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TfcJXfKG OX EACH OTHEK. The Taylor Brothers Enliven Their Canvass by Recollections of Early l>;?ys. From the Noslivilie Amui-aa. A moment of silence marked the close of I5ob?s recital. Then some one 1 turned to Alf, who had been an intent i listener, his eyes fixed on the floor, the i smoke from his cigar carlin^ over his fine head, his whole attitude sngges- | tive of caim repose. "What .=ort of a j boy was Bob?" was inquired of the liepublican candidate. Alf removed the fragrant weed from his lips, and turning his chair toward the lire and peering into the blaze, while a sreuuine > ? . srnne stoie over ms couiu?mtm;c, j "Well, he was a queer boy. To begin j with"?(1IjC careful, Alf," smilinsdy j interjecterl his younger brother. "All j right," and then, continuing, "yes, he was queer. lie was in all manner of mischief at all times, but he had a knack of getting out of the worst scrapes without a scratch, while Nat ? jj t? .1 t 1.* rift,.;! hp UIKl U1LU itiiU. JL im; was a natural-born humorist, and with his droll ways could trick the old folks nine times out of ten. He would lead u.s into mischief and then <jet out just in the nick of time and leave us to catch the consequences. A luckv star has been over that boy," pointing to Bob, "from the day he was born. Let me tell you how he got ahead of us on one occasion, but it will serve as an instance of how he managed things. Brother Xat, Jim and I, Bob and a little negro boy went in swimming1 one Sunday morning in the mill pond near our house. Father had told us he would whip u? if we went swimming on Sunday, but we disobeyed him. He found it out that afternoon. He would not punish us because it was Sunday, but he took us bright and early in the morning to the barn yard. AVe knew what was coming. He took a shingle and bored holes through it with "a gimlet, and then he made us bead over a leg. \ ou can imagine the result. He punished Jim and Nat and me, and we were all crying when he went up to Bob, w ho nvas leaning over the log waiting his turn. Father raised the paddle, suddenly Bob pulled a half dollar cut oi his pocket and twisting his head around at father with a most humorous expi ession of countenance, he said: "Dad, I'll give you this to let me off," and at the same timejollering father the half dollar. We were aH watching him as intently as onr.p.ains would let us. Father stood with the paddle uplifted. Bob continued in Ins leaning' position, holding the liall dollar between his uplifted fingers with that grimace unalterable on his features. Bob was pool as a cucumber. Father at length broke out in a laugh and bade Bob be up andoffin a twinkling. Bob sprang to his feet and slipping iiis half dollar back in his pocket~waiked by us to the house jnaking faces at us as he went by." The laughter which this fraterna e?U.,-had created bavins* ceased, the same inquisitor asked Bob of the buy hood of Alf. "Well," said Bob, with a merry twinkle in bis eye, "Alf hat more temper than 1; he had more figh than I did, but I had more lan. He was quick to resent an injury ant equally quick to forgive. Alf wa; always fond of hunting. When i mere lad lie would go out on the moun tains with on old man who lived iieai tis and camp out for weeks at a time 1 oelieve he had rather hunt now thai do anything. Alt' was my favorite brother, it'I had a favorite, and I thinlhe thought the most of me, althougl he never told me so, for he always die li.ivp a. wnv of coRcealiniT his afi'ectioi from those lie loved. Father though! there was more outcome i:i Alf that: in any of us, but brother Jim, whc invented that gun of which you have heard, is the smartest. Alf always was a keen one. You may be sure h< cociid work a scheme as well as any ~ body. i'JI tell you an incident of hit manhood which illustrates his boy%^r,^A Wtian !>? n/<io lMinnino' fi'il* tllf uwu. TV iiv If U>8 .U?IU4?<B Legislature there was a big Baptisi vote which he wanted and vantet badly. One day he went to a baptising. The preacher had a number ol converts in the creek. Alt', as big a; lite, stood among the people on th: shore, sieging for dear life. As fast a: a person was baptized and sfsried foi the snore Air wotua waue nuu iu. creek and, siKpn^as he advanced wit!: his hymn-book in one hand, he would extend the omen to the (dripping penitent and escort him or her to the shore. Alf <ror the vote of every Bap tist in the district. That's the sort o; fellow he was." and in this gay band' inage the evening passed. Kan Away From the Uridal Altar. From tiie Savannah News. A prominent young lawyer ofEllavilie called on one of the visiting young ladies of that place some time since. >v nue eiigageu in nappy conversation the subject of matrimony sprang np. He proposed, she accepted, and over the hills to the Court House he sped in search of the Ordinary. The license procured, he returned and, notifying the minister, who appeared at a reasonable time thereafter, they sallied forth to be married. As they entered the room, she clinging to his arm almost a loving bride, a ripple of laughter ran through the crowd. The minister jsrose and, addresstug them solemnly, began the ceremony. They stood like pillars of ctnne> r?nv mnrfvl o lin?.- Ac no l>otron reading in deep, clear tones the marriage vow a death-like silence per" vacted the room. Certainly, thought the crowd, tiie voting lady will withdraw after finding the young man refuse?, but not so. In stead, she stood almost immovable. All was silence. Nothing save the slow and distinct words from the lips of the minister were heard. Friends looked uneasy . and looked inquiringly around. Were J they really going to marry? Still the! couple stood?lie wishing that she1 would call the minister down and she almost afraid that he was in earnest, i but determined on standing him out, i "Was puzzled to know how much fur-1 tber lie would permit the preacher to ; go. Finally, however, the sikn:e was ; broken by shoius from the crowd; the youiiir mau's heart had tailed hitn and, trembling in the knees, he broke ranks and left his bride almost dying with laughter- For"the moment the minister seemed paralyzed, but was soon intrt fJirt com-nt f\i' ?V>r> M the party of friends who had assern- j bled to see the fun. 1 The Result of Ccrelessne^. LaFayettk, Ixd.. October 2.?A fatal : explosion occurred at Bringliurst. a village of 30'J inhabitants, in (.'arroll county, yes- I terday. A mnn named Britton went to the j store of Shanklin & Kcarns for sonic pow-1 der. Mr. Kcarcs, with ;i lighted cigar in \ his mouth, poured out the powder from a ! large can into the scaies. In setting down ' til; can the cigar was knocked from Ids mouth in'o the powder, which exploded i with great violence, tearing out the front of J the building and scattering the goods about J the streets. Mr. Ivearne's arms w;>.s broken in two places, his shoulders were dislocated j and his head and face were frightfully j burned. He died in a few hoi:: -. " 13riiton had both arms broken ai:d was terribly burned. His injuries are fatal. Shelving fell upon Mr. Shnnklin and seriously injured him. A. boy was blackened and burned but not fatally hurt. Kearns was about 50 years old and leaves a widow and ! eight children. Ti? JL Alt iU^U .VO 911\/UiV& iiVl Ut VliCcouraged. Married men have struggled for home for twenty centuries and have not yet 1 Succeeded in getting it. * : TI1REK UEAIIW BV \\ . Mrs Malwr** llu^aui Himself. ilt-r Ba- ; l>y Died, and .Now >he i* Dead. (j:i Novelliw T. 1S-S4, Man?" .Mahev handed lii:r.>el! from tiif; bunt;is;er <>f the . 1 1 V.. < >< stairs leaumg ?u iij> iwm n.. ~,;x ; Thirty-hrst street, on account of hi.-; wife's : intemperate h;:!'it>. Ke left some sT.000 in bank, which his wi<Jow Margaret proceeded to spend. She became a confirmed drunkard, and was repeatedly sent to the Island for short terms. Three mouths after his death a posthumous child was born, a;:d for a short time it seemed as though the mother would lead a less reckless life. On August 2D she moved from Xo. 2G'J Xinlh avenue. where she Lad lived aboutyear, and paid *2oU for a grocery store at I\"o. 4i:> west Forty-iirst street. She never opened the store. Four days after she mov<;d in >ht was arrested on tiie street for being drunk and disorderly, and after she had been taken to the station house the officer found her dead child in the house. The coroner linally acquitted the mother of everything but neglect. The woman's life after that was one long orgie. At 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon janitor ; Fried knocked at the front doer to execute I a dispossess warrant lie got no reply, I and linally burst in the rear window. The ' woman was found Ivimrdead i:i the middle i rri ? ?,wi t1ir, jw1v. I rQUIil. 1 JIU iiluVJ <li!> ?/;ava <u?u iuv w\4j ; badly decomposed. She b::d evidently been dead several days. On l lie bed were two large empty bottles, which smelled strongly of whisky. Tacked under the pillow was a full bottle <-f whisk}'. The coroner's deputy appeared during the after1 noon and allowed the undertaker to remove ; the remains. Of the $7,000 which the j woman had when her husbaud died twentyj five months ago $2,700 is left.?JV'. Star. SOUTH CAROLINA I.\ THE LEAD. AnuuoJ Meeting of tlie Trustees of the i'eabodv Fund. j Xew Yoi'.k. October 7.?At the_moetin? i to-day of the Trustees of the I'eafxxiv ! Fund the following executive committed was appointed: A. II. II. Stuart. W. M. Evarts, Chief Justice Waite, ex-Presidenl j Hayes. .James D. Porter and Chairmur ; Winthrop. A resolution was adopted to increase the allotment to the State of South Carolina ir I view of the devastation caused by the earth i quakes. The amount will probably b< '; tixed at ?10,(>00. I T.-. 1>;.. oimn.l1 o/3/3rocc ot i-nctonlnv'. iti UU11UUJL UUUIVC^ C4.V J WVV1 MUJ . ' meeting, President "VYinthrop said the re ; duction of interest liad diminished the in come realized from the bonds left by Mr ! Peabody. He congratulated the trustee on their 20 years' successful work, am . called attention to the necessity of securing [ national aid for education. He alluded t< ' the illiteracy among the negroes of tin 1 j South, and said that education would mak< { them better and stop fraud. ' i Referring to South Carolina, Mr. "Win ; C.ii/l nnf nn/? i\( flio Qrknfliorn had made greater or more successful effort i in the cause of education, the now need ; ed assistance, owing to the terrible dsvast-j i j tion caused by tiie recent earthquake. ; ' He said tiiat the proposed statue to Mr > Peabody by the superintendents of th i Virgiuia schools, to be placed in the capi l i tol Washington, was a merited tribute t< j a man who had given ?"2.000,000 for th ' Southern schools. The Secretary in his report gave th i amounts apportioned to each State. 11 | j *uid that in consequence of the States o i Florida and Mississippi repudiating thei : | bands, the fund hnd lost $1,100,000 whic-1 ' I had been given by 31r. Peabody to th > i fund, and their allotment had been stoppc* i and divided among the other States. rr*t- - -r i l lie uiu jijic m luu iuuu iui luc jcu r amounted 10 S(>2,3(5o, divided as follows ; Alabama $4,900, -Vrtrinsas ?2,100, G corgi i .$2,000. Louisiana ?3,800. Xorlii Carolin .; $2,700, South Carolina $o,000, Tcnnesee ?1,000, Texas ?3,000, Virginia ?4 505 j "West Virginia ?3,300. I "While Tli re is Life There is Hope. ; Many of the diseases of this seasoi " i of the year can be averted by a smal 1 | amount of care and at little cost, b; ' j the timely use of Ewbank's Tor a ; i Cinchona" Cordial. [ It cures Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Choi ; era Morbus and like complaints. iV " traveler should be without a bottle, a ?; it will prevent any disease that wouli 110 doubt arise from the change o ' | water, food and climate, without it j;; use. The most valuable medicine ii 1 the world, contains all the be?t am ;: most curative properties of all othe | Tonics, Bitters, etc., etc., being th< |! greatest Bioou rurifier, Li^er Ilegula ;! tor and Life and iiea*th-J?e$lorjn< \ | Agent in existence. For 5'alaria Fever and Ague, Chills and Fever ! pyspepsia, Indigestion, Sick Head ^ I acues nervous iieaaacne, unronu 1 j Rheumatism, etc., e:c., it is truly ; ' i Herculean Remedy. It gives new lift ; and vigor to the aged". iPor ladies n "j delicate health, weak and sickiy cb;l 1 cren, nnrsin? mothers. See circulars " i wrapped with bottle. Charleston, s. C,, Sept 1,1S85. H. B. Ewbaxk, Esq., Prudent o S The Topaz Cinchona Cordial Go. 1 ^nartanbursr, S. C.: Dear Sir?I have ; used a case of year Topaz Cordial ir i my family, 2-ud" as a 1'onls Appe ; tizer I can cheerfully recommend I'U all who are suffering from Debiiitv and lack of appetite. My children, j especially, have been much benefitted by its use. .Respectfully, Hutsos Lee. Ask your druggist fur Ewba??'s Tctwz Cinchona Cordial and take ::o other. The Topaz Cinchona Coedial Co., * Spartanburg, S. C.3 U. S. A. Bright Uits About Brighter tioins. i From tliu Chicago Inter-Oeaa. Tiie fact that gloves have been cnj tirely ignored by gentlemen in society and will be similarly treated this winter by the ladies has had a tendency to i brush up the ring trade, and some i very unique settings are shown. From a mineral standpoint there is nothing ! new. Diamonds are just as precious ! and plentiful ever, and rubies and emeralds are quite as rare. Torquoises An/1 ponr.lin'fij TT* \ \ \ iiftfAi' 1A^/I tiiiii to in ;:rwY^i 11 ivu favor. For thoss who criii afford them solitaires arc maichle=, and genuine pebbles in red gold and Roman setting can be had for 840 or $4,000. Opaque moonstones and semi-transparent opals make prottv rings when combined with sappires and rubies. The red, white and blue lings come under the head of cluster rings and are meeting with unususl favor. One style is a triplicate ring ridged with three live-1 stone bars set with small rubies, dia-I monds and sapphires. The prettiest3 rings oi me season are or uomun gold, with three atones in mosaic setting. Old mine stones oi' this style, made of a blue diamond, a sappshire and ruby are very choice ane cheap at $37.). Pook Fellows!?Prostrated, debili-1 tated, enfeebled, they feel as if they ; were hardly worth picking up. They i would hardly give the toss of a bright j p?nnv for a chance of a choicc between I life and death. But even such forlorn : people can be renewed by the use of: Brown's Iron Bitters. It vitalizes the ! blood, tones tlic nerves, and re&cvates j the system. ?J.r. Isaac C. Weed, Burr's Si ills', O., says: "I. used Brown's Iron Betters for general weakness, and it helped me greatly/' * The undertakers wbo embalmed the body i of Gen. Grant have notified W. J. ArkelJ, ! proprietor of the Judyc and the Albany ! Evening Jour ml, of a suit instituted j' against him for $500 for that service. The j bill has been presented to everybody con- : neeted with Grant's family except Mrs. ' Grant. Col F. I). Grant refused to pay it. | Mr. Arkell telegraphed as soon as "the j General died to the firm of E. Holmes?Jc Co. j at Saratoga to go at once to Mount Me- j Hro.-rnr with nvinlirmfpc fnr Iflvinor nut tlif hotly, and {lie undertakers have fallen ' back on him. The New York says j that if they will send the bill to the editor : of that paper he will remit them the amount. I gg?aMiiM "inni un\ K.\!<;i5TS OK LMlOJi. Saj?jH?rtft)r5'triK?Tsnt Augusta and 0tV>er Pine?." ?Canadian nmi ?litr Calholic Churcii. Richmond. Ya.. October 7.?As the committee credentials desired !tinner time for the consider,:', ion of ;l:e case of the contesting delegations from it. Louis, ihe rules were suspended and the convention proceeded to the discussion of < li<qucstion of giving the support of the order to locked out cotton workers of Augusta, the curriers and tanners of Pea body and | Salem, ?.!ass.. and the journeymen plumb: cis of Ne'.v York. Theie are 3.000 men in nf fl.ii t 1 .'%/! ? rwl !inn?t 1,4'JO in lie latter. It was decided to support then . Monti eai.. October 7.?The constitution r.f the Iv nights of Labor has been re; vised by members cf the clergy in this city. ; under the auspices of Archbishop Fabre. with object of expunging provisions ; contrary to the rules of the Komun Catholicchurch. Mr. Powderly when here promi ised the Archbishop to support the passage 1 /xf nn-*..n/1mAnlo K<-.f/\rn l\\/+ rtnniv.l /'An. j KJl i.ilC aiUVilUUlt'lUO WiV/lV; CiiVJ uiiuuai vvu : vention Two delegates from the Knights , of Labor organization here left to attend ! tlie convention in liichmond and have i taken the revised consiitution with them. I It is silted that the Archbishop delayed j action until the p "escnt time because of the i assembling of th-j liichmond convention. LABOR TROUBLES IX CIBA. Twenty Thousand Ci^ar Ma kern Locket Out? (ireat Distress Prevailing. Kkv Vv'est, October 8.?Havana ndj vices b}* steamer to day state that the cigar j makers strike there, which lias continued seven weeks, will probably assume a very j serious aspect before the settlement is ! reached. Jt is estinated that 20,000 persons i throughout the island are idle and consideri able distress prevails among them. The i rough element, taking advantage of the . | general excitement, is committing depre! dations. Highway robberies and assassinai tions occur daily. " A riot has been appro j bended several days by the authorities of | Havana, who have taken precautions tc i keen ail available civil guards under arms, 1 i while mounted police patrol the city pre(j pared for any emergency. The following cablegram was received 1 last night, tin Havana, by the President oi the Cig.ir Makers' Union: "The cigai 3 makers and shippers of Santiago I)e Lo: Vegas are out of employment and destitute. 5 yOU men and 300 women are without bmu for their families and ask their brothers ir Key West for relief and transposition ' Announce by telegraph to Tampa and Xev J York. Also notify the Knights of Labor." ~ The Color <lues:io? and the Knights of Lahcr r> J I Richmond Va. . October G.?Tlsroughou j the city to day the principal topic of dis ; cussion was tlie admission lusi mgni 01 coi ~ ored delegate Farrel to a seat in the orehes s tra circle in the Acad em of Music, ; * : section of the auditorium in Rich mom : theatres hitherto sacredly guarded fr? in tin " intrusion of all persons of his race. Tin , general feeling among Virginians here i " ; one of bitter resentment, and they regan _ the delegates from District No.*4'J witl 0 | anything but a friendly feeling. It is sai( , that, the majority of the local Knights ar much pi evoked at the action of their visit .. ing bretheren. and it was reported that : few Knights living here declared their in f ' tentioa of abandoning the order and join ; ing the Law and Order League, orgauizei in nvftn! smivrcitmn fA tho Tvnifrlit? n Jj' Labor." " r1 Kiciim.>xd. Va., October G.?It was m ~ moral to-day that the delegates of Distric I 40. with colored brother Farreli. intends ,r ! goingtoihe Richmond Theatre this evening and if the latter was refused admission t force their way in with him. Mrs. W. T ' Powell, proprietor and manager of tli e theatre, v, hich is the leading one in the city '' heard of the rumor, and gave instruction : that Farreli should not he admitted excep ' to the gallery reserved for negroes. Sh called on i he chief of police to afford pre , ; teetiou in case of troubh;. | i The chief culled on Powderly at Ford' : Hotel to request that he use his influence I z 1 prevent an attempt to force the admissioi 1 of the colored delegate, as it would caus ; trouble. Powderly sent word that he \va y too busy to sre him, but to see the executiv s board instead. The latter said they though i Farrell would not try to enter the theatre f but they could give no assurance on th s j subject. ; Before the theatre opened Chief Poe ant 11 thirty-live policemen were on guard there r | At the hour for opening the theatre thou a j sands of people assembled on Broad street " The col- red delegate and his fellow-mem ~ I hers of District 49 did not appear, and then ' was no disturbance of the peace. Tin ?; crowd remained about the theatre unti ?! Dearly JO o'piock before dispersing. -: FarreJI, the colored delegate of Assembly " i r-.r* Pi ai/^z-jrh: ot 7i?c tin " Ti/, \'lJ -t- VTTVil^l UIO owvt iui. i evening. It is stated that no fui'ijier at 5 tempts will be made by the colored dele i gate to enter '.lie theatre or other place - ' while the convention is in session. f <5C eoylp nnij the T.*?riiT. __ Reports from all over the .South suov th< f! good effects that have come to tills scctioi i from the workings of the tariff, which is ' l declared an unmitigated evil by Morrison j WaUerson 2nd others of the free trade j stripe. In six years cotton mills and theii "? ' 1 ? . 1-- J LKJ _ 1 1 v productions nave neany uouuteu; luiuum ]. mills have increased one-half, and manu g;;^'rally one-fourth; while wealth, in proportion io population, has increased ' one-half. The leading newspapers ?>f tii^ Sou! jjwesl , are in favor of protection. They argue : i that the North having had the benefit oi : i tie nolicy when they were without manu: factu'cn. ",t js unjust to even liiink of doin? | away with the Sy'~?jn just as tiieir own in" i dustries aie struggling to ?.li"jr feet. Ala] bnma to-day can produce pig iron j.yen I cheaper than Pennsylvania, and insists oil ' the 'ei!?GViiv?i?t of the market which has * l*nn . ? i ueen secureu. uiiui:#' luau nan ?i vv.il: tury of protection. Thjs/iema;^) from the South wji| becojne more extended the toor;; | its mines a?'e disc-ovprpd ac/l opened and its factories increase.?-/fasl<ie ynion. A Deadly Burglar Trap. ; A JJutto. Montana, miner named W. P. j Emery fixcd up a burglar trap in his cabin j Saturday and went off prospecting. He securely lacked the cabin' :.Aii $$ arranged . the interior that an entrance would d'.siurb i u combination, setting off a heavy charge - * - 1"l- ? 1 ' 1 "c .!.? j Oi cynain;u.\ >vi:en Jie rcuuueu iruui im; ' mountain found that a terrible explosion ; liad taken place. TIip burglar had entered i through a window. Tlie lioor *^'as torn up : and splintered and the cabin was generally , badly wrecked. The interior was spattered ; with blood. There was blood on the door, blood on the walls; a lot of stone in one corner was covered with blood, tlu.' window sill was st:.ined red, and just inside the room, soni;; three feet from the window, was a pool as if a quart or more of blood had oo/.ed from the wound of some person who had fallen there. Search was made ! ana1 iie wouJd-ue ourgiar was iouna nc-;i*r by. IIu was in a frightful condition. His skull was badly fractured, the top of his head being nearly blown oil. He gave the name of is. "When found he was barely conscious, and his recovery is impossible. Ua!t:?norc the (Julf. Baltic,i;Ej October 7. ?President Gar rctt. of .the Daltio^vro nnd Ohio Railroad Company, while in Europe, porfcftiod arf/,,. .omin'nir tl,/. f 11 ^ nf'fpi i lvi my ?ww sary for extending the Shenandoah Valley railroad south to Pensacola. Florida, and work i.s to be commenced within thirty days. The route is said to be over the old line direct into Salem, Virginia, via : BueLtaD:?n, thence south to the famous Cranberry iron mines of North Carolina, Birmingham, Ala., Da]ton, Ga., and to [ Pensacola. The United States Automatic Cut Off Company lateiy organized in Atlanta, Ga., will mflnnfr/'t.-i.T n rim-in/- fn nrcv^n? freez iiiriii water pipes. The v/ater is automatically cut off before reaching the freezing point or at any other degree desired. It : will be a bad day for the plumbers when ' such a device is put into successful operation. I Happiness never reaches us before we are i ready for it. ? GENERAL XE\Vi? ITEM!-. Fact* of Jnterrwt <;r?fh?*rp?l from VarloQh , <1 carters. The frost has cut the tobacco.crop of North C:t;oli:ia short. i Atlanta is tn have a prohibition morniug ; daily with $75,000 capital. The genera' distribution of ;hc nc.v one c?1 vi?r mli'ii-i'r-v ti.-Tsn Tbnrxl.iv j The streets of Chattanooga arc to be i paved with Georgia granite. Secretary .Manning will return to ilie : Treasury and go to work next Monday. The comet discovered bv Prof. Barnard, of Xashvi!!'?, Monday night, was discoverad by Dr. Harlwig, of Strasburg, as shown by a cablegram received. Thd Savaun::b Tinics stales that the foli ored people of Charleston have *123. WW. So I on deposit in the live cents savings bank of . that city. \ The Virginia Tobacco Association reports i for the lical year than ever sold before in one year. Sacrilegious thieves broke into a Cathoi lie cliurrii in Indiana, Wednesday, and j stole iwo crowns from the shrine of the I Virgin Mary. ! The New Jersey operatives, who refused to work in the Augusta Factory, have gone back home, their passage being paid by the Knights of Labor. A private letter from Warren. Ark., I states that Judge J. M. Bradley, of tiie 10th j district of Arkansas, is desperately ill of a j sickness closely resembling leprosy. I > lL'JUt V iklll^lVJU WiUtUU, Ut 1 lli'M.U ; principles, from ;t hotel kept by Ned~8Kokes, is one of the reasons why the devil is sometimes presumed to smile. The boiler of the cotton compress at Charlotte exploded Monday. The tireman : was fata'ly injured and the boiler house : wrecked. During Thursday there were reported i deaths from cholera and 20 new cases i: Szegedin, Hungary, and in all of Italy " deaths and 14 new cases. The sum of *10.000 collected in Londoi for the Charleston sufferers has been handei " to me Amcncan .Legation, itisnonuougn that there will be a second $10,000. ' The coldest place in the cotton belt las Sunday was in Memphis, where the mer cury came within eight degrees of tin ? freezing point. [ Fifteen thousand employees of Chicagr , meat packing houses have struck agains extending the working hours to ten hour a day. There is apprehension of seriou trouble?possibly a riot. John Schmidt, who shot his wife abou . a month ago in Newark, X. J., and whi was indicted for murder in the first desrrec t i was found dead in his cc-il in Essex count1 -1 jail- / "| Is it true that General Young will 110 j winter at St. Petersburg? If Sunset Co: 1 should resign, what a chance for the Ger 1 eral at Constantinople, which has an e'ysia e climate. " Complications thicken between Russi ! on the one hand and Bulgaria, Austria an j other powers on the other. There is m ; much doubt about a war soon in thn j neighborhood. ! A il!s:rv>fr-li from cnvs flint rnmnr a worthy of credence are afloat of a cor | spiracy to kidnap King Milan, of Servi:; and force him to abdicate, or. if unable t > secure lii-s abdication, to murder him. f The owners of the Anchor Line believ i that the Anchoria is safe, but is delayed b i- ; some accident to her machinery. She w;i :t i insured in Liverpool at 15 guinea?, the oi J dinary rale of insurance, 'Wednesday. Fourte- n prisoners escaped from the ja p at Elizabeth, Va., by breaking through tli ! Tloor and tunneling under the ground i distance of 50 feet. 2sine of the 14 were i y iui iiiuiuLf. j Prince Melissano, a member of one c the leading families of Naples, lias cnmmi c ted suicide rrfter seeing his name posted f a defaulter at his club, lie Lad lost heav ^ ly in gambling, p | Tlie J>. ston Baptists at meeting 3Ior ;1 day refused to co-cperatc with 'K-Methodis e Episcopal ministers in furthering the aj s pea ranee of the Revs. Sam Jones and Sar c Small in a series of revival meetings in t hi t city. Chattanooga seems to be the mngneti e city. The times says that men have sol out in Birmingham and Atlanta and invesi .1 uu >?uuv- nui u uuuai uaa uyjm: IHJL . Chattanooga to Birmingham or Atlanta. "When New England fanatics stirred u the slavery question, long haired brethre from England came over to add fuel to th e fiame. !Now long haired German philosc L' pliers have arrived to stir another hell-brot ' | called Socialism. . j The new newspaper, the Indcpendcr \ Bulgaria, stigmatizes G.en. Haul bars as s "Rebel fomenting rebellion among the peo pie and the anny.:' It :i}so urges the gov prrmiMif fri-n T\:inlhnrs unci <fni 5 him across the frontier." ; The Lonl Lieutenant of Ireland and hi wife went to the Gaiety Theatre in Dublii Saturday evening. They were cheered 1>; the peop'e in the lower part of the house 3 while ifjose in the gallery hissed and shout * ed "fjocj save I?elai}4-': The South is rapidly becomjngthe favor ite section for investment of Northern am p English capital. The West will be left t< r its own mighty resources and the Soutl prodigiously developed. There are inan\ "booms'' just ahead. [ One of the curious features of the frui culture :ilong the Hudson this fall is thai ripe strawberries were gathered at YA dif : j fcrent points between 3Iarlborough am ' | Catskil' nrf .Qctobgr 5 and '0. Growers an 1 unable to account for this singular freak ol ! nature. I The annual report of the Dauvllic To j bacco Association shows that the sales foi tiie year were 40,353.942 pounds, at ar j average of 0.41 per hundred. This doc* j not include' a sab of 3,000,000 or more l pounds purchased in thai ruarkct and not ! handled by warehouses. Ti;e Stale Bar Association of New York 1 has ?elccfed .% the subject for the next anj nuaf essay '-the advisability of national i legislation Oil UJU zuujfjui, ui Mimi-jugr ituu ! djvot>f:p ij) ilie United States."' SouUi C-nr ' olina is the oniy S&tg in the Union which J does net tolerate tlio abandonment of marj riage contract. Fire broke out yesterday in the four story factory building Xos. 6:3-07 Bayard street, Is. Y. Eight firms have shops in it. WiiinL. J.?ogansky, a young woman living at 64 Bayard -tvee;, fe" to the street : on her head and crushed her skuiJ. '"he : loss on the building and contents will foot I up about ?-0,000. i John Sherman complains that for the | first year tho Dumo^atic administration did I not reducejhe debt of th-, .country. He ! forgot to mention that it. is now'beifcg pal^ | so rapidly that many eminent Republicans ! com);!ail). < )f course it took some time to i nni *'i.? iim.su-> m rights and find out how i matters stood. The iron and steel prc.dueJion the United States will be greater this year than ever before, i!?1 will come very close to the production of Great Britain. At the nf nrnmvss it wiil he !)l)f, n few years, three or four at mo^l. when the United States will pass England and become the greatest iron producer in the world. The powder blast at Stone Mountain was a "bust." Four tons of blasting powder wcie put in a thirty foot well of solid granite. packed and then touched off by an elec- i trie wire. Persons at ibe foot of the mounliJn barely felt a shock, while those ! at any tiistartee knew nothing of it. It tore ! up the granite though m great slices and i blocks. ' Foaming lager is again flowing in the Gate City of the South. Atlanta can no ; longer be termed a dry town, for the back- j of lMYihihition was broken bv the I General Council Tuesday evening, when , tiiey passed an ordinance allowing the At- ' lanitL city brewing companies to sell and deliver beer by the quart or keg to private : families. Mrs. H. Henshaw, the wife of a brick-; maker at Cold'Springs. X. Y., gave birth j last Monday to a male child with four feet, j Otherwise the child is well formed and i healthy. One leg is bui two inches long. ! and protrudes from the left hip. Another : leg protrudes from the lumbar vertebra-. ; The child is able to move them with almost ] as little difficulty as its natural limbs. i ' ( I BRIC-A-BRAC. Although the real summer's gone The Indian summer's speeding on. Twill soon lie here with cloudless skies And maveious wealth of gorgeous dyes, j Its bracing morn and hazy noon. And full orbed, placid yellow moon. The best thing ou;?A big tire. 1 An attached couple?Oyster shells. Barbers always predict short crops. 11 is rain or shine with a bootblack. Sweet meat?Sugar-cured hams. Slander, like mud, dries and falls off. Going the rounds?Climbing the ladder. Every carpenter has a plane duty before ! l.hn V.'lieu a dog is muzzled his hark is on the tied. Cranks arc men who make other men ; thick. Said a conceited young lady: "You men ; arc a covct-us set.'' School boys are usually glad to see rule ! laid down. A thorn in the bush is worth two in the ! hand. Yc: Wfilfr-r fcinrs- om mist }>cfnrp thpv i are gone. ! Tlie barber is the man "who. is the most apt to "dye at his post/' Inquirer. No. The army rolll is not I similar to ship bread. ! The Pope paid his periodical formal visit . to St. Peter's Thursday. ' 'My dear wife." as the man said when he i j looked at the last milliner's bill. Flies that do not annoy the people?Stage flics. , What is taken before you possess it? ; ; Your photograph. 1 \ Polc-itical?It is said P. Bismark does : : not care anything about the wires; but he < tl:inks the Poles ought to be under ground. ' The Sunday school boy was slightly ccn| fi.sed when he said: "Esau wasaman wlio ) u'rntA on#l enlrl 1i?c r?Ar\\rrirrl?t fnr n M i VIV IUVIViJ, UU*I kJVlV.1 Uig b AVA u ; bottle of potash." } j The dude never takes things cum grano 1 salis or he wouldn't be so fresh. The new fall bonnets, they say, will be V-shaped. The bills will be X-shaped. The eagle is a tough bird, but when it is , I put on the back of a dollar it is legal ten| der. , : A woman never knows whether the side, ; walk is paved or not when she has on a new s I dres?si A "Western paper says: "It is not good ! for man f> be alone." He should buy a 11 dog. o | Don't be depressed by misfortunes. 'Tis the blackest storm which gives the loveliesl y | rainbow. | The man who would beat an egg is mear ,t enough to whip cream, thresh wheat, oi x lick a postage stamp. i- The Triennial General Convention of th( n ; Protestant Episcopal Church in the Unitec States met at Chicago last week, a j "What is the difference between an ungrj d ; lover and a jilted maid? One Is a cros; ?t ceui and the other a cut-lass. it line CATTrtn ftnnrAliJofe t r\ lidnff jioo auai^uioLO tv uau^ ' The country waits for lier game of "sever s : up." l~ Frcckles arc fashionable. They indicati ' I that the possessor lias been to the summe: 0 resorts. ! The more a man drinks the soberer hi c thinks himself. He never "knows when hi y I is loaded." jT i The Russian agency at Sofia officially de * i nies that Gen. Ivaulbars has been recallec . j by the Czar. ; Lord Randolph Churchill is in Berlin in ? : coir and has had an interview with Princi 'n ; Herbert Bismarck. A man may be neither a yatchtsman no: : take an interest in horseflesh and yet h( may be fond of schooners and ponies. ,s ; A human skeleton weighs from 10 to II i- j pounds, and the blood of the body abou ! 28 pounds, but cremation leaves only eigh j ounces. ;t | Before marriage, says a henpecked one )., a girl speaks to her lover with her eyes ii! after marriage with her tongue, is A New York physician says "it is dan : gerous to go into the water after a heart} c ; meal." And we presume if he did go ir itff/>r !ir> wniildn't. finH it I-! Indiana girls must be made out of verj n poor i. iinber. A young fellow has just beer i sued by one of them for breaking her col p | lar bone while he was hugging her. n i lie was a broken down gambler turned e ! waiter, and when a customer said: "A )- ' small steak, please," he replied absent Ii mindedly: ''On the black or on the red?"' Statistics show that prisoners sentenced J i to imprisonment for life live to a greater age a, than persons who have to work for theii -1 living outsid.e. j Mrs. Gubbins says she never allows hei 1 ' boy* Jim to eat any jam. for her husband ; died of the jim jams, and she dpn:t propose s i to run auv chancrss with the boy. !; The steamer La Mascotte, a passenger | boat running between St. Louis and Cape > Girardeau, exploded her boilers Wednesday, killing a large number of people. I A discussion is going on in a suburban | town as to whether Eve ate one or more 1 i apples. We should say it does not matter ' i much. The resuit was the same. i ! ; j It is the general belief that the poet is al U(T>5 5UiUIIl^ 1U tuu V^IUUUO, tlliO 10 14 lUiiUVJ. , There is not much soar to him when the i , landlord comes in by the back way with _ | the monthly rent bill. i ' "Johnny," said the country editor to the ; I "devil." "my mother-in-law is dead and we r j want crape for the door. Take the print j ing,office towel up to the hoiye and hang if . j on the kijob." Gen. I'leasauton has not abandoned his 11 "blue glass" theory. He says he has three.?! year old colts reared under blue glass that ! i are as large as five-year olds raised on Ken! tuckv blue grass. i * . I f*-iinrrron1iiril hi-ivr-nf tr>rc }invr> incf I w">- 1J !'"{> J : been indicted in Richmond, Ya. They : boj coitcd a merchant because he wouldn't ; withdraw his advertising from a certain ! newspaper. j A Catholic legend gays that the devil i gave a hermit" The choice of ttyrec great : viq-s, one of which wa$ drunkenness.' The j hermit phosc tbjs as being the least sinful; ! he became drunk, and then he committed the other two. The likeness of the exemplary and unroj mantic wife of the Father of his Country . will speedily become familiar to every j mqn woman and child in the United States ! ?if it is coS ,;o already?by its appearance I 1 on the one dollar silver certificates. ! A la/y man when offered a "VYaterbury I watch as a premium with a suit of blothes i which he had purchased, declined it with ; the remark that he had enough of hard work to do already without winding a Watcrbury watch every 24 hours. 1 Invest your money in a bank or in some enterprise, says an exchange, not in dia! ijion^s. Diamonds draw nolnterest. They i don't, eh? You ^ust leave your diamonds I with your "unclc' a little white and see if ! tlifv draw no interest.' I f . It was a dying dry goods clerk, wlio, ! after being visited ]jy a benevolent lady i who sought to smooth his journey to the j other world, turned his gla?sy eyes upon I her, after she had ceased speaking, and | softly inquired: "Anything else to-day, : ma'am V' A physologist comes out with the statement that a man breathes twenty times a minute. This is doubtless quite true. When alongside of a man who had been drinking gin and eating limburger cheese and onions, we were firmly persuaded that Iw v;os br^thing a million times a minute. Borax is a <rood disinfectant about the person as avcII :is about the house. Scatiered about the house it makes cracks and corners uninhabitable for insects, and taken into the human system it is prophylactic against infectives or germ diseases. It is said that a teasponful daily may l)e taken without any other than favorable effects. The Albany (Ga.) Xeic* tells this good one: "Wiggins is like an old negro local weather prophet that once flourished in Albany. He predicted rain for a certain day that failed to put in an appearance. A gentleman meeting him on the street next day asked, "Charley, didn't you say it was * 1 utt 1..4 ?ning 10 nun yesimmy; us, sir; uui j I told a lie." I KOI TH MRftMM \E\Yf?. The towns along- the Savannah Valley railroad are rapidly building up. Peter Klintworth lost his hand in a cotton gin, at St. Stephen's, on the 7th. There are eight shepherd dogs in Ander son of tine brood. They are becoming quire the fashion. A fire destroyed Mr. (J. E. Satterthwait s gin house and five bales of cotton, at Monimorenci, on the 7th. A mule belonging to Judge Hair, of Prosperity, killed itself Sunday while attempting to jump a paling fence. On Monday afternoon two unknown drunken men fought, near Anderson, when one of them had an ear bitten off. The Barnwell Sentinel thinks Col. J. II. Averill, of the South Carolina Railway, the most efficient railroad man of his age in the country. Sam Cooper, colored, of Williamsburg, was caught under a falling tree a few niglits ago, while opossum hunting, and had both legs broken. LeRov Spriogs, charged with the homi cide of John R. Bell on the 27th of Juue last, was tried at Lancaster Wednesday and acquitted. Dr. R. F. Divver is making arrangements to open a foundry and machine shop in Anderson on or about the 1st of January next. It is thought the telegraph line on the Savannah Valley railroad will be completed in two or three more weeks. Freight traffic on the Savannah Valley road is reported good, while the passenger business is light. Col. 0. H. P. Scott, who represents the Augusta Factor}-, carried 24 girls and boys from McCormick to Augusta Monday ,to work in the factory. Last Monday night, while attending a sleight-of-hand"show given by an Indian in Varennes township, Anderson county, Mr. Herbert Finley accidentally shot himself in the leg. The trial of Robert L. and Mary A. Gray, charged with killing Allen Barksd:ile ten years ago. took place in Anderson on Fri day. Defendants were acquitted. Davis, : the wife murderer, pleaded not guilty. Hi was convicted and sentenced to be hanged on the oth of November next. He is nc ' doubt insane. Weekly Record of Bu-inexs Failure*. New York. October 8.?The business failures throughout the country the lasi i ofiwAw oo trv r> Pa rmm [ UUJO ao i^pvi jVU WW i/uu vv vu. i ber for the United States 167 and forCana da 23, which is about up to the average o: . the last six or seven -weeks. The bulk o ! the casualties is reported from the Southerr ' and Western States. I More feliakes. Charleston, S. C., October S.?Then ? were three shocks at Summerville las t night. Reports differ widely as to the in tensity of the shocks?some residents de T daring that they were more severe thai ' any disturbance since August 31st, whili others report that they were slight tremors No one was hurt, however, and no damagi was done to property. 1 A o"Krrl*f voc olon f/ilt' lwirn of A OXi^Ub OUVV/(\ UiOU AUl iiVIV MV o'clock this morning by earty risers, but i j was not generally felt. r ? A Very Strange Phenomenon. I Dawson, Ga., October 5.?A wonderfu " phenomenon may be seen at the home o Mr. M. P. Hoyle, who resides only a fev hundred yards beyond the corporate limit 1 of Dawson. It is a constant fall of rail from a cloudless sky, the area in Mr - Hoyle's yard that is covered by the showe: 3 being about 25 feet square. Many citizen have"been out to see this remarkable sight r and all testify that there is a genuine am 2 ceaseless fall of raindrops. Al times th< supply of water seems ereater than a * Ulll'Ji O. 1?X1. AJLL'J iv; 11*31/ tll*0 UU j usual sight three weeks ago. He canno | explain the mystery. The Brooklyn Presbytery continued tin > trial of Iiev. Benjamin Staunton, pastor o ; the Fort Greene Presbyterian Church, 01 the charges of conduct unbecoming a min - ister. : In a letter to a friend a young lady &tate 1 that she is not engaged, but she sees a clout above the horizon about as \?rge as a man'. r hand. 1 The frequency with which the sea ser pent has been seen tbis summer dcmolishe tlio tli*t tlio tpmrw-.r-in^w mnvfltnonl i [ m.-.king progress. It lias been well attested that Nero, tli< t Roman Emperor of infamous memory who at all times took an active part in tin I theatrical representations of his day, en ; forced applause at the point of the sword and not a member of the audience was allowed to leave the theatre until the im . perial signal should be given. On one occasion, while Nero was on the stage singing I to his own accompaniment on the lyre, ac earthquake shook the city; yet not one among the thousands present dared st much as attempt to flee from the danger 01 1 leave his seat, fearing the summary wrath of the tyrant whose will held the people in bondage.?jtfeio York Clipper. ''Mens Sana in fyrw e Sa: o." wm 'am Established in 1793. The 93d Yearly Tekm begins September 8th, 1886. For Catalogue7 giving full particulars, address, Maj. R. BINGHAM, Supt., Bingham School P. 0,, Orange Co., K C. CHARLOTTE FEMALE INSTITUTE. THE rumor tliat-the Principal will remove to Columbia, S. C., is a mistake. He has purchased the controlling interest of the CHARLOTTE FEMALE INSTITUTE; has spent $4,000 in renovating and improving jthe buildings, and is now making niore valuable improvements than ever, i. ne u unciing is ugiuea wun gas, warmed vitH the be?t of wrought-iron furnac.es, "has hot and cold water baths, i and first-class appointments as a Boarding School in eyery respect. jfo more experienced and accomplished. corps of Teachers is to be found in the South, and the Music and Art Department are unsurpassed. Full session begins September 1,18S6. For Catalogue apply to the Principal Rev. WM. JR. ATKINSON, Augl 11.2m Charlotte, X. C. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. OUR BABY'S FIRST YEAR, by Marion Hnriand, also containing: much valu.-hle Information. +> page oook. Sent on recel of 2 c-.nt stamp by Heed & Cam rick. Mercantile Exchange Bid's:. X 1". JTewspaper Advertising. DAUfiinF A ca 27 Park Place and 24-26 Murray Street, New York. Make lowest rules on all newspapers in t be U. S. and Canada. Established SPECIAL OFFER. * ** % Wc win insm u one-Inch advertise rrteni one month In fir ?< ted list of 225 DAILIES AXD WEEKLIES covering the U. S. for $260. Circulation c.o> ?.292 copies per montli. We will insert a one-inch ailVt one month in our POPI LAR IJHAL LISTS >_/ of 1,130 Daily and Weekly newspapers for$ooo. No patent list papers are Included. Send tor catalogue. Part es contemplating .a line of advertising, large or small, an- rrquested to send for estimate of cost. Sept-'O-Jw I lllS A lb A RI jft "^1 ST-jitcrs tlie system torn unknown j r--" z-rra &na ill caasts, at all seasons. ; pp fp |\T M I ! Sialicss tie Serves, Inpairs Diu-estioa, cad ; X' J-/ ' Enfeebles the Hassles. llf^OWN^^pa? jj|Jj I ESSS2S2SSE^?BM J | [3 f ^OaS* -<*?6 TeiTO. ..t^-'tjme of ]ab0r and i &HI I ?i? /^hAJ/^V . . ! lessens the intensity ^Hi "'** ? ? ? - ' i?ii<- it. I So.Hcre fans! -^^SSSUihi I _ I I Ji^^j?r'j * i danger to life of both fl ^ \%>IWvn7 ivWrtrA t oother and child, and J i J ^ ||j > ?*A e r^er; k-^vsUie mother in a ^ I^Dll ^ f|@ tit ,1 rn -n coveiv, and*far" less *P^tl li ?! HI v-"*^ Mother or OMldi liable*to flooding, cel. ?lli! P3 B? _? ? tr'lU vuisions, and other gggg BEST iSM!? alarming symptoms Qt::ckiy and completelycnres Sfalaria,and CfciISs incident to slow or j and Fevers, i'or Intermittent Fevers, Las- The Dread of nninfni lnhnr 7t< ritade, Tack of Energy, >6 has no equal. It : f,IU1' ,J?'\ ? M enriches ana purities the blood. stimulates the ap- -n ?- , . , truly Wonderful olhca! P<J::e, and strensthens the muscles and nerros. i iVi Oilier flOOG CV ill this reSDCCt ell' *"* " or 1 >?, Mllftl I prod;n~o constiri~:inn?< //(' o'hrr Iron medicinn<b>. ITr^.T mbhb | Father T. J. Retxt. the patriotic and scholaxl? Transformed to 1 HE M O T H E K'b FRIEND and to be x. u. 5<1 IS .o.rn s I?ou Bittors witc thft rib m ma ? -j _ _ . ^ ~ 4* j est satisfaction for Malaria. aod as a preventive of | I TJ! nVBsfid 3S olie Of iliG 9 , ci.nis and like and wai always keep it on M U J~ TIt iife-savhig remedies n.?siw?isnnffr? trade nark and crossed red liaes oi tbe nineteenth CtUon wrapper. Tr>';o n? othrr. Made ontv by tUTV. at BMfV.VX <!T!;'~.ItCAiiCO^ BAI-T'MOKt. MP. ! , Vmm 11-a naftiro nf Ladies'if axi> Boon?nsefnl and attractive, cats- ?nd xroinu.e iiaiUre 01 _ taininjriibt of prizes for recipes.information about the Ciise it Will of jK M coins, ctc.. k:v.*ti n.ray by aii dealers in medicine, cr : Annrcp I,,. stf>nd ' A mailed to asy address oa receipt of 2c. staaxp. | / \ \ J , '"L uw U-iaeiMCOa ? 1 I I I V tuat we cannot pub- JjjjM ! \ J t lisli certificates concerning this Remedy p without wvundin^the jj i0x % I Cs i Stfrt v P7U1 ri?> Ye* wo have hundreds ! ^ ?g\ i ^ of such testimonials on 18 i _TA_ "?'> ,iSI-u liu juvjvic-i Jl ^ ik3$ : who has once used it m i . will ever a^ain be t i Suffering Wcm?H without it in her time ! A prominent physician iately remarked "^flg to the propi ietor, that it it were admissible t0 li!ake public the letters we receive, the I _ %&M-^r i "-Mothers' Friend" would outsell anything ; 1 . : Gentlemen*:?During my career in the vj j p^cjcv of medic^je 1 use;, your ''MOTH' ^LP ^ ! ^an lip indiifted toiro tiirou^L the ordeal Most of the diseases which afflict, mankind are origin- ! r.v-Y-rt ? .? .p _ allycaasedbyadisorderedcoaditionofthe LIVER. j i? a.ter OllCe U$il)?J it. For all complaints ot this kind, such as Torpidity of : 1 OUfS truly, the Liver. Biliousness, Nervous Dyspepsia, Indiges- j T.E.PENNINGTON M D J tion. Irregularity of the Bowels, Constipation. Flata- Palmpff/> (ir, TmutlA 1DS1 ' ' ? lency. Eructations and Burning of the Stomach ! s for.iSTWSS L''i?TT ,? , M t (sometiine3 called Heartburn), Miasma, Malaria, ! ? Our Treatib6 OB Ile<ll Elld Bloody Flux, Chills and Fever, Breakbone Fever, I "^ppineSS Of IVOIHSD," mailed fi'66. Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diar- I BKADFIEL.D .REGULATOR CO., - rhcea. Loss of Appetite, Headacbo, Foal Breath, j Atlanta Ga. ' Irregularities incidental to Females. Beariog-down j ' pinjfip npfj nDf'AHIg scursiriAHUa dilll UiitrAliO' j | It changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow j J j tin,to. to a radcy. healthy color. It entirely removes j low. gloomy spirits. It is one of the BEST AL" S | TE*ATIV?S and PURIFIERS OF THE I * 1 j BLOOD, and is A VALUAELE TONiC. i ; STADICER'S AURANTII BUY THEM AT HOME. 5 Foe sale by all Druggists. Price S t .00 per bottle, j | C.F.STADsGER, Proprietor, e 140 SO. FRONT ST.. Phnade-^hla, Pa. I PEACE INSTITUTE! J 9i)Tt. YOUNG LADIES. ! TUT7 T3TTCrT A/T A ITT7C HI? 1 ' 1 J. 11JJ JJJjkJl i-'-L-t XJLVJLji.J KSX" RALEIGH, SORTIJ tAROLIXA. I - ^ 1 mllE FALL TERM COMMENCES Ox!"r\y i \T/\ri t \TT\ AT)n A IVTO f 1 the first Wednesday.?f September, ! PiANOS AND ORGANS f 1S86, and closes correspondsuptime in June ! s following. Advantages for instruction in ; I all tlie branches, usually tauaht in first- j crkr n at class Seminaries for Young Ladies, unsur-j ?oULD A? ? ' passed. Building heated by stearu, and in I every way as -ouipment, etc., equal to ? aiybthe South. A full corps of First- FACTO"RY5P"RTrFS FO"R flASTT - Class Teachers engaged for session com- "VAUJMLjriuyiSfc H 1 menciag in September. Terms ns reason- ^ e able as any other institution offering same " t. i (irvjiifairuc sAli^ifpfl i ?OR ? - For catalogue, containing fall particulars j . j t as to terms, etc., address Augn^m ligg^. | EASY INSTALMENTS. j I DELIVERED TO NEAREST DE- ^ POT, FREIGHT JvREE. ^ \ Write for prices and terms?to ^ : THRRHINfi MACHINES ^ i |M| -;j ijfAJ: r WA , I nRLOilliiu a specialty. KZs^ai;!'.' ') :* ii?'-,1 ifefRg^SiS Sei Simplest, Most Durable, Economical, and Perfect EasSrS^1'"^.~ a? I 'n i:*e?wastes no grain; cleans it ready for market. yHRFgHIMR PMRIMPS a^9SS? Jm i ?*-v r C2^i a icy a .v Trto | iiukviiium aiixntav 1"" tz&yjfiy r &ybc'Ugetbyni?2 tow3Ull?..uid Standard Implement*gen Pm 5 bill ^fgjf ?G2LSa BMC? GOODS ' eraUy* ^ for iIlostrated catalogue. 1 : I Btptw!if5Sfur< 7~Rr MC'irf, in One Month, A. B. FARQUHAR, ^ i I ?e?WIrMl. A*rl?tawl YORE. ?%. ^ "E&J^IE&ILSOLjSL 2VSagazineRlfi?r^^^^^^^^^^^Brr For large or small game* all sizes. The strongest jhooting rifle sinde. Perfect y^^^^fSSHStSSBBBBf accuracy guaranteed, a:.ii the only absolutely safe rifle on the market. BALLAKD callury, sporting and target rifles. worW reaowned. Send for Illuitrated Catalogue. MARUN FIRE ARMS CO., New Haven, Conn, ECZEMA ERADICATED. Lv.vi.i-.vi.il..?ji. ic viuv ?va m m> mat i uiuiiv i am enureiy wen oi eczema artcr having taken Swift's Specific. I have been troubled with it very little in my face since last spring. ^ At the be::inn:n? of cold weather last fall it made a slight appearance, but went avrav and has never returaiii. S. s. s no doubt broke it ap. at least it put my system in ?oo<i condition < and T got welt. It also benefited mv wife preatly in case of sick headache, and made a perfect aJ cure of a breaking oat <a my little three year old daughter last summer. ^9 Watkinsville, (Jx, Feb. 13.1&6. Kev. JAMES V. M. XOKRIS. Treatise on Dlooa and Skin Diseases mailed free. The Swift SrEcinc Co.. Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. i Ashley Solttrt/r frn atsin i ? i ? ? ? ? I-?" w -4. j. v v_^ l ^ ' > j The Solubh^iiano isXhighiy concentrated Ammoniated Guuic, a complete High Gr ide Fertilizer for aii crops. ASHLEY COTTON AND CORN COMPOUND -A complete Fertilizer for these two crops and also largely used by the Truckers near Charleston f< r vegetables, etc. ASHLEY ASn ELEMENT.?A very cheap and excellent Non-Ammoniaied Fertilizer for Cotton, Corn ar.d J-'mall Grain Crop;, ard also for Fruit Trees,' Grape Vines, etc. ASHLEY DISSOLVED DONE: ASHLEY ACID PTIOSP1TATF nf 41 Grade5?for use alone and in Compost neap. VB For Terms. Direetu s. Teslimonials, and for the various attractive and instructive publications of the Company, address THE ASHLEY PHOSPHATE CO., Charleston, S.1C. Nov25l1j m armm m m m ^ar Thes: -erearonderfd discover/. No ethers like then in the world. Will positively enre be ?fMormation Jtronnd each box is worth te^ Jimw the cost of a cause no inconven- assw BBSS BMSSM KBUEBB ^SHB^ be made to realize the marvelous power r f these- pills, they would walk 100 miles to get a box if they could not be had without. Sent by mail for 25 cents in stamps. Illustrated pamphlet free, postpaid. Send for it: the information is very valuable. I. S. JOHNSON & CO., 22 Custom House Street, BOSTON, MASS.