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THE i KLL A ThorousU Examination?What wan >ouc<i? ,%o ( uuii'wioi:. Richmond. V v., January 20.?To the twelfth day after the exec ution of Taos. J. Cluverius, the cell occupied during his confinement in the city jail v.*:ts opened and examined. It was said that "he room ii:t?I only been opened <-,-< ;j since the prisoner walked out to r^seend the gallows. but its condition looked asit in ! )>ee': opened several times. Eiidit representatives <>? the Richmond press walked in the room and immediately commence" i mm examination. The ceil presented rather a lonely appearance and the closely shut room had a musty smell. In the centre was the table, closely associated with letters, theories and statements of the prisoner. On the bench near the window was the basin, while the j oT-r.1 r'n-.ir in !-r. titc.1 to c:t \V:tS ! by. On his couch lay the -lev: irray suit of ; clothes which he wore during his trial and while confined in the jail as he left il when he put on his execution clolhts. in the vest pockets were found his watch, a worn one dollar note, tooth-pick and some other small trinkets. The watch had an open face, and stopped running at :>. 14 o'clock. The reporters' main object was to find some evidence of confession, but their search was in vain. A smail memorandum book was found in the inside vest pocket of .he prisoner's suit, and it was hoped that in ? t . \ * ?k,. ims some vaiuauit; ev h:;;ui uu found. It contained the names of ::Ii ll:e witnesses during the trial and many not examined. The manner of arranging this book was very systematic. Opposite the "watch key," '"lieile Island" and other points of evidence he had placed all the witnesses, and every minor point was taken note of. If also contained the principal points brought out in the prisoner's review of the evidence which he furnished Gov. Lee. On the dingy walls over the couch hung Cluverius's straw hat which he often wore during the summer of lbSo. A large quantity of letters were found upon Ids table from different people. They were mostly letters of condolence. .Nothing was found lhat would in anv wav show that he knew anything about the death of his cousin. The trunk of the prisoner was in very good order, and contained many memoranda, letters and trinkets, but nothing of interest. The reporters spent over half an hour in the ceil, searched vigilantly, but found nothing that in any way implicated the prisoner in the dastardly crime committed 3Iarch 13lh, ISS-l A Bi;r Robbery in Charleston. Charleston is very much stirred up over the systematic robbery of one of the largest wholesale houses on East Bay, and a Pinkerton detective who has been working up the case lias just made his report. It is said that sirce the death of the senior some six vears s<ro the house has fallen behind between tfloO.OOU and *150,GOO, but it was not until six months ago that the house suspected anything wrong. A Pin ke; ton detective was sent for." Soon after this a young man was given employment in the store and gradually worked himself up from porter, watchman, assistant shipping clerk, etc, remaining in each department long enough to become thoroughly acquainted "with his fellow clerks. The young man turned out to be a detective and about a week ago he returned to his employers and made his report to the agency wlxo sent it to the house. The report exposed the whole business and designated the guilty parties. The firm is now treating with them with a view to recovering a portion of the spoils. It is said that one of the cierks or salesmen, or whoever he is (nobody seems to know who he is,) has offered $-"3,00!) to get off. This enterprising youth, so the story goes, has managed in five or?i>ix years Id accumulate a deposit of ?10,000 in the city bank, and tc '!o this on a salary of x75 per mors til. i neve are saiu xo uc m ree or four others who have been equally successful in business, and it is stated that the reason the matter has been kept quiet is because the firm is endeavoring to compromise /with its wealthy employees. This, it may be j repeated, is simply a summary of the thous ! and and one rumors that are flying about j condensed and put into narrative iorm.? j . Savannah JS'eico. The Railroad* ami Che Law. Prominent railroad men suggest a convention of railroad representatives to agree upon a rise of 100 per cent, in through freight rates, with the anticipated effect of creating a panic and bringing about the repeal of the icier-State commerce Act. Such an advance would pay the railroads ' ? * - * 1 1.4. very well untti tne c mmissiuiicxs yruu^m them to books for violating the fundamental requirement of the act, Avhiclt is that the rates shall be ''reasonable and just." An I advance of 100 per cent, in rates at one time by all the railroads would look like a pool or conspiracy, and would have to be explained satisfactorily by reference to details. There is a penalty of $5,000 for each violation of the act. This penalty, together with the terrors of an investigation, will probably prevent any unnecessary advance of rates. The better policy for the railroads is to accept the Act loyally and try to carry it out in good faith. They have long desired something to protect them from themselves, and they may yet find the interState commerce Act the very thing they have wanted. It subjects them to the restraints of law, ami must tend to substitute civilized methods for barbarous and predator}- habits. There are some roads probably thai never had a solid basis of vachic: trv>! Trih * 1v i-?ui i-u iuuvw v**v?.v ?. v - j needed, quiet, stead}* and honest ways, suck as the law requires, "ill in the end be admitted to be better. Stockholders will undoubtedly fare better when railroad officials lose their autocratic powers ;tnd wild-cat adventures have an end.?Baltimore Hun. Head of ti:e Signal Service. Officers of high rank in the army are confident that no action will be taken in the matter of the appointment of a new chief signal officer for the present. It will be impossible to accomplish anything in the way of a transfer of the signal bureau to the civil service at this session of Congress. It is the general impression that for tins reason the .War Department will use its influence to postpone tiie appoinment of a new chief until after the next session of Congress. Captain Greely will be allowed to remain at the head of the corps ujitil the fate of the proposed changes is dclinitely known. In case the transfer cannot be effected, it is not the opinion that Capt. j T.M'1 r-niff si?rn;il officer. I vnwwijr >. i.J. UV, ? It is one of the "plums" of the service, and there is not a colonel of the line who would not willingly accept it. Gen. ilazen held the rank of colonel when he was unpointed, and it is not probable an cftkx-r of a lower rank could jump to a brigadier generalship. Another question has arisen in connection with the temporary 'ippoint * ment of Captain Greeiy. The statutes have it that there shall be no temporary ap- j pointments for a longer period than ten j days after the death, resignation or dismis- ! sal of an official. There is some difference ; of opinion as to the proper construction to be placed on the statute. The second comptroller will take up this question irVir.n ?< <> dfivs inivc i-xmred from the death of Gen. Ila/.c-n, and will probably render some decision on the dispute points. Wall Paper*. If you live in a rented house, refuse to sign the next lease unless the house shall be papered for you. Accept a cheap paper if necessary, but stipulate that you shall do " your choosing yourself. Then make yourself lit to choose, and don't rely on tlie glib- ] best clerk that ever persuaded a hesitating customer. Read Last lake's "Hints oil Household Taste," get the "House Beautiful'' from the library, and look up Sk rib- i ;oer's Household Art Scries. At least, read i&as'l&ke. ami discover for yourself that rthe so-Called Easthikiar. papers and carpets ; f " fv/.'n heius made aiter his dvsii:ns: ] are, in short. what lie most aix>minated. f < "Thee, armed and equipped with know ledge, make a determined raid upon the !: cheap papers: ask for ! > cent rolls first, J; and then, if yon must. go up to ~o, but no ;j higher. One of the pretties: paj*.r,s I ever | ' saw was only cents a rolh Of coarse 1 j there was no" gilt, hut gilt is of doubtful j value in a paper. If you are very short of ' funds, put th." paper on yourself. It not at all an iiapt^ibie ta-k.?'Jo'sl IIj-;kkeeping. ; A man; isayounjc lady who i: single and j? Tvho will be won if >he marries. CKXKK\L ."VOTES. The deadlock continues in the Indiana Legislature. ; The V>V-t Virginia Legislature failed to elect a Senator. The brewers at I)cs Moines. Ia., have again closed tlu ir retail liars. The trial of boodle Alderman O'lveiil, of ' Xc'v York, began vesterdnv. a The British steamer Crambrook has been lost :it sea witfi her crew of 30 men. A dozen families in Ilazelton. Penn.,have been poisoned i?y citing a bad cheese. The shot tower of the Gulf Shot and Lead i Company, of New Orleans, has been burned. The Queen's speech on the opening of Parliament excited little interest. A lire in Dallas. Tex., on Wednesday. destroyed **w.uw worm 01 property. Exi'resident Hayes has been appointed j a Trustee of the University of Ohio. Argument in tiie telephone case began in ; the United States Supreme Court Monday. : In the last 10 days more than ?3,000,000 : worth of Alabama public lands h:is been i .sold. The British steamship Xepaul recently sank a Chinese transport with 100 niauda- : rins and soldiers. The lower house of the Texas Legislature has passed a bill forbidding officials of that State from using free passes on railroads. The National Convention of the "Woman Suffrage Association opened its session at Washington yesterday. Governor Foraker. of Ohio, has issued a ] proclamation of quarantine against the ! shipment of cattle for Illinois. Judge Thomas S. Ashe, of the State Supremo Court, is critically ill at his home, in Wadesboro, X. C. The resilience of II. F. Ross, at Fernan J City, Pa., was burned, and his four chil-1 j? 1 i uicu UUIUI'U I\J UU.ltJl. The United Labor party of Philadelphia, Pa., in convention have nominated Thomas Phelps, a shoemaker, for flavor. Two pilots were drowned while attempting to make a landing at Barnegat, X. J., their boat being lost in the gale. The resolution to amend the Constitution so as to permit women to vote has been killed in the Senate. Ex-Sheriff Hurry II. Koch, of Buffalo, X. Y., committed suicide Tuesday by hanging. There has been no advance towards a settlement of the trouble in Iliggin's carpet factory at New York. Bismarck claims that he will soon publish a paper from :he Pope, taking sides with the government. Over 30,000 longshoremen are on a strike in New York, and many ocean steamships arc kept in port. The North Carolina Knights of Labor have passed resolutions urging the passage of the Blair educational bill. The headquarters of the Richmond and ! Danville railroad will soon be moved back j to Richmond. The Chicago Union League has declined | to elect Mr. Giadstone an honorary mem- i ber of that body. The longshoremen's strike in New York is growing in proportions, and has now extended to nearly ail the steamship lines. An order has been issued forbidding the i ! exportation of horses across the German i frontier in any direction. The Memphis (Tenn) National liank, j with it? capital stock of ?500.000 all sub-! scribed, was organized last night. A boiler explosion near Oil City, Pa., in the Egypt oil district, demolished the boiler j house and killed t-.vo men. The Senatorial deadlocks in Texas, Iudi- ! ana, New Jersey and West Virginia continue. Failures for the week: United States 230, Canada 33?total 271, against 301 last week. Evictions continue in Ireland. The Irish members of Parliament gave strong expression to their indignation-yesterday. There have been 30 new cases of cholera nri.l Ji in Rtv?nns A vr?sinw> Wrdncs day. The Tennessee Senate has passed on its linal reading the prohibition amendment to the Constitution, the vote being 31 to 2. It is said that United States Treasurer j Jordan will leader his resignation, to take j effect on the Is': of May. The Senate has passed the House bill to i appropriate .$300,000 for a site and a public building in Charleston. The Tennessee Legislature, on the sixth ballot for United States Senator, elected exGovernor W. B. Bates, Democrat. The Michigan Legislature has passed a bill directed against imported detectives? i like Pinkerton's men. Two boys, aged 12 and 13 respectively, were drowned in the Schuylkill canal. They were skating, and the ice broke. The bill appropriating $100,000 for the relief of the sufferers by the drouth was passed in the Te .as Senate. The people of Corinth, Miss., are elated over the discovery of what appears to be , black and white iron ore 12 miles distant, j Four ballots were taken in joint session i 1U ILIt; jl LAtW I-CLUMUIUIC iUl "CUaiUi, UUk without final result. lieagan leads. The longshoremen's strike ic X?.w York is growing serious, and trouble is expected in a few days when large ocean steamships come. The Health Commissioners of Xew York have decided not to declare small pox epidemical as it would cause the city to lose about $1,000,000 worth of trade. Senator Butler has introduced an amendment to the river and harbor bill, providing for an appropriation of ?100,000 for Winyah Bay. The Texas Legislature balloted for United States Senator without result. A joint ballot will be taken to-day. General 3Iaxey leads. To-day tlie two houses of the West Virginia Legislature %vil! ballot for Senator in joint assembly, and it is thought that Camrinn ivill )><> fAaftixl Ilollingsworth, the defaulting treasurer : i of Knox county, Ind., walked into the \ : court room and gave himself sip. It is said ; he will implicate prominent citizens. Several persons have died at Mount Clair, : | 2s. J., from drinking water from a well that , had been poisoned by the drainage of a cess , pool. The Sew German Liberals of the Second ? Berlin district have nominated Prof. Vir- j chow for the Reichstag, in opposition to ' Von Moltke. ] J. H- Kngel, of Sun'oury, Pa., died re ccntly of h\drophobia. lie was bitten by a dog above the eye a short time ago. He : frothed at tbe mouth with convulsions be- ' fore dying. j Ton thousand people assembled in Madi- t son Square Garden, >!ew York, Sunday night, in compliment t<> Michael Pavitt and his wife. ' Governor Lee and some friends have gone \ on a 11 excursion to .Minnesota. They will i visit the ice palacc at bt. Paul, and after- i "wards go to Duluth. j ( jlrs. Van Z-.indt, the mother of the girl j who wants to marry the anarchist Spies, i ( says she* is going with her daughter to Paris I .. till the appeal of Spies he decided. Father McGlyun has replied at length to ' * Archbishop C'crrigan. lie accuses the pre-! x late of ditingenuousness, and adheres to his | -] land theory. j c A party of masked' men, supposed to be I illicit di.-t:liers. in Dawson county. Ga., J waylaid Andrew Howard and stamped him : to death. i j n In Town-c (_i; . J. C. Justice shot, p uid kiiied J. Y>. iioddard, whom he sus- 1 pectcd of giving information to revenue bikers. The murderer is m jail. j J Tiie January thaw has produced remark- n d)]e iioods and ice gorges in Schuylkill ! a river, near Reading, Pa., and at other n >oir.ts. j * A tire in VvTiitchurst ?x Owen's sash and t] .'lind factory at Richmond, Ya., entailed a j c, oss of ?3.500 and causcd the death of a ? colored fireman. The employees in Wiggins I: Co.'s carpet ti . . \ /.*.* VT\nr-y r-? r* "I lA *v ilvk 1} JL iiUUAU^liU^ W.VUV, , il. lave struck because of Ihe discharge of j omc employees. I nGen'.'ml Charles P. Stone, the American I s;; General who in recent years rendered con- : spicuous service in the Egyptian army, is !1 dead. Sunday night the post office at Columbus, j ' Miss.. w::s robbed of s.jOO and seven regis- j tered letters. Two mail robberies occurre<l | ] _ i r. ..i i \r: . . Li cm .Ui^s. ; The lYderai grand jury at St. Louis has ! returned ' 1 indictments" against persons : charged with frauds in the elections last Xovemb r. By a fire at "Reidsviiie. X. C.. S..nday, the Piedmont Hotel, Star warehouse and eight stores were destroyed. Entire less about $00,000. About 100 of the Lorillard strikers returned I1' the factory and begged to be reinstated on the old terras. They were all taken back. A Democratic caucus met at Nashville, Ten::., Monday, and nominated Bate, who had just retired from the gubernatorial race. , This assures his election. A dispatch from Tonquin says that Col. , Baissand has carried the rebel position at ' Mika Tiian-Hoa, and that 500 were killed. Thy Fi ench were pursuing the rebels. The "Women's Temperance Union of Virginia has passed resolutions congratulating Mrs. Cleveland on her being a total ab . stainer. Joseph L. Morsran, of South Carolina. secretary of the United States legition at! Mex'co, has resigned, to take effect the 1st of M-ircli. Freeman Arlington, of Augusta, Ga., was shocked by electricity on TLursday night, in try to fix an electric light, lie is expectcd to die. The President's reception to Congress and the Judiciary, the second of this season's seiies, took" place at the While House Thursday night. The boot and shoe factories of Worcester and Spencer, Mass., have commenced a movement looking to the non-employment of any Knights of Labor. The American Cotton Oil Company, operating in Mississippi, h:is raised the price of cotton seed?a victory for the planters. Postmaster Francis E. Sharp, of Oconto. Wis., was lodged in jail at'Milwaukee hist night, charged with having tilled a large number of registered letters. Calculations on the total yield of the sugar crop of Cuba vary between <500,000 and 800,000 tons. There is still a fair demand f< >r tobacco and cigars. The boiler in the Harvey paper mill at Wellsburg. W. Va., exploded, killing John and Thomas Iv'elson and severely injuring John Parish. Frank I). "Walcott, from Vermont, went into an opium den in Livingston. Montana, and died from the use of the drug. The Chinamen running the den were ordered to quit, and they did so. Three colored men were drowned in South fiver, near Annapolis. One of the number broke through the ice, and the other two were drowned in trying to rescue him. Advices from Zanzibar say Count Tele key's expedition for the exploration of Central Africa, which arrived in Zanzibar last June, has now started for the mainland. James J. Titus, of Belvidere, X. J., the college janitor convicted of the murder and outrage of the servant girl named Tillie Smith, is sentenced to be hanged April 14. Three local assemblies in Philadelphia, composed of journeymen tailors, have seceded from the Knights of Labor. Their grievance is that "boss" tailors (middle men) have been admitted into the order. A dispatch from Suakirn says it is reported that a small force of Abyssicians attacked Wassowak and were repulsed with a loss ox 200 killed. Five Italians were killed. The Senate separation at Indianapolis, Ind., is without change. Two ballots were taken. All the members were present, and the figures went back to those of last week. President and Mrs. Cleveland, with a large parly of friends, went to Baltimore Monday night and were present at the charity ball. They returned to Washington about 1.30. At Xelson, Minn., Thursday night, four men in a sleigh, crossing a railroad track, were run into by a train. Two of them : were killed, one was mortally and the fourth was badly injured. Thomas C. Evans, of Xanticoke, Pa., who was arrested last fall for bribery at the Republican Convention, was convicted in the Criminal Court at Wilkesbarre. The striking operatives in Iliggins's car 1 pet factory at Xew York are said to have ' gained the victory over their employers. 1 They have returned to work in a bod}*. Havemeyer's Sugar Refining Company's works on Commercial street,' Brooklyn, have heea closed by a want of coal, throw- s ing a large number of men out of employment. 1 Charles Taylor, aged 18, formerly clerk ; in the post office at Columbus, 3Iiss., has been arrested in Nashville with AoOO of ; stolen money in his possession. j The passage by the United States Senate of the Edmunds fisheries bill attracts very . little attention at Toronto. Xone of the ] newspapers comment on the matter edito , rially. I Seven jurors in the O'Xeill bribery case have bee n taken from the box by challenge? by the prosecution. Others havn been obtained, and the day closed with 11 in the box. ; The demands of the employees of the National Tube Works of Pittsburg, Pa., for an advance of wages has been granted. The increase will average 10 per cent., and affects 2,."500 workmen. An immense breaker of the Parish Coal Company, at Plymouth. Pa., was totally burned Tuesday night. It was one of the largest breakers in a tlirarite cval regions, and had a capacity for 1,200 tons per day: The origin of the recent great fires at Tver don, Switzerland, has been traced to Anarchisms, who set fire to many buildings with the object of making work for unemployed persons. The Senate of Michigan Thursday night passed a joint resolution to submit the pro- " hibitory amendment to the vote of the people by a vote of 22 to 10. The resolution had Already passed the House. All the employees (225 in number) of i Selz, Schwab & Co., of Chicago, boot and ] shoe manufacturers, went on a strike be- f cause the firm would not discharge non- ( union workmen. t The sale of the Little I lock and Missis- f sippi River railroad was made yesterday to c Jay Gouid, who paid $180,000 for it. The c sale previously made had been set aside for r i: lOU CUIIIJMillULU J?lclLULC5. > Thirty Democratic members of the House \ 1 md nine Democratic Senators of the Xew ] ( Jersey Legislature balloted in joint session r for Senat'-r yesterday, but did not have the c required majority. They adjourned until ,o-ci:iy. (| Advices from Mexico say a great deal of ? mffcritiir is reported oniong the Chinese in 1 Macallan, arising out of differences between he laborers and the companies which , wrought l hem out. Coal operators along the Baltimore and 0 JJiio district have been compelled to close ^ Iowa a number of their works on account j >f the scarcity of cars. About 1,000 men y} ire thrown out of employment. The ollice of the Gulf, Colorado and junta Fj railroad, at Richmond, Texas, L vas robbed of $1,400 on Tuesday night. ? rhe stati;.-n agent was forced, at the muzzle if a pistol, to show them the safe. The cotion crop in Mexico this year will p mouot to about oOO.UOO quintals and as j 00,000 quintals a month are required to .. tiaki: UP, tin; -ieticit will have to be im- ... lortcd fro::. the United States. Senatoi iiahone introduced in the Senate ' bill to provide for the reimbursement of jc*' iie States of Maryland and Virginia for j sr locc-y advanced to the United States to ('! id in the erection of public buildings at ^ ermanent seats of the Government. t.u It is the general opinion at Madrid that iere is no prospect of negotiations for the ommcrcial treaty between Spain and the ]a 'nited States being successful. The Span- ]K h authorities are distrustful of the inten- ;n ons of the American government in the latter. 0f JL licit *>vU; fJiUlL J I'll 111 1^1 UUU ^UUIiUaj lU iglit at Gloucester, "Mass., over the pas- fo ige of the retaliation fishery bill by the I of' Senate. A large crowd assembled in the i ricinity of the custom house and post office, i Ul/\r.lrinrr tl>/i ct-r&nt crj/l clmiVITV** f'71- i 1/f/i.n.u. LI.V. s.im ...... a c ? Lhusiasm. The* Inter-State Commtrce Bill lias i<-cn laid before the President for liis signature. IIc has ivferred it to the Attorney General for consideration and report on the const:- : Lutionality of its provisions. The New York Herald says it is under-; stood that .Secretary 3Ianning and United ' States Treasurer Jordan, v.ill both resign their present positions and accept the man- ' agement of the new 35.000,000 dollar ban;:, which it is said, is soon to be organized in that city. Assembly llSi. Knights of Labor. Baltimore. have sued S. Ruth -k Son. tin can makers, for ?20,000 damages for breach of contract charges that Ituth k Sou agreed Lo pay Union prices for work, and broke their contract, thus throwing many men j ou; of e!;:!dovmeut. The Indian;; Senatorship is as far from a settlement as ever, and there is no ianiie diate pn-spect of u ehsnge. The General | Assembly met in joint convention Monday j and took one ballot, which resulted: Tur-1 : pie, 7-1: Harrison, 70; Allen, 1. The explosion of a boiler occurred at 1 Spanks & Co.'siron works at Elnaborough, 1 near Pittsburg, Pa., badly wrecking the mill, (/lie man named Patterson was instantly killed and a number of others se- : riously injured. Friday, Mrs. Kuester, of Wisner. Xe- ; 1 bniska, put poison in a bottle of whisky; with whieh her husband afterwards treated the family of John Wherrer. All who drank were taken violently ill. and Louis ! Wherrer has since died. Mrs. Kuester has 1 been arrested. Two bills directed against the employ- ; ment of Pinkerton's officers within the I State were introduced in the >'ew .Jer-ey [ Legislature yesterday. They were;general : bills, prohibiting, under heavy penalty.any j person not actually a citizen of the Suite i from acting as police or detective oilicer. Bud Cornish went to the house of a j farmer. John Green, near SLarpsviile, Ivy., i and after a few words, shot and killed Lulu j Green, aged IS. The mother attempted ?<>' save iicr daughter and was also seriously 1 wounded. Cornish was arrested and lodgep ; in jail at Springfield. The organization of the New Jersey Sen ate has been postponed until Friday. In i the House the Democrats by a party vote passed a resolution to begin balloting for Senator, and Leon Abbott, of Hudson, received the :J0 Democratic voles, the Repub i Nconc lv.fiicinrr tn xri\tr> nn the irrnilllrf (A illegality. Senator Morgan introduced as an amend- j f ment to the bill which pa-.sed the Hov.se 1 creating a Department of .Agriculture and Labor, a section providing for the transfer j of the signal service to one of the civil de-1 partments of the Government (not named); and providing for the retention of the . present organization. Henry Stiles, :i colored boy 10 years old, j was arrested in Savannah for the murder : of Charles Bogens, colored, 14 years old. ! The two hoys had a quarrel on Tuesday, j and Stiles struck Bogens in the buck with ! a brickbat. Bogens died Thursday m ?rning. He was subject to spasms. Stiles |: claimed that the brick was tlrown in self- : defence. About 200 cases of giant powder ex ploded while in transit over the Missouri 1 Paoiiic road half a mile west of Fort Scott, Kansas, yesterday morning. It was being : < transported in a magazine car. The train ; consisted of 23 freight cars and 15 of thani were completely demolished. The engine ; , was badly broken up. but not blown oil . the track. Only one man was killed. An Orsini bomb was thrown near the Town 11:: 11 in Altoona last night, but it ex- : ploded soon and did no harm. Fragments of the bomb were analyzed, and it was found that it had not been manufactured | by an expert. Several Socialists were ar- ! rested on suspicion of being concerned in the affair, but they were liberated alter a I short detention. In the sundry civil appropriation biii reported by Senator Allison, the estimates 1 amounted to So 1,540,862. The House bill ' appropriated ?I9,75o,411. The Semite committee has increased the amount to s22,- < !>i)3,856. Thus the bill as reported is. s$,S47,00G below the estimates and in excess of the appropriations for the cur- , rent year. j The announcement is made in Cincinnati i that a contract has been signed for the pur- ' pose of putting on the road a theatrical j nnmrMinv lir-rt/jr fllft lllCI-bW-.i iinfl Villi ill,. approval of the Catholic Church, villi the . 1 object of collecting a fund for the relict of : j the creditots of the late Archbishop Pur j cell. The venture is to start very soon, but j will not do business during i.jnt. August Goethe, a cur-driver in 3Iilwau- j j kee, was assaulted and robbed some months ' igo. T wo boys. Malion iMcCullougii and i . Win. Pclizo. were arrested on the charge | | ~jf having done the crime, were convicted j ( rid sent to the penitentiary for three years. Defectives furnished the evidence against j Lhem. Xow Father Decker, a Catholic ; ' priest, says that the real criminal confessed I 1 to him, but that he cannot reveal his name, i ' The priest's statement is generally believed, aid it is now probable thai the boys will be 1 liberated. They have been shamefully j < created in prison, and one of them is said 1 1.- j..: c -U UU UJ 1111$ l/l UVlldUUipiIUll. Roorh o:id (he Saw. ' ; From 1SC9 lo 1S7G. a period of eight | fears, the Republican party then in control , >f the government expended- ?270,000,000 j [ )n the navy, and yet to-day there is not a ! , >hip in it that would float two minutes j 1 mder lire of any European man of-war. i, John Iiotich was one of the men who bene itted under this expenditure of money for : ^ Evhieh the country received nothing in re- :] .urn, but a lot of frail and badly construct-1 ,*d hulks. The talk of the "Republican j s wpers about John Itoachs brojeen heart j < loes not sound very weJi in lace oi tne ug- > ires we have quoted. They go to show ,hat had the Republican party remained in ( :ontrol much longer John Roach's heart a vould have doubtless been all right, but i t he country would have been broken.? Yeic Orleans Xlatos. ( Labor nnd Capital. ^ Colonel William Preston Johnson ha? , >ecn making a speech to the Knights of * Labor of Xew Orleans, in which he dealt ? ipecially on the fact that war had been de-1 c :larcd between labor and capital, and that; he conllict could only terminate in the j s ollowing three ways: Tlie triumph of J 1 capital, which would be disastrous to all | L rlasses; the victory of labor, which means evolution, anarchy, bloodshed, and nf'cr- A vard a redistribution of property and more a nisrule and national destruction; or by a b :essation of hostilities and peaceful adjustment on the basis of justice., both sides rec- ; < ignizin^ that the law of Christ, which is j a loing uuto others as you would have them : lo to you, is the only hi v.- upon which i ommunities must rest to be permanently rosperous and happy. a Stamped leather chairs are the proper !i iiing for dining-room and library. Disoatches from Fremont, 2sorth Bend ; q nd other points within r. radius of 100 j ^ liles west of Omaha, report nr>i>es oa j s! 'hursday night, supposed to be earth- u uakes. An exchange speaks of a man with double ^ ieth "?\ ho can crack a walnut. That is j r!" othing There is a policeman in Colum-; a' ia who h;is a set of false teeth and he can : St rack a cocoanut. j ni There is one tiling in which the Pilgrim Wthers had the advantage of our English isUorsof the present day. They were not interviewed" as soon as th<y had landed, id asked hud they liked the country. ^ Mrs. Asa J. Milligen and her two chil j a en under 2 years of age. residing a mile I di uth of I3urr Oak, 3iich., were found ! owned in a cistern in three feet of water, J ^ hursday evening, b}* her husband, on re- j jn rning home. On the mother's body was : t;j id a stone of 23 pounds wc:ght. J. Davis, a planter, collected sTOO in At- ^r n.ta recently and took the train for his =" >me in Greensboro. Wheel about nine i!es from Ataata lie accider- tally dropped 5c 5 pocket book containing the money out an the car window. He got off the train T1 the next station and went back to look go r it. He succeeded in fir.ding it intact ar. tcr about six hours' search. ha BRIC-A-BRAC. woman'S AIM. When lovely woman throw? a rock, A contumacious lieu to scare, It cives tli* artistic eye a shock To mark her attitude and air. But be not. to your danger blind. If you should l>e besid" her then; At once a place 01 sarciy r.nci. That is to say. stand near the hen. Parasites?Eye-glasses. A matter of cores?Apples. The plumber's vegetable?Leek. High strung?Telegraph wires. A mrutvr of taste?Strong butter. A host in himself-?The inn-keeper. Something fresh in corsets?A dude. A country-seat?The milking-stool. A grave charge?The sexton's fee. Hours of idolncss?Sparkling days. The proper study of womankind is man. Do wiry men make the best telegraphers? A teetotaller?An accountant in a tea store. Much adieu about nothing?The parting uf two society girls. Self-possession is nine points of the lawyer. Something that will bear lookiDg into?A micro-c >pe. A good way to make children tell the truth is to tell it yourself. A man who makes r>otPS on his fingernails can have ideas at Lis fingers' ends. The cio'hes may make the man, but they certainly don't make the ballet dancer. When a man sees double, ir is evidence that bis glasses arc too strong for him. White glass finger-bowls are the only kind used on tables of fashionable people. The p's that Russia wants?Plunder, power and prestige. Xo man can digest the English grammar i:n:il he has et a mology. When the heart is full the lips are silent; when the man is full it is different. An after-dinner speaker?The bonbon cracker. Never trust tlie man who is always depreciating his associates. A restaurant keeper can make both ends meet by scrying calf's head and ox-tail soup. The latest wrinkle?That in the tails of your overcoat. V, lieu a man loses Ins laise teeth, coum it be called a gum drop? The way of the transgressor is hard?be cause many feet have trodden it. "A Terrible Temptation"?Tosay "chestnut" when an old joke is sprung. The in' re intelligent you make a juryman believe he is. the stupider he gets. A conductor can be polite to the ladies and at the same time knock down the fare. Hens have an ambition similar to men. They all want to get on the highest roost. "Two heads are better than one." This was written before three-story bonnets came in fashion. It is said of one fashionable young man that he never paid anything but a compliment. A sporting paper says: "A match race uas been arranged." We presume it will and in a scratch. The elephant is never troubled with baggage when he is traveling, his trunk is idways "on a head." 3Ir. John L. Sullivan seldom bccomes unconscious. still his opponents are always ilarmed when he feints. An exchange says that the masculine [rii i must go. If she have the "go" in her ivhv shouldn't she. An Ohio girl has had 09 oilers of marriages v. it iiiZ2 two years. Perhaps the 100th man will be the unlucky fellow. I:i India it costs more to get married ihan tu die. Mature is full of wise provision.?. A Nebraska court has undertaken to explain "What is in a sausage." At last reports it had got 110 farther than the bark. "The most unkindncst cut of all" is frequently furnished you by your butcher with the assurance that it is sirloin. When a girl gets mad and rises from a fellow's knee, but thinks better of it and joes back again. :rs what they call a relapse. A Louisiana Judge decides that a man who loses money for poker may recover from the man who sells him the chips. Some one wants to know why spikes ivere placed on the head ef the Goddess of Liberty. To keep her hair up, of course. An article on gingerbread says that it iias been made since the 14th century. We liavc certainly seen some that we thought Tii/rlj? hoTV> "S-tve the fat," says an exchange. If here is yoing to he a preference in those to 3e saved, better save the lean. The fat jlies will hum belter. The subject of American fisheries was liscussed in Parliament on Friday. It was loped that everything would be arranged peaceably. * A professional palmist says a persons can lever tell a lie with his hand shut. He jaa't with his mouth shut, either, Palmistry, i will be seen, is a great study. "What is the difference between an ingry lover and a jilted maid?" "Give it ip"" "Wh}'. one is a cross beau, and the )ther is a cut lass." The discovery of a scarlet snake is re K>rted by an Ontario paper. Themanwho liseovered it had in all probability been >ainting the town red. A Xew Yorker shot at his wife, but the ml let hit nothing but her store hair. It is ery hard to get at the exact boundaries of i Y?T\mon nntpo/lorc One difference between riding a liorse ind riding a hobby is this?a man can get >11 a horse at any lime, but from a hobby, icvcr. That electric boy in California?just dis overed?can be utilized when he becomes i few years older by marrying him to an dectric belie. Mr. J. II. Hoffman's horse bit him on lie shoulder this morning, to the arnusenent of those who witnessed it and no painill injury to Mr. Hoffman. .Miss Stager, of Chicago, is to marry _,ord Butler. One would suppose from lie hulv's name that she would prefer a oach'.nan to a butler. The Irishman's manner of obtaining ound sleep is worth imitation. lie said hat a short sleep did for him, because when ie slept, he paid attention to it. Fullness under the eye denotes language. Yhen the 'fullness is large and discolored nd hurts, this denotes that the man has ieen using too muck of it. She?"Isn't that papa coming?" lie? 'How provoking; I was just going to steal kiss." She (ingeniously)?He's awfully en r-.-igk ted, C liar ley?aw fully!" "If a man couM only catch fish as easily s he can lie about it!" laments a- Texas ditor. lie could, if he only understood shing as well as he does lying. The expression "sleeps like a top"' is uite common, but we doubt if anybody ould sleep on a peg; most people cannot ;md on one long when its business end is p in a boot. . A quaint writer says: "I have seen omen so delicate that they are afraid to de for fear of the horses running away; | [raid to sail lor tear the noat snouia overit. and afraid to walk for fear the dew j light fall: but I never saw one afraid to ;t married." lie was about to propose, but was some- I hat nervous. He didn't know how to .-gin. At last he stammered out: "I'm ;ry uneasy." "Uneasy." she cchoed. hen she added emphatically: "I'll bet it's ilea off my dog. I've been there." He dn't propose. Tiie}' had been married six weeks, and e said: "Now dou't oo stay out late, :i come home soon to oor 'little wifey ey :*" They had been married six years, ;d she said: "If you go out to-night, nith, I'm going to lock up the house and i over and sleep at mother's." It has comc to pass that almost every I lulhern town now claims to be on a boom, d in most instances the claim is sustained. ' ie money that once purchased slaves now es into more substantial capital, and cities d railroads are springing up on every nd. j j SONG. Our boat is aground on a spit o? sand, But what care we? me stars are oui aaa me inwu is at juuiiu, . And -.re hear the- rote of the sea. . Our boat is aground on a spit of sand i J "A'hile we wait the turn of the tide. The birds are wa!:i:i^ in morning-land, : j And the planets U-ginning to hide. Where is the night with its shadows and song, j ] The sand spit, the rote of the sea? TWre they but myths that to dreams belong, j . Like the love that he sang to me? ?Mary X. Presjott in Harper's Bazar, j The Soatlx African Qnagga i It \r- stated that the quagga, the fceautii iul wild striped ass of South Africa, has , suddenly ceased to exist. The bootmakers : i of London and New Yonc wanted his ; ; skin for a particular kind cf sportsman's j J boot, and he consequently passed away ! out of zoology. There may be a few left 1 on the highest and wildest, plateaus, but i the Boers, tempted by the high prices, ! have extirpated the herds whicli only ten ; \ years ago existed in South Africa. That : will be the fate of the elephant, too, and possibly of the crocodile, it takes whole * provinces to supply ivory for one advertis- ; ing firm in Oxford street, the price is four- : ' tola the price ot a quarter ot a century j j ago, and the leasts are hunted with a per- j 3 sistency which in no lung time must be j ] fatal. i The Indian government is making efforts to protect the Asiatic breed, but they . will all be futile. Animals which when , i dead are exceedingly valuable contract a , | habit of dying, and laws establishing J I close time are powerless when it is worth ( j while to run the risk of breaking them, i ( j The crocodile's skin is used by smoker's \ ! and pursemakers, and so he will d:sap- j I pear. Whatever Europe wants Europe !J ! will have; and if the fashion of turning i ! tigers' claws into brooches had developed ' < and spread to America, tigers would have 2 perished. There will soon not be a bird < of paradise on earth, and the ostrich has only been saved by private breeders. ; Man will not wait for the cooling of the j { wonu .o cunsumu tnei jumjij xii u. uu;u teak tn es to humming birds, and a century or two hence will find himself perplexed by a planet in which there is Both- j ' ing except what he makes. lie is a poor sort of creator.?London Spectator. ii The Court Martial System. ''It is a startling fact, shown up by re- 1 liable figures," said an army officer .yes- j terday, that 50 per cent, of the soldiers in : department were, during the past year, tried by court martial. Most of them, of ^ course, were tried for petty offenses,such as drunkenness, being off duty without leave of absence. This is a pitiful shoving, and j at the same time its truth cannot be disputed. It proves that there is something ' radically wrong with the present system of court martial. As the thing is now, if i a soldier goes off or becomes intoxicated, he is immediately tried by court martial and sentenced to a term in the guard house. That relieves him from duty, and j throws the work on the men who behave tli omen! vac Tliic c1icr?Anr?>rroc cmnrl soldiers and hc-lps the bad ones. The fact is there ought to be a fixed code of laws, rigidly enforced, with a cer- . tain punishment for each crime?something similar to the code which obtains in the police court. Then a soldier who dis- \ obeys these laws would know just what punishment to expect. Under the present system a soldier, tried by our court mar- | tial, might get a sentence more severe or more lenient than a soldier who commits the very same crime, but is tried by a dif- j ferent court martial board. In my opinion : there ought to be less guard house sentence and more fining dont?. Let a soldier . xmcjerstand that an infringement of the lawis going to cost him the half or whole | of his month's pay, and he Will be pretty j apt to keep straight. For that reason a | fixed code of laws and fines ought to be I | determined upon.?Omaha Bee. Xcw Fatl for Collectors. A new fad for collectors has been dis- : covered, namely, engraved plates. It is j no' > -ugh to collect etchings and engravii:-_rs. but these enthusiasts want the steel i and Conner nlates that thev ivere printed ! from. Is there a stray hobby for any one left to ride? This is an age of collections, : and what "rafts" of matter pass through tlie auction rooms into the parlors and libraries and cabinets of our wealthy citizens! Pictures, prints, first editions, coins, clocks, watches, bric-a-brac, minerals, curios, autographs, photographs, ; gems, postage stamps, walking sticks, umbrellas (!), gloves, firearms, swords, carvings, play bills, book plates, buttons and business cards. The man who made a collection of cigar stumps Is already noted beyond his deserts. The piquancy of this j metal plate collecting doubtless consists in the difficulty of securing examples of value, for those made by painter etchers are commonly defaced or destroyed after a limited number of impressions have been taken, and it- U a matter of principle with the etcher that no .impression shall be struck after the lines becrin to show sims of weakening under the strain of the press.?Brooklyn Eagle. A Heartless Man. "Wife (looking up from book)?My gra- ; cious alive, I would not have been the \ wife of the earl of Warwick for anything. ' Husband?Why? j Wife?Because I see it stated that no 1 j less than 30,000 persons ate dailv at his ! table, Husband?What difference would that " have made? Wife?Do you reckon I'd want to wait ; on so many people? Think I could wash ; so many dishes? Think that a woman's ! created merely to work? I never saw the j like. Men haven't got a bit of sympathy. 1 Here vou sit at ease and want me to set i the table for 30.000 people. I ought not to live with you another minute, you heartless thing. Husband?Why, Mary, don"t carry on so. I have never asked you to wait on so many people. In fact, I don't intend that you shall. Wife (smiling through her tears)?Oh. I didn't think you would be so cruel, but the way you spoke, dear, I thought you were in earnest.?Arkansaw Traveler. A No to of Persian Civilization. When the hereditary governor of a great city tells you that his grandfather was boiled to death, and that lii.s own fate may not be different, it strikes you that S his grandsire probably was, and that the e grandson is, somehow connected with a s sugar refinery. But when the gentleman I proceeds to explain that his ancestor was \ judicially boiled to tu death, and that the 1 only favor he could obtain was that the ? Ivit-. rmrl Tint. whpn Tia E was plunged into it, a thrill of liorror, ' g tempered with incredulity, is apt to freeze I the listener: but yet such things are and | will be again in Persia. The hereditary | governor of the town of Shiraz. the capi- g tal of Fars. the richest and largest prov- g Ince of modern Persia, was the gentleman 3 who had lost his'grandfather in this way. i | ?C. J. Wills. Th?> Duty of ?t;itc Legislation should be tiiectc'i In ever; ' 3 State regulating tir: ?:: ? ::n<! c.f 1 many poisons recoiled tu bv v.uu.eii Li { their desperation to obtain beautiful com-j j plcxions, while there exits in Dr TTar!er".? i 1 Iron Tonic every requisite necessary to ac- j 2 compusii iiie nDj-cr w::,io;u '.ry.ir.n^ >health or endangering life. * vIaEZMM I ULmmju 11 \ 5 Srass and Clover Seeds, Seed Grain and Potatoes, ! ~ Garden and Flower Seeds, \ Vegetable & Flowering Plants,' ^ v: , . # # fii Pnces quoted on application. pj Descriptive Catalogue mailed free. e? Correspondence Solicited. cz r.w.wooMSONS, jj SEEDSMEN, NO. 10 S. FOURTEENTH ST. | lention this paper. RICHMOND, VA B \ BLOOD AND MONET. The blood of man lias much to do in shaping bis actions during bis pilgiimagc through this troublesome workl. regardless of the amount of prcH-nt or expectant money in pocket or stored jiwav in bank. It is a conceded fact that we up pear as our blood makes us, and the purer the blood, tbe happier, healthier, prettier and wiser v.e arc; hence the oft repeated interrogatory, "how is your bloodV* With pure streams of life-giving iuicl coursing through our vein?, bounding through our hearts and ploughing shrongh our physical frames, our morals become belter, cur constitution stronger, jur inteiieetual facaltits more acute and grander, an;. ruen. v. omen and children [luppier, healthier -nd more lovely. The unprecedented demand, the tin-, paralleled curative powers, and the un-: inishikable proof from those of unimpeachable character and integrity, point sith an unerring finger to 1>. ii 3.? Botanic Blood Balm?as far the best, the ?*., .1 .j.-.i'l t 11> P ;ir,drsf :<nd most powerful blood remedy ever before kuown to mortal man, in tlis relief and positive core of Scrofula, liheumatism, Skin diseases, all taints of blood poison, Kidney complaints, old ulcers md sores; cancers, catarrh, etc. B. B. i>. is only about three years old ?a baby in a giant in power-?but; ao remedy in America can or ever lias' made such awondeial showing in its magical powers in cn dzg and entirely, jradicatng the above corn^jJints. ;uid; gigantic salts in 1 ue face of frenzied op- | position and would-be moneyed monopo-1 lists. .Letters from a1! points v.-cere introduced are pou?ing in upon us, speaking In its loudest praise. Some say they receive more benefit from one bottle of B. B. u. iban they have from twenty, thirty md fifty and even, one hundred bottles of a boasted decoction of inert and non medicinal roots ;:l-u branches of common forest trees. Vv'e hold the proof in. black iud v.hite, and \ve also hold the foit. ' All v.-ho desire full information abont j the cause and cure of Blood Poisons, ; Scrofula and Scrof olous Spellings, Ul;ers, Sort s, rheumatism, Kidney Com-: plaints, Catarrh, etc., can secure by mail; free, a copy of our 32 page Illustrated Book of "Wonders, filled with the most wonderful and startling proof ever before known. Address, BLOOD BAL:>I CO., Atlanta, Ga. "W*y\ INFORMATlOtr PERSONS season Limbs, Bach and \ / Sides, Bad Blood, "ry \/lndiffesticn,Dyspepsia, Xalaria,Constipations Kidney Troubles. -t?VOLIHA CORDIAL CUBES SHEUMATISH, Bad Blood and Kidney Troubles, by cleansing the blood of a'.l its impurities, strengthening all parts of the bod/. -i?VOLIHA CORDIAL CURES SICK-liEADAGHE, Neur&Uria, Pains ;n the T.imb?, E;iclc and Sides, by toning the nerves and i::ecsthcniBg the muscles. -i?VOLIHA CORDIAL CURES DYSPEPSIA, Indlrestlon and Constipation, by sidin* the assini- , ihuin? of the 1'ocd tbroush the proper action of the ttotuucii; it creates a healthy apnetite. *?V0L!NA CORDIAL CURES NERVOUSNESS, Depression of spirits and Weakness, by enlivening and toning the system. -*?VOL!MA CORDIAL CURES OVERWORKED end Delicate "Women, Puny and Sickly Children. It is delightful and nutritious as a general Tonic. Vol inn. Alnjr\nns and Diary dSSgEjua for 1887- A liund?ome, complete ~z~S&j3 and useful Book, tellinjrhowto ct'P.E J)isr..\s;-..s rt HOME in a pleasant, natural way. Mailed on receipt of a 2c. postage stsmp. Address VOL3?iA DRUG & CHEM5CAL CO. KAi.1 'fjlUrifc, SflO., U. A. ?? rJ&i 'Will purify the BLOOD reculat? the LIVER end KID KEYS and ^Kr ^JtSi Restore the HEALTH and VTGCH cf yOXJTH. I)yspepsia.*V>nt OI Al>r>eilie, ;r.riit;csuQ2.L.iit4UL j ^Spg553^ Strcnstb end Tired foeiicsab- j solntely cured: Bones, in us. cles and rierros receive new force. Jiilivens the n:nd I * *=&5sS>w and supplies Brain Power. j ? ?TV - -c? --=v Sofferini: from complaints 9 S\ &> SK peculiar totheir sm? ili hnu LAL^JSQ inSX KAXTKa'S I30N | TCICICasAf* and speedycur<*. Givcsaclenr, heol- j thy complexion. Freqnent attempts at conat^rfeit- i inc oniy add to th? popciarity of the oricinai. L'o i not experiment??et the 02iGD?"Ai.ASB Best, ? Dr. KARTSR-fi LiVER PiLLS?. \ ! R Cv.ro Constipati sn. Liver Complaint and s? e.:!? ; HHeadacbe. Sample Doso and Dream Bcckfl ! ^mailed on receipt of rvrc cents in postage, f i THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY. ; St. Louis? Mo. ^e^^D-5-, ?7?*$ mmyc:n> T?* I &Ki5r.< y 5-.2 B K5C% s?!? &yo-d Settrmail j Sj .r-^. "rjy,v-f :*:.t -53? C??338S j ? v I!rt~r..f*v- riDfJfy, in One "onth, mJ& iiur. <myjhin:rel _<r. A Absolu'KVrtalnty. OSS' * t. Y o . ! 73 ti r? :::vichSt.N.Vozi. Mga??b aaaa?ia?? i 10SSMA EI Gentlemen?'It i.; 'tno ym to ?n- that I tbi taken S;>cri;:c. I have beea troubled A: mc beuinr.i::;; of c<;M weather last fsllit: h:is never retumX. S. s. s. no doubt broke it t and i ;-n: v.(;; I:benefited :n v \v:fo irreat 1 cun- ' r. b.'cakiiij; om <ray isttle Vircc year Vrcik::i#-.i!le. Ga., Feb. 23, 2 ?.->>. Treatise on Bloec and Skin L,isea.--e? rmilf The -S ?rr-'.r. 2Z33SS ics.' pills w:rs a vrcaderfal discover?. others relieve aB siaascr of disease. Ths inforaation aj e marvelous tower of th?ss Tills, tlisy would walk lioat. Sen: by mail for 25 cents in stamps. Ilia ; information 13 very va_uaoic. I. S. & 1 If FlIMD ^ 3IAKFS Chiid-Birth Easy! The t^me has come -when the terr'.b'.e ajrony of this critical jenod in w man's lite ran be avoided. A <31-^tinjruishe l physic: ?n, vrho sp^nt 44 years ta this bran-.-li of prscU e, !eft t'e ihilil-ixannjrwomaii this iesracy, 'i he Moth eh'< Fkisx:-, and to-<!ay There are Thousands of women who, having nscl this remedy oefore conEiK-xaer.t,'1 c up and call his cams blessed. We cm prove al! we c:attn b.v living wfcae sog, and anvoae inter- _ es:e?l c::n <r; ii, or huve thfir hus -andg ? do so, and see :he original letter', which we cannot puMish. All druggists sell it. For particulars address M Beadfikld Regulatoe Co., Atlanta, Qa, PIANOS andORGANS 1 From the World's Best Makers, f j~ims\-r\*cr Tinrm?a , A'l JC XVXki X XViVJ-iO, Easiest Terms of Payment ^ Eight Grand Makers, and Oyer Three Hundred Stylea to Select From. PIANOS: Chickerlcg, Mason & Hamlin, 1 Mathnshek, Bent and Arion. ' ORGANS: Hason & Hamlin, Urcnestrai ana Bay State. jd Pianos and Organs delivered, freight paid, to all points South. Fifteen days' trial, and Freight Paid Both Ways, il i not satisfactory. Order, and test the Instruments in , your Own Homes. j COLUMBIA MUSIC HOUSE, ^ | Branch of LUDDEN & BATES' SOUTHERN MUSIC HOUSE." ' PBICES A2xD TERMS THE SAMS. 2V. W. TRUMP, Manager* MfMNK VAPOR STOVE. . THIS STOVE HAS ..BEEN SOLD ! sines 1S77 from Elaine to California, and | never fails to please. The South is tlie Place to Use These Stoves. d Gasoline, 74 degrees, is the fluid used. 1 All these Stoves are supplied \rith a SAFETY TANK, which makes them safer than coal cr wood stoves. "We war rant our goods the best in tlie market. Agents wanted. AMERICAN VAPOR' STOVE CO., '! G Chasiplain St., Cleveland, Ohio. < CHARLOTTE mm INSTITUTE. \TO INSTITUTE for YOUNG LADIES , i.x in the boath lias advantages superior to tiio.se otr.-red heie in ?very depart- x nieai?CoUeaiate. Art and Music. Only experienced 'and' accomplished teachers. T ?e buiie'iJ.i is lighted with gas, wanned with the 'jest wrou^ht-iron lurnaces, has tin,'- -jri'l /-/-li/J 'V !. .->! !>s ' !;< f>nri app-'u'itrveuiS as a Boarding School in every respect?110 school in ti;e South has ^ / . superior." Ip*. Foe Board and To:tfon in everything * . in fuli Co'ie-iiate course, including ancient ar>d modern languages. per session ot 20 weeks $100 LVdacii*n for two or more from same family or neighborhood. Pupils cliarged only xrom date ot entrance. For Cati'ogue, with lull particulars, address Ksv. WiDR. ATKINSON, Ciiarlotte, X. C. E- B- MARKS, 4 ALsEuizcinrer oi PRINTERS ROLLER CGMPOSITIGN 'COLUMBIA, S. C. *WPri titers7 Hollers cast on the shortest notice at the most reasonable^rates. Use Marks' Composition. M tADIOAT^r""'''^ nk^I am after haying ^ >d froc. J 8 h-:?t SrsciFiq Co., Drawers, Atlanta, G&. 1jL. ^Pi J /ike then in the Trorld \TiIl positively ccre aund each bos is ~orth tea tines the cost of a bloodand cure chro? worth of aay other M erec*- If people could i 100 miles to got a bcr if they could cot be had strated pamphlet free, postpaid. Sena for it; CO., ?2 Custom House Street, BOSTON, MASS. .