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T'"" " .j ' ?* " _ ggqzazaygz^sgzy-gr^* " *- ' 11 GENERAL SEWS NOTES?. Items ot Interest Gathered from Various Quarter*. Ex-Congressman A. J. Weaver, of 2s e braska, is dead. - John C. Breckeniidge "will be perpetuated in bronze at Lexington, Ky. The German Crown Prince is dying of a cancer of the tongue. President EIi">t, of Harvard, is doing Sicily and Southern Europe. John A. Roach, the new Mayor of Chicago, has been forma]ly installed in office. The island of Guernsey -vas shaken by an earthquake. Three more constables have resigned in Ireland rather than take part in evictions. Agent Joyce is suing the Marquis of Clanricarde for ?50,000 damages for libel. Failures for tue week?United States 171, Canada 2S: total 199, against 17-1 last week. High license has beer, defeated by the Delaware Senate, and tl?e Legislature has adjourned. Montreal is again flooded in the lower parts of the city, along the river, to the depth of six feet. Alexander Mitchell, President of the Chicago. Milwaukeesand St. Paul railroad, died in New York on Tuesday. The fifteenth and last reported ballot in Tallahassee stood: Perry 46, Bloxham 40, blank 1. The Xtassachusetts House has passed the high license bill -o a third reading. Votc, ' - 1SS iO S9. James G. Blaine has arrived in Chicago. He has completely recovered from his late * illness. Th a "EVor:/->V? 7oTt* >c- T<vrtT"? v/V/X fcj. Atfc?? 10 XV/?.bXX loud complaints in the republic. Petitions are p During in. .An explosion aboardt?a>#gta] at Wilmington Wednesday^Sed one man and injured severaL^/*^ ^a<^MWW^Tarnf. between t tic Ameer's : -^_^?^*Soo}>s and rebels, 50 of.the former and 500 * of the latter -were killed. Ssm Jones will next carry the war into California, having agreed to an engagement at San Francisco in June. Fire Wednesday burned out the Fulton (111.) Journal printing office and three other \ . buildings. Total loss ?23,000. R. H. Knapp, the Atlanta broker who took in his friends to the extent of about * ?25,000, was a Canadian by birth. Via Bremen, 17,7-iO emigrants have sailed to America, from ilarch 1 to January 1, V: ~ " against 13,175 for same period last year. Marshal Bozaine was painfully wounded by a Frenchman, who attempted his assassination Tlie business portion of North 3Iiddletoyrn, Ky.,'was almost totally burned Mon> - . cay. Loss $3-5,000. Nine of twenty-four Socialists were convicted of conspiracy in Berlin and sentenced to snort terms of imprisonment. A strong effort is being made to settle the silversmith strike in New York and Providence. The Russian Commission has been informed to increase the duty on cotton goods and starch. ' By a falling elevator (broken rope) in Cornersville, fed., George Hampden was killed and J. jlcCormick fatally wounded. ! - " " \ Major John E. Blaine, paymaster in the > army, and brother of Jame* G. Blaine, died j at Hot Springs, Ark. The court house of Joacs county, Miss., j together with all the comty records, was i destroyed by an incendiary tire on Monday j night. Two more men lost their lives in the j construction ef New York's new acquc- j .duct. A dynamite cartridge was accident- j ally exploded. The President has appointed Col. Wes- j ley Merritt to be Brigadier General, vice j Brigadier General Orlando B. Wilcox, re-1 v tired. Chauncy M. Depew is going to Europe ! ; ma week or two to commit several extern- J ' pore speeches for next winter's banquets. Prince Eugene, of Sweden, is in Paris: >. studying art with Bonnat, who regards hirc j ' as one of the mQstjprorpjsing of his students, j ' Joaquin Siller has ^bought six hundr?i ; and forty acres of land near Shasta, CaL, j ' " and will become a farmer, if he isn't too indolent. Friends of Postmaster General Vilas say that iron ore abounds on Ids Wisconsin lands and that he will be a millionaire in a i little while. ! A mnrtrr miIKnn#iro (rirlc in Wocninfl". , ton society are the Misses ^Siggs, who sue-; ceeded, with their brothers, to their father's j *% ":: '' ' banking business. ]; * Millionaire Corcoran, who does more for j 1 Washington than all the other millionaires !: lumped together, pays taxes on $9,ICC,000 I worth of property. ( Billy Emerson, the minstrel, who writes ;' his first name with a small b, receives ?500 i * per week and travels in a private c^r with J his wife whereyer he goes. i.i Queen Victoria has received enough : jubilee gifts to ?11 a store ho ise as big as jc Windsor Castle. Many of "thera have to be f given away for want of space to put them, jr Senator Sherman's Mansfield friends say' that their favorite'is not a millionaire, out! the man who has four aces in his sleeve : -J rarely alludes to that fact prematurely. ] ^ Baroii de Sarter, who has a castle on ;he j ? Rhine and a villa just outside of Paris, is j * scattering some of his ?6,000,000 among j the New York porters. j i AS one ot tne illustrious (joionei ^ Thomas P. Ochiltree announces himself in a favor of Don Cameron for lt&cf. This is T pretty hard on Cameron. Lord Randolph Churchill is becoming 1 n one of the favorite after dinner speakers in o England, frequently attending as many as L six banquets in a week. ^ Justice Woods, of the United States Su- " preme Court, has started from California for Washington, much improved physically tc by his sojourn in the Golden State. a Governor Wet more, of Rhode Island, ^ has gone to New York to explain to his po. f litical friends that a '"barl" isn't worth a* 112 -Jr cuss where the Mugwumps are concerned. Andrew Carnegie, the millionaire iron p< manufacturer, was married in Xew York lu to Miss Whitfield, daughter of the late John ci W. Whitfield. in Gen. Adam Badeau's story that General j v? " Lee and his family were fed by the Federal commissary, just after the surrender, turns j ni out to be altogether false. j m President Cleveland writes that he can not attend the Calhoun unveiling in Charlec-; co ton. He pays a glowing tribute to the character of vus dead statesman. : p_ The total amount of trade dollars re-1 licj deemed to date is ?5,243,000, -which amount by will be increased $400,000 by the recent th: Importations at San Francisco from China, ses A sensation was caused in Milwaukee i Friday by the explosion of a bomb which i is supposed to have been thrown from a i att street car. Xobody hurt. j i f Plots to kill the Czar have been unearthed p KieS and Odessa. They wanted to blow up the imperial car, opportunity present- ? ing. j the Frank Laster and his wife were killed by j ^ cars on the trestle of the Georgia Pacific j j . toad at Birmingham. Ala. The latter was i P" decapitate! j imT= Claries C. "Weiller.& Sons, Baltimore, ! made ail assignment to Joseph Leophold; tr#)r for the benefit of their creditors. The bond j <,rm of the trustee is $100,000. : Herman Levy, clias Harry LeoYitt, the : well-known informer in the famous Had-i "j dork mi>rr?Ar tr??] is snin? rhp C!him ?r> i mail for $300,000?libel. " i ^ Dr. McGlynn s friends say thai wliec. lie: em delivers Ms lecture in Boston on Stli May, 1 tliro he will have as sympathetic an audience as Joe ie had in New York. i -p. It is expected that another call for three ' Bint pec cent, bonds will be made in a few days, th-o There are now outstanding $15,924,600 lumi three per cents. deal] There were five passengers reported miss-j poin ing from the wrecked steamer Victoria, j They have applied for their baggage and ! ber c are all right* * ~ j The The-Queen of Servia has separated from : feat* her husband, Xljg Milan, and returned to \ clare her family in Russia? political and domes-1 anti-' ?Ic difficulties. J foL ? 3M3MBC ? |J Ba w OgetECMCBgggBB BWBBEBB An Irish non-commissioned officer has ; j been dismissed from Woolrdch arsenal for j i "giving away secrets." Ail accomplice, j goes v,ith him. ! By papa! authority, the Nuncio at Paris ; ; announced that the Pope has promised to ; intervene in Alsace-Lorraine in 'avor of j ; Germany. The French Crown jewels are on exhibi-; j tion. The cables say plenty of orders, ! | principally from wives of United States j j Senators, are being received from America, i John E. Blaine, brother of James G. j ; Blaine, is at the point of death in Hot j j Springs, Ark. lie is paymaster in the ! I Federal army. De!awftre*s_ Anti-Policy Gambling bill i ; was stolen en route to the Governor for j i signature. A duplicate bill is being rail- j I roaded to the end of its legislative journey, j Hale cc Slatmaker's box factory, Wheel- j i ing, W. Vs., was burned 3Ionday morn-: ! ing; incendiary. Loss ?2G,GG0; insurance j j $11,GC0. The Building Trial Council organi/.ed in I Chicago Sunday. Thirty thousand worki ingmen in the building business are conj ceraed. John Brown's house, at Seven Mile Ford, | Smyth county, Ya., was burned Sunday | night. His daughters, aged 10 and 21, | perished in the flames. I P. J. Egon has been sentenced to two years in the penitentiary. It will be re j | membered he was convicted in. St. Louis of i j election frauds last November. j Secretary Fairchild will attend the Calj houn monument unveiling. Assistant Secretary Thompson will assume his duties in his absence. In a speech !>efore the Eighty Club in London, Gladstone favored a dissolution of Parliament, on the ground that it would be good lortne country. __ ~~The American Newspaper Publishers' Association has established an office in New York. Jsjnes S. Metcalf, of the Buffalo Express, is to be in charge. The Lord Mayor of Dublin has called a ; meeting for the purpose of taking steps ; towards the erection of a national memoj rial to Mr. Gladstone. Cardinal Gibbons is supported by the Pope in his decision in favor of the Knights oj Labor. The decree is conditional on good behaviour on the part of the order. A sharp shock of earthquake has been experienced. over the whole of the island of Jersey. Tlie tremor proceeded from west to east. No damage was done. ^The threatened strike of carpenters in Milwaukee, "Wis., has been averted, the master carpenters agreeing to keep their shops open only nine hours after 3Iay 1, and to pay men the present prices per hour. The three-masted schooner Geo. ?. Marts, from Baltimore, Md., for Charleston, S. C., was blown up snd set on fire from some unknown cause. Two of the crew were killed. The charge that Parnell had something to | do "with the Phcenix Park murders is generally disbelieved. The matter will be investigated by a committee of the House of Commons. By a dynamite explosion, 30 miles from Crystal Falls, Mich., August Brash, John Good, Win. Hornbuck, Joseph Weisman and three others were seriously hurt, three of them mortally. Evictions Save been resumed on Lord Lanusdowne's estates. O'Brien and Kilbridge sail for Canada on Sunday to denounce Lord Lanusdowne's course. The Delaware House, by a vote of 15 to 64, has passed a high license bill grading liquor licenses from ?400 for Wilmington down to ?200 for village ana county taverns. The Italian Parliament is in session. The j government's policy was stated to .be or ~ of peace, but, to keep up with the times, j credits for increased armaments would be j < asked. Phil. D. Armour is up at 6.30 in the j ' morning and in another hour has read the j market and stock reports, eaten his break- j fast and decided on his line of attack for : i the da v. : Torn Ochiltree says that he never con- 1 tradicts a newspaper statement, but he does ! often wish that he could lay hands on the reporters >7ho credit him with what he 5 terms villainous gr&sjaisr. Prince Frederick Leopold, of Prussia, nephew of Emperor William, of Germany, j snd Prince Louis Esterhasy, of Austria, 1 have arrived in San Francisco. They are s making a tour of the world. Managers of the coal and iron compa- * nies in the Birmiogham' district have ap- ^ pointed delegates to wait upon the Interstate Commerce Commission when that c body is on its Southern trip. i ^ Magoi-E'ect Roche, of Chicago, has ap-! t pointed John English, a newspaper report- j ?r of eighteen years experience, h;s private | v .'jcreta;j,af a comfortable salary. The ^ Mayor is evidently lookiDg a little higher. "Q Anent Andrew Carnegie's rumored en- g jagement to Miss "WhitSeld the v/ashing-; 1 ;on Post recalls that a year ego .he was sairl j c, ;o be engaged to Mr. Gladstone's daughter j si ;nd later to the widow of a Scotch duke. | G The -Secretary of the Interior has re ! o guested the Attorney .Qeneral to institute j a: uit a^ciiuov uaiuco owwuud UA I he country charged with unlawfully re-: 3 noving timber from the public domain. si A freight train on the Grand Trunk Jj Railway went through a fridge over Nash's si ?fcos, Friday, near 3Iorrisbu?g, Out. The ai ngineer and fireman were killed and a JP rafcemaii was badly injured. sf Thellev. J. B. jDobbip.<?. D. D., a well- ? mown member of the Philadelphia, 3Iethdist Episcopal Conference, dropped dead ; t the depot at Ash bury Park. Apoplexy H ras the cause. ' The striking Newark, X. J., brass i f louliers are suffering for the necessaries i w f life. It is claimed that the Kcights of | ^ ,abor are not sLazidiag by them." They j h -eat out?and are stiii cci?by order of lclojal assembly. ! tjj About 3,000 Chicago carpenters returned j > work on the basis of S hours and 35 i all jnts an hour. All employers appear to be gc illing to engage men on tiese terms pro- hi; idsd the men applying are skiHcus;oj:k- tal ien. j Timber Acront Conner of Florida has re-' co >rted to the General Load Ogjce that a i :mber Srm in that State has cause# io be 'tw it iicd removed from government lands j .&a one locality 2,500,000 feet of timber, ? dued at $20,000. A private letter from ex-Secretary Sfan- ^ n g; the first he has written himself for j onths, has been received by a friend in ew York, and pronounces him in better ndition than at any time since his attack. co) A special dispatch from St. Johns, X. flat , says the bill for the total prohibition of I iucr traffic in that colony was defeated wil the casting vore of the Speaker, but: o?? at it -will certainly be carried* at the nextj Sol sion. of j Queen Kapislan: of the Sandwich Islands s arrived in San Francisco, en route to end the jubilee oi" Queen Victoria. She * tl visit Washington "to pay uor respects ' President Cleveland before going to < c-i , ' ~ &i >ix of the'men iurcc&d for complicity in j side : plot to assassinate the Cza*-, s^ich was ; bus; have b'^en carried out on the l^th vf cp. i rcb, have been sentenced to death. ler conspirators been sentenced to 1 >riionment for life. j n a tight .at South Bend, Ind., between ; It r.r.lir-P ??;;? ? en71 tr nf trimnc Alotron ' mG? nps were captured; sir of them were j Pr?l ted with 3 6 vol vers. JLtoring the flght a j easiJ cemun, John3Ietz, shot a tramp through of n: heart, killing him instantly. j of 1 he I "en ssy kania company h as exempted ! '< rs o; St Paul and Burlington ffo.ni tie boy-! with . * Cir-> dispatch says ib^. jcast-1 an? trunk lilies have resumed the sale of j Aub ugh tickets ever the iiannibal and St. : face to Kansas City and points beyond. 1 and ie President iiu appointed Edward P. j a;^a fham, of Ohio, io v>e .Chief Justice of j ? ?1 Supreme Court of the District of Co-1 ]vart' iris, io +ill the vacancy caused by the ' ix of Chief Justice Carter. The ap-j 01 S2* tee is a Democrat. Ii Aft does /x ,, tlXUC3U?J. question of license was the principal J rT ' tre. A majority of the citizens de-I d for .'icense, but in smaller places the i Pe e license ticket was uniformly success- j Ho j sticks / Ill I I I III II III III ||1 ? The Rev. Mr. Carter, a Free Methodist minister, who has been conducting a series of revival meetings in Ohio, was driven out of the town of Utah by a mob with rotten eggs for preaching doctrines obnoxious to many of the people. The Supreme Court has sustained the validity of the Maxwell land grant and the old Mexican grant, covering over 1,700,000 acres, in New Mexico and Colorado. The present owners of the grant are bondholders of the Dutch Land Company. The contract under consideration between Armoup & Co., of Chicago, and the Selma .La.ua company nas been closed, the same having been signed by both parties. Extensive warehouses of Armour, with refrigerators, will be erected at once. The receivers of the Texas and Pacific railroad have applied to Judge Pardee for a construction of the inter-Slate law, setting forth their own construction. Pardee agrees with the railroad construction, and orders that it be followed until the further order of the Court-. Mrs. Kichard H. Dana, who was Miss Edith Longfellow, and Jlrs. J. G. Thorpe, who was Miss Anna Allegra Longfellow, both daughters of the poet, are building houses on his former estate, which they will occupy when finished. William Moore, a hotel man of Atchison* looks so much like Frank James that when he visited Kansas City the other day, all the predestrians instinctively buttoned up their coat and allowed their right hand to wander in the direction of their hippockets. xiit: i resiueui lias uppomuiu oiguuiuey Buller, of Boston, Second Comptroller of the Treasury, in place of Judge Maynard, promoted to the Assistant Secretaryship of the Treasury. Butler is but 29 years of afe. He is a native of_ Quincv, Mass. 'One of the old' boilers aVtne Chemical Works, Augusta, exploded Monday, killing a machinist named Geo. Biggers. At the time of the explosion four men were standing near the boiler, all of whom were knocked down by the concussion. While walking on the tracks of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad near Everson, Pa., two ladies?Mrs. Gettemy and Mrs. Anderson?were struck by a shifting engine and terribly mangled. The former died in a few hours and Mrs. Anderson is fatally hurt. Rudolph Schnaubelt has been heard from. He says he did not throw the bomb, but intimates" that he is sorry he didn't. He is in Norway. He will be remembered as the much-looked for Anarchist and alleged bomb thrower at the Haymaket riot in Chicago. The Ridenour murder case., at Winche3- j ter, Virginia, has been concluded with a j verdict of guilty. For intricate points of j law and number of witnesses, this has been the most interesting case, except that of Cluverius, in the history of Virginia's creniinal jurisprudence. Gov. Larrabee has written a letter on tie j workings .of prohibition in Iowa. In 80 j of the 99 counfies the anti-liquor law is ' rigidly enforced, aad partially in the others, j He says prohibition has greatly Ixnefited the State, and the only population lost is composed of confirmed rum sellers and drinkers. At Detroit, Michigan, several months; ago, the ship carpenters were on a strike, j and men were brought from Maine to do ! their work. The Knights of Labor paid j these men $35 each to return home. One j of tbe men did not return, ard suit was j brought to recover the bonus paid him. I The suit failed because the contract to re j turn was illegal. Governor Church, of Dakota, tells this story: A year or so ago, when I was mak ;? ttctu * ? lug n J'JUIUCJ IUIU luc jjiucrw riiiirfc, u?v iiaiu stopped in the prairie and looking out I saw a solitary house. The conductor chanced to come along and I asked who lived the'e. ''That." said he, '"is where Mr.?lives and prints his paper." There wasn't another i house within 100 miles. Temporary orders have been made by j thelnter State Commiss;on suspending the fourth section of the Act, on the applica- ; tioa of the Forfolk and Southern Railroad Company, Cincinnati, New Orleans tod rexas railroad, as to points south of Ohio . in a east of Mississippi, and also on peti- . :ion of the Texas Pacific railroad as to [reights destined to El Paso. = 1 < The party of Senatorial pleasure-seekers j, ivho yec2ntly came back from Cuba had a ;: itornr.j' trip from Havana northward. Gen- . :ial McCook and Senator Sherman didn't ] nind it, but Senators Manderson, Palmer . ;nd Aldrich were sad at heart?and el;3- 1 vhcre. The ladies all yielded gracefully, 1 xcept Jlrs. JlcCook, who made a bet with ? Senator Palmer of a box of oranges that j? he would stay on deck all day. She won i ? lis bfct. " j I George A. Ford, a jeweler of New Ha- j s en, undertook to get up the invitation for J I Ir. and Mrs. Cleveland to the dedication | t f a soldiers' monvnent. He exposed the v orgeous document in his shop window, t >.e Xsw Haven Union callcd attention to | bad grammar in it, and now Ford j i aes that n?,w$p;:pcr fo" $10,000 damages, j I riammarlsns say the O'nio.n iz ri^ht. An j t< ther invitation was sent to theTresident; c d his wife. j 0 Monday night a cyclone visited the vi- j b o? Suffolk, Ya., with fatal and de- j ^ :ructive eaecif. Its track was about 100 I y ardswide. The house oi Jolm Wright, !-0 x miles north of Suffolk, oh the i*orfoik j sd Western railroad, was completely de- V iclished. Wright and his wife and young J g ste.i' and .James Luke were in the house at j le time. ' Mrs. Weight and Mr. Luke were j ?( tiled, the young girl fatally injured, and j *v rright seriously hurt. Much other dam- 11 je >as dsne to property along the path of o; ^cyclone. Si Qp the plantation of Caleb J. Harris,pear : Gg., lives an aged colored woman G1 ho claims to be 106 years old. Her old- P' t living child is between ?0 and 90 and se >r youngest, -with -whom she is now living, ti is several grandchildren. She does all j iu e cooking for a family of 11 and in addi- j th >2 ;o her kitchen duties finds time to do to [ her sewing. Her eyesight is almost as ti< iod as it was 50 or ft 7.efJS ago and she ac s never had occasion to iisc gisis^p or to as ke a dose of medicine. { Taylor Eatman/a white farmer of Wayne th unty, K. 6., yas in his house, and with hi qi was his family, a wife, daughter and th 0 sons, aged 13 and 7 years. Eatrnan d the youngest son were at the window. oa holt of lighting struck the gable of the use and the 'amity wgre thrown in dif- 0+] eat directions. The wife fir&t recovered jsciousness and found Eatman and his 1-i sou lying dead on the side of the room posite the window. |n a few moments cr? 1 daughter and elder'son also became itcious. The house took fire, but the nes -w?i72 soon extinguished. StJ i ere is a little jewel for the crowd that 1 be satisfied with nothing hut post: ccs,: Postmaster Davis, of the town of j j ar, 111., receives the very moderate salary out 10 cents a year. Ths Postmaster at Peck, , got 30 cents last year, while the Post- ^-e iter at Lear, Ark., got 31 cents. It is \y6 I that there are more than 16,000 Post;ters who receive no more than ?40 a r and 10.000 who receive no more than p^jj \ Some of these give space in r r own buildings ic ofnces they pre- tjje over and some do not.'' It is a vsrse one iness, on the whole, than shoveling fog ue v eight. pub * ? - 62,cl To Remote i*.o on Wart. rp is now fully established that the com- i j i <*?#. which is so unsightly, and often IU. iferous 011 zhs hands and face, can be y removed by smail doses of sulphate , tagnssia taken internally. M. Golrat, anao Lyons, has drawn attention to this ex- F111rdinary fact. Several children treated ( three grains of Kpsc-ui salts, morning st10^ evening, were promptly cured. 2*. ? ^ ers, f?c case of a woman whose I ^ was distigur.ed by these excrescences, J who was cured in a month by a drachm j e<2H,a half of magnesia takes-daily.' An ; tl fcc : medical man reports a case of lar?e ) ,^eS? 3 wliicli disappeared in a fortnight ftavc the daily administration of ten grains ^?"sf Medical Press. ties? ment a raindrop ioi-<icclJ!? a storm, so ^?rs? a pimple npon the Iranian ix>dy in- m e nealth-destroying virus in the fu'^r 1, which can be neutralized and ex- arom d only by Dr. Hcrter's Iron Tonic. party usehold hints?Pokers and broom- what tweei { WHVT THE PAPERS SAY. The Repabl-.can "Policy." [From the Columbia Daily liecord,] The ^Massachusetts Club, a body comI posed of Republicans, held a love-feast ; in Boston last Saturday?about three j hundred guests participating. Ex-Govj ernor Claiin presided, and speeches -were \ made by Governor Ames, Senator Da^es : and Senator Hoar. The remarks, of ; Senator Hoar constituted the speech of S the occasion. He devoted himself to a j criticism of the Democratic policy as outlined in a recent speech oi Speaker I Carlisle. He paid a high compliment to i Mr. Carlisle as a man enjoying and deI serving the respect of the Democratic ; party. He expresses the opinion that j the party has no settled policy respect| ing the tariff and other vital question?, i and that some policy in this direction j must be adopted and proclaimed. On | the other hand, said Senator Hoar, the : Republican party has "a clear, fixed, | definite opinion and purpose"?which he proceeded to state as follows: "They agree that a great surplus in the Treasury is an evil. It takes from the people by taxation money which should not be taken from them, and it keeps from circulation money which the' people should be using. We propose to do away with this surplus, first, by diminishing the taxation which puts it in the Treasury, and, second, by expending on necessary public objects the j money which is already there. "We pro| pose to take off the duty on every imported article which enters into an American manufacture as a material, or I - - i _i * is a necessary article 01 consumption ior the American people, "which, cannot profitably be "pi-c^Sced^here. "Where any article can be procf?$y ^produced here, and American labor is l^ppoited by its production, -we propose to'lpg? the duty on and reserve the American market for the American product. \Ve propose to maintain the policy which has created our existing system of manufactures, and mean that it shall, in the South and all the country, foster new. manufactures. We propose, further, to reduce the revenue by diminishing or totally abrogating the tax on tobacco. We propose to expend the accumulated money in the Treasury by constructing a navy; by providing fit defenses for our coast cities; by helping to establish and put upon their feet systems subject wholly to local control, of common school education for our illiterate population, without regard to race or previous condition; by enlarging and perfecting our postal system at home and abroad; by giving reasonable encouragement to the establishment of lines of steamships to foreign ports. We agree also with Mr. Carlisle that the political and civil rights of the humblest citizen, in every section are to be respected. We mean to secure that respect when we get the power to make laws and the power to aamiL^tor tnern, oy presenting as a criminal the man who invades them by violence or by fraud. We think one of these rights is the right to vote for Congressmen or for President, and to have that vote counted." , The trouble about the Republican parts's "fixed purpose" in past yearsjust "so long as that party controlled the government?was that it looked chiefly the perpetuation of its own power, at any cost and at any sacrifice of the rights of the people. Its so-called "principles" were tainted all through with a sentiment born of war and nurtured for improper purposes. That sentiment was hatred of the Southern people. ]?o language was too strong for the expression of Pepub- ' lican abhorrence of Southern wrongdoing. Economic questions, now so ' much urged upon the people by Republican spokesmen, were left quite in the 1 background. Not until the campaign of 1880 did the "grand old party" arouse i itself to the needs.of the dear people. The tariff issue v as then, for the first i time fci'ace the win. icade nrnmrnfint, in the figlit. The ''bloody shirt" had been ( waved to fragments. The "Solid South" had been freed from-negro domination, md from the presence.of Federal bayonets. "The same South, the abode of . rebels and ku-kjux, enjoyed a degree of 1 peace, a measure of prosperity, unknown when this section was under the benign s nfliuence of the rogues and blackguards ;vhom Senator Hoar then delighted to !ustam. The Democratic candidate was i man honored at the North and respect- .b :d at the South. Some appeal had to )e made to Northern voters, which k hould not be founded Merely upon the jassiens engendered of' the "war. The ^ arifi question was used for all that it fas worth?and, almost wholly upon ft hat issue, Hancock was beaten. The Republican party finds itself now , a worse plight by .far than in 1880.- ^ Jvfry prediction of its stump-orators, ' Du ching the effects of Democratic ase^da'Acy. has been falsified. The Dem- ^ cratic party has proved itself well c^pale of conducting the government in a ' ay to satisfy all the best elements of ar ae people. The field of Republican 88 perations being thus greatly contracted, is leaders of the party must amplify in eauiig wiin wnat is sow iett them. v' ecator Hoar marks out a line of procure which promises to be asjnof&ns- is e to Democrats as it will be ineffectual 33 i disturbing the.Democratic possession I the national government. Of . course, lo; 2D a tor Hoar must needs talk about cl( respecting the rights of the humblest tizeu in every section," etc,. A Be- bl< iblican speech without some taint of gii ctionalism would not be recognized as te genuine article. Doubtless he -will ho ill y iealize his wish to have counted ar< .e ballot of every man who is entitled vote. That is precisely what the elec- sci >n laws in the different Southern States on complish. The citizen's right to vote, J declared by law, is carefiJJy guarded. paj Tucze at least some satisfaction in Tfc e thought that Senator Hoar will j mself leave off abusing and slandering <?tj e South, and will confine his speeches bcx topics which may be discussed with- r t talking about "rebels," "traitors," ma he Solid Strath,'' ^disunion," and c^t her things too'numerous and too dis- < reeable to mention. Of one thing the nator jzzj be assured. The Demoitic party is ready ?or the fray, on T Y and all of the questions thav- concern * 3 -welfare of the people of the United ma, ilea. r Panders Heavily to the Magwcisps. (Camden Journal.) but t does not take a close observer to find yesl , that Mr. Cleveland panders heavily to j "Mugwumps," and. really, sometimes, jnoare forced to believe that Harper's but ek-'y, the intolerant radical sheet, and fl0ir New York Times, its peer in Southern . erness, are the stars which illumine his , Ltical path. ^nl [is appointments up North are, to say 1, * le^st of it, queer, and there is scarcely made but what surprise is brought out. . ^ show,-, a disposition to drink from Re- in.ch lican fountains, and literally rejoices at t^rt 1 draught he takes. * * * thy i o us it is not pleasant, and, although Ti may be called spoilsmen, yet we gk>ry not < it- En.ao b^nse we can well remember hen n these calves who are no?/ drinking the c : from the Democratic teat were vile Be insatiable enemies of our postrate and aua, h abused South, ardent and unrelent- at b< jncmles o? the Democratic party. Why clerk ild they be. rewarded? I* it cSjciency Sai e? If so, the Democratic party must j dear, sd be weak, and ought to be disbanded i"0,: cannot produce and bring forward the ingy Is of such men as these. a i >r more than 20 years past such men as hope : have reviled and abused oiir party, repor been able a?d valuable adjuncts to thing > -who have nearly destroyed our lib??- It i ind made a mockery of civil govern-; sting This being the case, we cannot erf- hone] > Mr. Cleveland's course, and while true, gentle, sweet words of Republicans is tha warm his bosom, and give hope to his smeai e, it ?*1JI not do, for under hinvand id him the solid propc of his .own Dr. will fall, crumble and decay, :and I every the President gains by running te- ard r 1 wind and water wili be lost in me I weaki f " . 4 r r i great straight forward course which in the end will alone gain success. Mr. Clevelan 3 ! is mistaken, and if his course is to be pur! sued, we see only a name withoat a pracL<! cal distinction in the two great parties. Hard Time*. j (Orangeburg Times and Democrat.) Yes, money is scarcel It is a wonder we have any, when nearly every pound of ba; con, flour and lard is purchased outside of j the State, and so many of our farmers teed j their stock on Western corn and Northern i hay. Yes, times are hard! But we send to Boston for cabbage and potatoes, and to Norfolk for turnips, and it is no uncommon sight to see a wagon from the country ; going home loaded with provisions and | produce not a single pound of which is raised in this State. No country or peo pie can truly thrive that sends abroad for the articles that they can produce them | I selves. The Danger of Division. (^fanning Times.) I A spirit of good will, peace and harmony should be nursed and nourished throughout the State now and for the next two years. It is imperative that issues that may have arisen in the Democratic party of the State in the past should be buried and kept- dormant until after the next Presidential election. Anything calculated to briDg about dissatisfaction or disunion, should be sliunned as a viper. Shoulder to shoulder, in perfect unison, the whole party must stand, and stand like a "Stonewall" until the trying season of next year is over. A \ew Track Mast be Followed. (Greenville Kews.) The numerous notices in the papers that different places in the State are endeavoring to build cotton factories show a healthy and strong effort toward improvement The fossils who sit Micawberlike and wait for something to turn up are-being pushed aside by the young and enterprising men wlia^ge-iiad the s^les torn from their 5^>orjie^!Tession in the country, and realize thar'Sbrr<3iew track must be followed besides the one^iy&leads from the farm to the store. Abase of Juries. (Newberry Herald? id Kews.) All this abuse of juri-'-s and charging them with the failure to pe. *orm their duty is not calculated to make the iurv svstem more efficient, nor to make juries any more ready to convict. If it has any influence at all, it wili be in the other direction. Like the Tariff. (Carolina Spartan.) It seems that the inter-State commerce bill does not work without friction. It is nearly as unmanageable as the tariff. (Newberry Htrald and News.) You cannot make men moral by legislation and you might fill up the statute book with such laws and they would be of no avail. BRIC-A-BRAC. shouldn't have asked it. So beautiful she seemed and so pure? Ah me! how I should miss her. Unable longer to endure " My wish, I asked to kiss her. ? A blush of deepest rose o'erspread Her face, as -if to mask it, As, with a woman's art, she said: "YFTiy, Frank, you should not ask it." A man of mark?A marquis. The hpifht of snmmpr?"FVilrrpri-hAit A go between?Ham in a sandwich. , A sound investment?Buying a drum. 1 Putting cn airs?The western cyclone. 1 The greatest roam, man of them all?The , tramp. , Sob-T thoughts?The kind that come next morning, you know. j It is not the cream that ought to be whipped, but the milkman. i Every sucker in the land ought to be put ^ ,hrough a "course of sprouts. j It is a mean girl who will give her faithful'lover the mitten in hot weather. A bunion is spoken of as a nobby thing j rr low-cut "shoes. . t An executive session is one in which to c lo nothing and keep it secret. s The lawyers are a veiy economical class. ? They make their suits last so long. " ? Rising with the lark is nothing wonder- a ul. Any rooster can beat the lark rising. ^ The man'who takes a hint is not neces- jj arily a tbief. ^ Now that the base ball season is at hand b smites" will oe more irequent tfcan ever, t Every dog has his day, but the nights c along to the cats. ? Gone up higher?The man who didn't now it was loaded. ^ The oee can draw twenty times Its own j eight; so can the porous plaster. ? The cream of experience is skimmed g om spilled milk. r( A Richland man has been lined $20 for eeping a cow. The 'cow belonged to a B sighbor. "Oh, I'm slow," said the tortoise to the ^ ire; "but I get there just the same." nd then the hare said, "Chestnuts!" ^ When vessels "list" is it because they are ixious to hear. what the wild waves are ying? Heavy "dews promote vegetation, and 'avy dues have often sent a business man vegetate. The fashionable slipper of undressed kid I just as effective in dressing down "kids" ' any other kind. "Yes," she said, "I think Charles is in ^ 7e with me. His breath now: smells of . ] >ves instead of plug tobacco." Ginger ale is said to be good for the JLJUUbO tug icacuu tuu UUUC lger ale. The dude is a blood. Fogg speaks of the Government -wareuse as "Purgatory," inasmuch as spirits ; there held'temporarily in bond. Fhere is hope for the durlGS. A French t entist claims to manufacture artificial lies. r fol i. Chicago collector of rare books has a id twenty-five hundred dollars for a bible. De3 ODght it was something new, probably. ^ prominent clergyman calls the face ?d le-plryground of the soul." Then a tor )k agent's cheek must be a prairie. ten rbe fool knows nothing of shame. A ' n can hold up his head under any cir- co; nstances when there is nothing in it got 'Trust" may be a good motto for a ristian; "trust not" is a good' one for a del or. -- ' I>aj t is an old saying that tUe watched pot er has a boil. That is the reason why a ? 1 a cannot see the back part of his neck.. ex^ >o not wear your troubles any misfor me es all on the outside/like an overcoat, u c keep them hidden within, like a ragged hat homely babies make the best look lUicva 13 au aua^c ao ujlu ao uiuc iu^cii ~ yoi; dare ?pt tej} a mother her baby is 0 lely. ers n old gent named John Smith has re- wer< ly got married, giving as his chief ?ets on his desire to save the name from c r extinction. Bully for Smith. very n ordinary woman's waist is thirty ies around. An ordinaiy man's arm is mj? y inches long. How admirable are **7; vorks. 0 Nature. - agaii le number of plants raised by man doe* cretti :xceed three thousand. An industrious u will raise more than that'every hour in [ay. irax is so abundant in Columbia, Nev- ^ that it sells for four cents a pound. Ah, ( t -era -formr? Tclxire fho Ti/-vf^l ravai 7V ? V vuw "UViV W1V JiVUV.1 . ;'s diamond comes from. repre id a fond husband fo his wife: "M\r I think 111 bay vou a little dog." HLat ; ao!" she replied,' uo not; I prefer giv- * ou all my affections'" Men ' strolling actor started out "with high ,e > of captivating the country girls, but t says uncertain eggs were the enly ~r s that were "mashed on him." *3^, ssaid that' bees 'and wasps ' will not j y ^ & person whose skin is smeared with i r. This, of course, may be perfectly i butihe trouble with the blasted insects ! t they won't wait until a Lellow can & <] himself. wishe Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" is I where acknowledged to be the standemedy for female complaints and A p lesses. It is sold by druggists. on the THE BOOK AGENT. IflSWlwSf ll?Sf eyes and a care- i jHMU'/y c worn, expres / jjfi / sion of coantenance. He was *'y5C) in the habit of visiting my office in quest of alms, and I always gave him something; for I felt instinctively that he was a worthy object, and that the small portion of my great wealth which I bestowed upon him would not be squandered in riotous living. I was sure that his life-history would be an interesting and absorbing tale, but I refrained, from motives of delicacy, from questioning him, until one day last week, when he entered the office with a face elongated to such an unusual extent, that I could not help remarking that he had evidently seen much trouble. He smiled sadly and replied: "Right you are, gentle sir. Wouldst hear my story?" "I wouldst." He sank into a chair, helped himself to a eigar, and began: "If you have tears prepare to shed them now. I am a Hungerford. You have heard of the Hungerfords of Hungerford?" "Never." He seemed hurt, and I was sorry I had not lied and said I had always worshipped the very name of Hungerford. He sighed deeply and resumed his narrative. "Anyhow, I am one of them. Many, many years ago, when my father was a lad cf ten, a book-agent visited my grandfather, and by means of bis bellish acts?if you will permit the somewbat forcible expression?induced bim to subscribe for a "History of tbe World from the Earliest Times down to the Present Day." This work was published in parts, and my grandfather thought it ' would be a big thing to have. Alas! it proved such, indeed. For the remainder of his life he took the parts and paid for them as they came. On his death-bed he said to my father: " 'William, the fortune I leave you is not as large as it would have been had I not sunk so much money in that History. Still I believe the work to be a valuable one and, as .it is nearing completion, do not neglect to secure all the numbers. Do not fail to take every part, and to i>av Dromntlv for it. I have civen i my word?a Hungerford's "word?and the honor of our family is involved.' : 'With these words he breathed his ; last. My father did not forget his par- < snt's dying injunction. The numbers ?me thick and fast, and- he was some- . times at his wits' end to raise the money ! to pay for them?for his modest fortune .! sras soon swallowed by the insatiable ] igeni. He began life handicapped by JiO History, and he was never able to ? jet a good iinancial footing. At last he , jave up the struggle and died. J " 'I should like to have seen the last ? lumber of the work/ he said to me?I 1 vas then a lad of twenty?'but that c Measure is reserved for you, ^Robert.' Jave courage, and the end will come S iome time!' "Well, I have co age, sir. For a time ! got along pretty w 11, but since I marked it has been up-hill work. I was tever able to save anything from the t alary I received when I had a position f s book-keejper, because the book-agent j a grandson of the man who introduced f he work to my grandfather's attention) ^ Iways claimed any little surplus money hat I happened to have on hand. At & ast I lost my place, and since then I r iave been forced to support niyself by & egging. I continued to take the His- 7" ory because I saw that it was nearing ^ ompletion, and as my grandfather had & aid on his death-bed the honor of the al [ungerfords was at stake. A few days al go the agent brought' me a number mien, as I tremDiingly turned over its saves, I saw contained accounts of the aveiling of the Bartholdi Statue and of ^ [enry Ward Beecher's return from' Eu- ti: >pe. se " 'Why,' I cried, excitedly, 'surely the ^ jstoiy must be nearly finished.' & " 'It is,' said the agent, 'the number ju hold in your hand is the last.' ? " 'Thank heaven!' I exclaimed, de)utly. 'A new life begins for me from lis hour.' "I paid the agent and bade him adieu. ' / ' 1 v s ' Hot so fast, my dear sir,' he said, ^ th a sarcastic smile. 'We will now * k about bindings for the great work;' I i he produced from his pocket a pa- \ yellowed by time, and flourished it . .Tl my face. It was an agreement, signby my grandfather, to have the His- ~ y bound in full Turkey morocco at . dollars a volume. 'I swooned on the spot. When I re- |5] rered consciousness the agent had p le, taking with him numbers enough of work to make one volume. He will iver the book to-day and I have got to J^| r him the ten dollars. And,' as the rior ;tory: will make an incalculable number mei columes, I cannot hope to be released exp ept by death."' The 'he old 'man then shook hands with and departed, leaving me to ponder ^ in the lesson taught by his sad story. w-Bit,. ' : For Convict on the Street*. n yesterday, for the first time, prison-, serving sentences in the county j.Jl I>< i put to work on the streets. The city fam the use of for the price of their b^arci, only ?ats a day e^cli, and a guard, vlr.ci1 ;s , *c considerably cheaper than free labor. uleS: 5 convicts were furnished, 3qd the overkept them plying the picks * Igorously. j turned cut for the work very reluct- S 7, and seemed disposed to kick mildly g ast it, but there was no real trouble in I ng them at it.?Greene ills I\'ezcx. The Cholera in South America. ; 3 tailed press accounts of the cholera's jes in South America received by mail sent the epidemic as very fatal and lv spreading. A Bolivian paper says I it Tueumah the death rate had reached lundred per day, and the only vehicles in the streets were hearses. In Santivery part of the city has been ravaged e pestilence. One feature of the diss the extreme suddenness of its attack fatal termination. Tiie accounts of j I ;ggary and 'despair to which the poorer j ? sin tlxe cholera-stricken districts are j g ed are bonify fng.^JVetf York Herald. : 3 isappointed young man says he i | s he was a rumor, because a r mor 11 jains currency, which lie has never j j ible to do. ound party?A muscular performer } jj ! piarv forte. ! * iMtiirwii m HTH.-Li,Baaa?g?bo rasbion ??otes !or May. _ Hats are not ouits rs high, but bonnets have not descended an incu. Eveir'ng gowns for young Indies are lavishly tilmmcd with ribb^rs and bows. Cuffs end c olio'o of linen should only be worn v, itb t-'ilor made ostumes. Monogr?n,s for under ^e..r sre embroidered in long narrow let* ^3 on the left side. A piece of p?rfuoa a curd-board or leather pbc-rd in a billing box,, or desk, will perfume the pap er very gratefolly. Wide ssshes or r; -at is are stfU tied around j the waist, bat they r'qu're a veiy slim ; figure, for being o vice they make the! waist look much larger than it really is. Elaborate night d-r"-?s are made of: spotted cambric, v. 1th tucks in front, and; a fell coquille of lace do's a the centre; the; r.eck and sit eves abo trimmed with k*ce I and ornamented w.th bows of colored ; ribbon. Straw bonnets and hats are trimmed with bows of ribbon or lace piglings, forming a; background to a bouquet of sma'I fairy-! like velvet tulips in a variety of natural i colors," mixed with light foliage of grasses. : Velveteen requires b'ttle or no trimming It is therefore a peculia-ly economical j fabric fordre'.r?s and costumes for both Iiuies and children. It cm be purchased j in all the dilfercrt shades fashionable this season. Some of the new hats have the crow n of .One straw, and the turned up biim Her i i with coarsc cr fancy straw in the same; shade. The velvet flowers ui ed upon bon- j rtr-fc orr-o?* P' iH in er lwf te> ' a much smaller extent, aid many styl:sb : models are of velvet til aimed with guipure lace. Mantelets, with k>n? squares or pointed ?.nds, sre made of silica* fabilcs, ?.cd ia phrn and brouche woolens, the beaded ornaments are tlic chief feature of the models, and these are very handsome. Many tr.ke the form of a-plain yoke, others have the yoke divided in tabs,"ending ia tassels or peudants, and raised rolls covered with bead-work take the place of a flat epaulet on the sboalder.?Lady Boot, i V <Q ? ? ^ The preliminary hearing in the post- f poncd Pan Handle railroao robbery cases j camc up "Wednesday morning, in Pitts- j Jvarg, before Deputy Mayor Cripp. All! "the prisoners -waived preliminaiy examina- j lion and we-e held for trial at cou't. The j case will probably be tried during the pres eot court term. ? - | -THUSDEfi. j An interesting letter from Mr. John! W. Weeks, superintendent of DeKalb J Pauper Home: _ Prom a feeling of gratitude and a de-' sire to benefit others, I voluntarily make i i this statement. I have great reason to be j1 thankful that X ever heard of B. B. B., i1 as x iiuow wnat a messing 11 nas oeen to,; me. I have suffered with Bronchial Ca- j; tarrh for a number of years. Six months! ago I was taken with" a severe pain in j right ear, which in a few days began to! discharge matter, "with terrible and al-! most unbearable palpitation and all sorts i of noises in my head. In ten d^ys after' the commencement of discharge and pain | in my ear I began to grow deaf and in | six weeks I was so deaf that I could* not; hear thunder. I was then compelled to use conversa- i tion tube, and it was often that I could j ' not hear with the tube. I then com-i menced taking B. B. B. and the running! Df my ear ceased running in five weeks, i md can now hear without the tube. My j general health has improved, palpitation j leased, and feel like a new being, and! ippreciate the benefit I have received! T> T> T> / J - kil l x ? A iuxu j_>. J3. ?>. iiiiiiue iu iiiiajiia, ijc2.:) { rith gratitude to God and thankfallness i 0 tlie Proprietors fox* sach a medicine.. 1 cheerfully recommend it to all wlio are! iffiicted with deafness and catarrh. Try! t; persevere in its use and you will be [* sonvinced of its value. 1 i JOHN W. WEEKS, i J superintendent DeKalb Pauper Home, j Decatur, Ga., May 4, 18S8. BRIGHT^ DISEASE. ,j| I have been a sufferer from Kidney and I Jladdc-r troubles for several, jtsus. I j. ave lately had what is termed Bright's | y )isease, and have had considerable swell-; ig of my legs and shortness of breath.j | !he urea has poisoned my blood also. I I scared and am rising (B. B. B.) Botanic \ >lood Balm, and find it acts powerfully; nd very "quickly, and I am delighted] ith its effects. I had previously used a j age quantity of various advertised rem- j lies, and several eminent physicians! [so waited on me, but B. B. B. stands' t the top. JOHN H. MARTIN. | Hrpplr Ala "Voir S 1 SQCl w, . IUUU, All wiio desire ful! infv>rr;:a:ion aLout the msc snd cure of Blood Fclsons, Scrofula and rofulo.s swellings, llcers, Sores, Itbeama. sm, Kidney complaints. Catarrh, etc.can cure by mail, free, a eopy^ur 32 pa?e Illusated Book of Wonders, filled witn the most ondertul and startling proof ever betore io\vn. Address, ilL'JOD BALM Co., Atlanta, Oa. ^ tiS i ii ? i ^ i ;con i- i -p, a * t . ?a? > j 7 ! a ' Suffering from coinpiajnta ! K> .ADiES FTDk^aSSTiS-s"^ j g DJTIC a safeand speedy rare. Gives a clear, beal- ; y comolftsrion. Praonent atteaiDta at counterfeit goulyadd to the popularity ol'tha oriKiaal. Do ^ >t experiment?get the Oeigtnai asd Best, Or. HARTER'S LIVER FILLS V 1? Car? Constipation.Liver Complaint and SIckB HeodacUe. Sample Dozo and Dream Boole & mailed on receipt of two conta In postage, f ?? HE DR. HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY. 8L Loais, Mo. ~ C H A R i X) TTE~~' | mm iirom? 0 INSTITUTE for YOUNG LADIES in tlie South lias advantages sane- luE to tliose o'feied heie in every depart- _ it?Collegiate, Art and Music. Only erienced and accomplished teachers, -p-r 1 building is lighted with gas, warmed a 1 i the best wrought-iron furnaces, has and cold water baths, and first-class ointments as a Boarding School in ry respect?no school in tne South has rpp ?rior. Board and Tuition in everything in fuli Collegiate course, including A1 ancient and modern languages, per Curt session of -*0 weeks "...S10G Tnfn jductisn for two or more from same Ely or neighborhood. Puniis charged - ? from date of entrance. * ? ot X tr Catalogue, with fall particulars, ad pl^ai 5 Kkv. WJI.31. A aIXSON, and: Charloltc, N, C. & Cc A 1?*> A ohmmnime Gent-emen?It is dSC VOtl to eay that I think I or taken Swift's Specific. I nave been troubled with it At the beginning of cold weather last fall it made s has never returned. S. S. 3. r.o doubt broke it up; at 1 and I got well. It also benefited my wife greatly in ccc cure of a breaking out c:; my little three year old da Watkin.-ville, Ga.. Feb. 13, ISSG. Treaties onUiooa asd Skin Diseases mailed free. The Swirr S Bp M ^ ^ i ii a? i ''cures A2*x, Ki'xoas, fr?ir. a common Slorcli, or Eraption, : to the worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum, I '?Fever - sojcs,*' Scaly or ZSoagli ! Skin, in short, uli disease* caused by bad , ! blood are conquered by this powerful. purifying, -and invigorating mcdieine. Great '-is Eaiinjr Ulcers rapidly beal under its benign influence. Especially lxas it manifested ifs potency in curing Teller, Rose Bash, ZSoils, earbaacles, tore Eyes, Scrof* ulous Sore* and Sxrellings, Sip* joint 5>iscu*e, "Sviiiio Swellings^ Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged 'Glajsds. Send ton ccnts in stamps for a larpce treatise. v.ith coiored plates, on Skin Diseases. or the same amount for a treatiso or. Scrofulous Affection?. "THE ??.OOS> IS TJIE LIFJE;' 'Thoroughly cleanse it by using Dr. Pierce's Go!<lei! Jledical JBiscoyery, and good *ii;?estion, a iair sxiu, snojani *pjr? iu:} and vital sti*cng:l?, will be established, CONSUMPTION, vrMch Is Scrofula c? tic Siting's, is arrested and cured by this remedy, if tocn before the last stages of the disease are rtwhed. From its marvelous power over this terribly ?, fatal disease, when Urst offering this now celebrated remedy to the public. Dr. Peghce thought seriously of calling it his "Confrnsintiou Cnre," but abandoned that name as too limited for a medicine which, frem its wonderful combination of tonic, ?r strengthening, alterative. cr iiood-cieansing, M anti-bilious. nutritive proper- V tics, is imeq>;:-ied, net only as a remedy for feonsumjrtioa, but for cli CSiroaic 3isc;n:cs ci the Li'/gr, Sssi snd Lungs. If you reel drJI, drowsy, debilitated, have Callow color of skin, or yellowish-brown spots on face or hoc;-, frequent headache or dizzi- ; lice's bad tasco in mouth, internal heat or chills, alternating with hot flushes, low spirits l-jt and gloomy forebodings, irregular appetite, and coated tongue; you are suffering from l:ylig8SiiOB, JDy^pepsia, and Torpid JLiver. or KUJousaess." In- many ,% cas'.s only part of these symptoms are expe- ' rienced. As a remedy for all such eases. i>r. Plcrcc's Goldea medical Cli> covery is unsurpassed. For TTcrJU. Lkkss. Spitting of Blood, Sliortttc&s oi Sreath, Broo> <? kindred aUcctions, it is an efficient remedy. Soed by Druggists. at $1.00, or SIX . BG'iTTixES for $5.00. Semi ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce's biois on Consumption. Address, TTorld's Dispensary IJZcdlcal Aeeo- -elation, CC3 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. ; $h~S$500 REWARD is offered by the proprietors figf f. ie\/\ of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kejnedjr ^ l.+ \ for a case of catarrh which pferet* ?3 they cannot cure. If you - & -Lave a discharge from tho' nose, offensive or otherwise, partial loss of sinel!, taste, or hearing, weak eyes, dullpain 35 or pressure in head, you have Catarrh. Thou- . . sands of cases terminate in consumption.' . Dr. Sage's Catarrh Reicedy cures the worst coses of Catarrh 144 Cold ia the Head," ind CatarrJial Meadaclic. 50 cents. . PIANOS and ORGANS " From the World's Best Makers, AT FACTORY PRICES. Easiest Terms of Payment Sight Grand Makers, and Ont Three Hundred Stales to Seleet Fron. ?. * . PIAIMOS : dickering, Mason & Hamlin, Mathnshek, Bent and Arion. ORGANS: Eason & Hamlin, Orchestral and Bay State. Pianos and Organs delivered, fralght aid, to allpointa South. Fifoom lays' rial, and Freight Paid Soft Ways, tt Let satisfactory. Order, tad test tha Instruments in our Own Homes. iOLUHBiA MUSISIGBSTW Branca of LUDDSN 6 BATES* 7 SOUTHEBN MUSIC HOUSE. PRICXS A2SD TZEH8 TH18AJQL V. W. TRUMP. XsnsfM. BRADFIELD'S FEMALE REGULATOR! * lost happily meets the demand of tie ago for man's peculiar afflictions. It la a remedy Tor ' )MAN ONLY, and for one SPECIAL CLASS of ' diseases. It is a Specific for certain diseased. . idltions of the womb, and so controls tie Men* ual organs as to regulate all derangements and / .}ignlaritles of her Monthly Sickness. The pro2tors claim for this Bemedy no 'other medical ] perty. Itls strictly a Vegetable Compound, studied prescription of a learned physician 3se srecialty was Fmulb DzsHisss,andwiioae ie became enviable because of his success in ' ' treatment and cure of female complaints. rertng woman, it will relieve yon of nearly an iplainta peculiar to yoox sex. or sale by druggists. Write for book, "Met* eta Woman," mailed free. BBUCTgtPBMTOlgQBOtS , HOW^MLCASES DESKS ICE & BASS FBE5TTC5E& FUTOBJS. Ask for Illustrated Pamphlet. :SY SHOW CASE CO., Mriile.Tm ?______ TTS CARMINATIVE! . POK IXFAXTS AAD - , ETHlNfi- nmrnp - W A Jk~r AW XI i instant relief for colic of [infants, s Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Cholera atom* or any'diseases of the stomach bowels. Makes the critical period eething safe and easy. Is a safe and sant tonic. For sale by all droggists, m for wholesale by Eovtaed, Willet" Augusta, Ga. hB J!!L. < n entirely well oi eeMica sfter haying very little in my face since last spring. .. SSBH snjrht anoearancc. bnt went smv '.<SSeJ east i: pat zny system in trood condition I ... " je of sick headachc, and made a pcrfect * ^3smS| ? fiJST. JAil?S V. 3f. 3IORBIS. *V. 'i- .'fliZ rscmc Co., Drawer 3. Atlanta, Ga. I '