to be plentiful along j ! tiif Fdistn. Farmers eoniulain of their de i 1 predations on the pea crops. A Rock Hill colored boy, 11 years old, ; drank about a pint of whisky arid the jury said he died of alcoholic poison During the storm of Tuesday a cow was j struck by lightning and killed on the place i ; of William Stevens, at TYilliamslon. A colored man in St. Andrew's parish j ; while handling his gun a few days ago | ! accidently shot and killed Joe Jenkins, a j j colored.child live years old. | Lightning struck in a cotton field on ; Capt. Wm. Goldsmith's place near Greenville with the usual effect of blighting all the plants in an area of many feet. While cutting engine wood, last Friday j evening, near Lewiedale, Mr. J. II. Nipper j | found a den of rattlesnakes in a log. One ; with ten rattles, and 1$ smaller size. Mr. B. F. Smith, of Abbeville C. II., was J stricken with paralysis on one side Satur: day night. He went to bed as usual and | awoke"next morning in a helpless condition. i ?i ~:_i AT.,?A A COlOrtli ijU', -tiuijijic .v^ucn, nuo | burned to death near Greenville Sunday, j She was endeavoring to get a fan that fell in the fire and her clothing caught. ; Two hundred and forty barrels of rosin j were shipped from Leesville to "Wilmington Monday last, by Mr. W. S. Cook?the I heaviest shipment of rosin ever made from that point at one time. P During a thunder storm Friday lightning struck the two-story barn and feed house of Mrs. Charlotte Bankers, in Pickens county. The building took lire and was burned to the ground with its contents. Last Sunday night lightning entered the telegraph at the depofin Orangeburg by means of the telephone wires and smashed up things generally, frightening several who were in the office at the time nearly to ; death. A brutal murder was committed about i seven miles from Prosperity "Wednesday I morning. Robert Harmon, a negro living ; on Mr. Ben. Nichols's place, became jeal ! ous of his wife and beat her to death. Her | neck was broken and her body beaten to a jelly and her skull -was broken. He was I captured and put in jail. Mr. John "W. Rykard, of Abbeville, who i has invented a car coupler, liy fan, cotton j chopper and a shaft for a buggy which ! sM-r* Kn rnlnoco/1 iv> o mnm/mt'c warrnno* in i U1U uv 1^1CU>A,U 41X U MJV/U1VUV ^ K? ?*| cjisc of a.runaway, Las Lis inventive mind j buried with something else. TLe latest | from this Edison of South Carolina is a ! motor for sewing machines. On last TLursday evening about dusk i Mr. C. T. Thames, of Manning, returning | from fishing, supposed lie Lad toucLed a j snake, wLea at tLat instant a monster rattle snake jumped over Lis sLoulder. He sLot at it with small sLot and it attacked liim again, when lie riddled it with buck shot. Mr. T. found 24 of its '-attics. WLile Mr. Mannie Snelling was out riding in Barnwell county last Saturday. Le was sligLtly wounded in tLe back of the Lead and rigLt cheek by small shot fired by some unknown person. It Las not 1 transpired wLetLer tLe shooting was acciI dental or intentional, but there are strong : suspicions that it was the work of an ! enemy. Mrs. J. P. Ducket, of Anderson, met ! with a painful accident while out riding ! last Saturday. While going down hill the ; Lorse stumbled, and in attempting to re: gain Lis steps, the holding-back straps I broke, and the buggy ran into the ditch, ; throwing Mrs. Ducket out. She was pain| fully bruised in several places on her perI son"and her shoulder-blade slightly frac | turea. A lively scrimmage took place at Dial's Oiiurch, in Laurens county, last Satury* base-hail eral fight occurred, during wmcE ooim Alx:rcroml)ie struck Butler Putnam with a rock. Putnam drew his revolver, but had to use his left hand, his right hand being crippled. This made his shooting bad and he missed his aim. Calvin Owens, who is Putnam's friend, likewise fired unsuccessfully into the assemblage. The two marks- | men were finally run olf with rocks. Old Sol is hand and glove these days j with the resort proprietors. ; "Mens Sana in Corpo o Sa o;' mm- sum. Established in 1793. The 93d Yeably Term begiDs September Sth, 1S8G. For Catalogue! giving full particulars, address, Maj. R. BINGHAM, Supt., Bingham School P. 0,, Orange Co., N. C. PEACE INSTITUTE? FOl! YOUNG LADIES, RALEIGH, NORTH i AROLI\A. THE FALL TERM COMMENCES OX the first Wednesday of September, 1886, and closes corresponding time in June following. Advantages for instruction in all the branches, usually taught in firstclass Seminaries for Young Ladies, unsurpassed. Building heated by steam, and in every way as to equipment, etc., equal to any in the South. A full corps of FirstClass Teachers engaged for session commencing in September. Terms as reasonable as any other institution offering same advantages. Correspondence solicited. For catalogue, containing full particulars as to terms, etc., address Rev. R. BUR WELL & SON, AugllL2m Principals, Raleigh, N. C. CHARLOTTE FEMALE INSTITUTE, j THE rumor that the Principal will remove to Columbia, S. C.. is a mistake. He has purchased the controlling interest in the CHARLOTTE FEMALE IXSTITTTE; lias spent 84,000 in renovating and j improving the buildings, and is now mak- j ing more valuable improvements than j ever. The building is lighted with gas, warmed with the' best of wrought-iron furnaces, has hot and cold water baths, and first-class appointments as a Boarding School in every respect. No more experienced and accomplished coips of Teachers is to be found in the South, and the Music and Art Department are unsurpassed. Full session begins September 1,18.8G. For Catalogue applv to the Principal REV. WM. R. ATKINSON, AugllL2m Charlotte, N. C. ? ^fl WORLD Cheapest |1 ^Commercial College ?fLextaifton, Ky. y' j j Highest Honor and Gold Medal over all other Colleges. | at the WorW'i Exposition, for System of Book-keep Ing and ; General Business Education. COOO Graduitm In Bn?.I. em. loTeachereemployed. CottofKuIl Business Course, ; including Tuition. Stationery and Board, about #90. Short- | Hand. Type-Writing and Trlejrsphy specialties. So Va- . ratios, Knttr Sow. Graduate* Guaranteed SuerrM. For ! irculars address W. 32. SMITH, Pres*t, Lexington,Ky. ttt i xt'in~*ilady active and ! YV AIM IMJ? intclHsrent. torepre- { sent in her own locality an oid firm. References required. Permanent position and good salary. GAY & IJttOJ*., 11; Barclay St, N. Y." Ukt ~ Mm? MmilWiiiriffl ill ri r Inni Miff in B i! HHvIyOT vHe#^s93vnBylS nimMmiHiMlnfrffl B HE^^51!EsS9i _...J?l? gg I Every strain or cold attacks that weak fca.-k and nearly prostrates yon. 1 i M \ Pimp# K wfp|i ^ 1 I 111 IP"? THE = i y BEST TONIC ? Strengthens the Muscles, Steadies the Nerves, Enriches the Blood, Gives New Vigor. Dr. J. L. Mtebs. Fairfield, Iowa, gays: "Brown's Iron Bitters is the best Iron medicine I ! liave known in my 30 years' practice. I havo found it specially benefceial in nervous or physical exhanetion. and in all debilitating ailments that bear so. j heavily on the S;\<tem.Use it freely in my own ftmily.'* ; Genuine has trade mart and crossed red lines on ; wrapper. Tnke no other. Made only by BROWN CHEMICAL CO.. BALTIMORE, 5II>. | Ladies' Hand Book?useful and attractive, con- i taininj: list of prizes for recipes, information about I coins, etc., (riven r.wny by all dealers in medicine, or I mailed to any addrosa cn receipt of 2c. stamp. | j 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, Nervous Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Irregularity of the Bowels, Constipation, Flatulency, Eructations and Burning of the Stomach (sometimes called Heartburn), Miasma, Malaria, Bloody Flux, Chills and Fever, Breakbone Fever, Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diarrhoea, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Foul Breath, Irregularities incidental to Females. Bearing-down "SSfiSiSTADIGEB'S AURflWTH is invaluable. It is not a panacea for all diseases, but j E> E all diseases of the LIVER, will STOMACH and BOWELS. It changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow ! tinge, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely removes j low. gloomy spirits. It is one of the BEST AL~ TERATIVES and PURIFIERS OF THE BLOOD, and Is A VALUABLE TONIC. STADECER'S AURANYSi For sale by all Druggists. Price S1.00 per bottla C. F.STADiCER, Proprietor, i40 SO. FRONT ST.. Philadelphia. Pa. IPIAHOS ml ORGANS BUY THEM AT HOME. I 0 Thln.Uk.U PIANOS AND ORGANS ? ?SOLD AT? FACTORY PEXCES FOE CASH r*r> VAt EASY INSTALMENTS. DELIVERED TO NEAREST DEPOT, FREIGHT FREE. I Write for prices and terms to I y. W. TKOIP, Columbia, S. C. . JuncOOLly | ^Potash Victim. Cared ty&S.S. I S. S. S. vs. I have had blood poison for ten years. I k I iodide of potash in that time, bat it did me no and limbs were covercd with sores, and I could |mat:sm in my shoulders. I took S. S. S.. and it h ernes I have taken. My face, body and neck matism is entirely gone. I weighed 116 pounds w 152 pounds. My* first bottle helped me greatly. 1 would not be without S. S. S. for several times C. E. MIT ^ISHLEY SoLL The SolublcfGuanois'a'highly concentratec Grade Fertilizer for all crops. . ASHLEY COTTON AND CORN COMPC two crops and also largely used by the Truck ASIILEY ASH ELEMENT.?A very chea; tilizer fur Cotton, Corn and Small Grain Cro; Vines, etc. ASIILEY DISSOLVED BONE; ASF.LEI trades?for use alone and in Compost heap. For Terms, Directions, Testimonials, and f< publications of tho Company, address THE ASHLEY P1IOSP Nov2.ji.ly (SSSSA BHB^ These pills were a wonderful discovery. No other: or relieve all manner of disease. The information a the marvelous power of these pills, they would wait without. Sent by mail for 25 cents in stamps. Ilh ths information is very valuable. I. S. JOHNSON & "MOTHERS' | FEIE2TD!" BaaggBaBBaBB? ^ NO More Terror! *?P 0111 J", shortens the time ot labor and i lessens the intensity Ne!MorecPaiTi' 'of Pain> but> jt i\ otmoie.rain. ?rreatI (limiuishes the -l _ danger 10 we ui uuui MVIUIVka mother and child, and Nojfore -?SH^?r. leaves the mother in a j condition highly fa- gJk x rotable to speedy rehit j-i m -i3 ccveiv, and far less A Mother or Child, liable to flooding, coi. M vulsions, and other m [alarmingsymptoms Wj incident to slow or The Dread of painful labor. Its . I _ , ., , truly wonderful effica- 1 Motherhood cyin this respect entitles it to be called 5 Transformed to THE MOTHE K'S FRIEND and to be ? H, ^ ranked as one of the ^ M Y~ H: life-saving remedies w of the nineteenth century. ?I1d From the nature of the case it will of \ -i -p v = T- course be understood / | \/ that we cannot pub J \ J I lish certificates concoming this Remedy without wounding the dclicacy of the writers. ?,w1 r?~Vet we*have hundreds Safety and Ease 0f such testimonials on file, and no mother 4 to who has once used it 1 will ever again be ^ Suffering WcmaB without it in her time of trouble. A prominent physician lately remarked to the proj rietor, that if it were admissible to nirtke public the letters we receive, the "Mothers' f riend" would outsell anything on the market. Gentlemen:?During my career in the practice of medicine I usci your "3IOTI1F.U'S FRIEND" in a great number of . cases, with the happiest results in every j instance! It makes labor easy, hastens delivery and recovery, and insukes safety to both mother and child. xo woman can be induced to go through the ordeal ^ without it after once usintr it. Yours truly, T. E. PENNINGTON, M.' D. Palmetto, Ga., June 10,1SS*. Send for our Treatise on "Health and Happiness of Woman," mailed free. Bkadfield Regulator Co., m Atlanta, Ga. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. 324and 326 Pearl St., New York. SEND FOE CIRCULAR ^ Tfffi (JURE TvTfl PAT. Dr. Harbin1# }Uxtnrc. fcr Diarrhoea, Dysentery. &c. Send ror circulars to F. Xichols 4& Co., Greenville, S. C. M tW?* Sample Package or P H, Pi HI Dlt- HAEBI.VS * JcVdilAd* Celebrated J LIVKIl PILLS. Jfl Address F. NICHOLS & CO., Greenville, S. C. DO NO MORE WHITEWASHING NOT WHEN I PLASTIC PAINT | Can be bad so clieap. Cend for pamplilet and color card, and learn its merits. MAXWELL, HAZLETT ?& CO-, jj j 109 McElderry's Wharf. Baltimore, Md., and n COG Washington Ave., Philadelphia. Pa. Parker's Tonic A Pure Family Medicine That Never Intoxicates. Sold by Tail Druggists la "large bottles at One 1 Dollar. . NEWSPAPE R AD YERTISINfT DAUCHY & CO., 27 Park Place and 24-26 Murray iSt\ew York. Make lowest rates on all newspapers in the U. S. and Canada. Established 1867. SPKCIAL OFFER.?We will insert a one-incli advertisement one month in our selected J 1st or 225 Dallies and Weeklies, covering' the U. S.. tor $ .CO Circulation 6,930,292 copies per monthSend ror Catalogue. Parties centemplatlng a line or advertising. Large or small, are requested to send ror estimate or cost. Aug4-4w ' THRESHING MSB J Simplest, Most Durable, Economical, and Perfect in use?wastes no grain; cleans it ready for market. THRESHING ENGINES POHTES,^ ?a?r 31111a. and Standard Implement* gen* dk erally. Send for illustrated catalogue. A. B. FARQUHAR, Pcnn?ylranl> Agricultural Wort*. YOKE. P irruTCWiBTEDr&I^ISS Rlim I \Sampieiree 10uioscoecjiningagems. mULbI I IJXori^-, quick sales. Territory (riven, canaian ^"Satisfaction jraaninteed. Address DR. SCOTT, 842 Broadway, NEW YORK* CAUTION. | & * Consumers should not conf'ise our Specific ? tcxih the numerous itnitaiions, substitutes. B potash and mercury mixtures ichich are got- g ten up to sell, not on, their oicn merit, but, on I the merit of our remedy. An imitation ;s ? always a fraud and a cheat, and they thrive g only as they can steal from the article imiiated. 5 Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed ? jree. fonaieoyauarugguu;. n . THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., | Drairer 3, Atlanta, Ga. 8 POTASH. now I have taken one hundred bottles of good. Last summer my face, seek, body scarcely use my arms on account of rheu.as done me more good than all other mcdi- ? are perfectly clear and clean, and my rhen- 9 hen I began the medicine, and I now weigh and gave me an appetite like a strong man. B > its weight in gold. CHELL, W. 23d St. Ferry, Sew York. fBLE pUANO. n i Ammoniated Guano, a complete ELigli >UND ? A complete Fertilizer for these ers near Charleston for vegetables, etc. p and excelknt Xon-Ammoniaied Ferps, and also for Fruit Troes, Grape ACID PHOSPHATE, of very High )r the various attractive and instructive cv & HA.TE CO., Charleston,' S.,C. s > like then in the world. Will positively curs round each box is worth ten times the cost of a IL ience. One box will MRbA do more to purify the hEh^EB bloedandcurechronworth of any other j remedy yet discovW&mjBf ered. If people could ^HaKr be made to realize : 100 miles to get a box if they could not be had istrated pamphlet free, postpaid. Send for it; CO., 22 Custom House Street, BOSTOU, MASS. ^ iicfi Blood! jj M