University of South Carolina Libraries
w m r ?t THE SO IT II CAKOJLIAA COLLEGE. ' Meeting of TruLa*t \isht?President McBryde'w Resignation. The Board of Trustees of the South Carolina College held their regular semiannual meeting in the College library last night. There were present Governor Richardson, Chief Justice Simpson, Associate Justices 3IcGov. ua ami 3fclver. Judge Simonton, ex-Judge A. C. Haskell, Superintendent Rice. Gen. Bratton, Representative Hutson and Col. JLipsbomb. President 31cBn'de served the lioard "with the required six months' notice of his intention to rerni *" A^i*y\A+A^ fKeMiccinn Sign. JlilCiU weiu <iu;ijiaivu u?v,u^w? , on this subject, and the following resoiu tion was at last adopted: Resolved, That this Board has heard with regret the notice given by President ilcBryde, under Subdivision -i, of Chapter 2, of "the By-Laws, as we feel satisfied that his resignation wiP prove to be an incalculable loss to the College. "We therefore earnestly hope that some arrangement may be made by which Dr. McBryde may be induced to reconsider his proposed resignation. Subsequently Gen. Bratton, Judge Haskell and Superintendent Rice were appointed a committee to ascertain if any steps can be taken to retain the sorvices of President McBryde. The reports of the President and professors as the work of the College were received and considered. The recommendations contained in the President's report were adopted. They consisted of recommendations of changes in the curriculum; as to the requirements for the admission of students, and as to the granting of degrees. The Board n<.-.\t considered the admission of beneficiaries, a matter committed to it by the recent Act of Assembly. A resolution iv<4c cifV.ntrr] in substance statins that no student shall be admitted free without a | certificate, ?;.gned by himself and parents I (if he have any), to the effect that he is un-! able to pay the tuition fee prescribed by the Legislature, accompanied by a statement of opinion, signed either by the Board of County Commissioners, Clerk of Court or Judge of Probate of his county, that the declaration of poverty is true. j 3Ir. John E. Barnwell was elected Li-1 brarian and Treasurer without opposition. He already held the ofiice of Secretary of the Faculty. Some time ago it was determined, in view of the fact thai the expenses of Claflin College were too great, to vacate the professorships at this time in order to allow the re-election of professors at reduced salaries. Professors W. J. DeTreville, 3Iortixner Glover and James Heyward were re-elected at salaries of $1,CC0 instead of 4>1,200 that they have heretofore received. Tii3 Board granted permission to the students to use the library hall for the commencement ball. Shortly before midnight the Board adjourned.?Columbia Daily Liecurd. SALYATIOA ARMY. Happy Bob,'' l*ader Sentence of Death, Gives iiis o;>ii;iou of it. Robert Van Brunt, lately a prominent ' * O-l 4.' ^ memoer 01 me caivauuu ? uuuu sentence of death at Rochester for the murder of young Roy. From an interview with a reporter of the Democrat this extract was made: "Van Brunt, you seem to place little reliance upon the final result of this hoped-for appeal to the higher courts, and you seem to clearly realize that your life is nearly ended, and that the dreadful event can at most be postponed but little. ZS'ow, with these grave convictions in your mind, I wish you "would tell me something about the true inwardness of this Salvation Army to which you belonged." Van Brunt who is only twenty-three years of age, meditated a moment eyed his. questioner curiously, and then laughed a bit in a perculiar manner to himself. "I think," he said, after a little, ?*I think there are a few good people yet in the army; I mean people that really want to benefit mankind* but I tell you most of the soldiers, and officers particularly, are thinking more of womankind," and the face of the man, who in due course of the law had less than ten days before his death on the gallows, took on a wicked leer, which startled even the experienced interviewer, who was mentally, but none the less unerringly, understanding the testimony of one who knew that he*was facing almost certain if not immediate death." "I ought to know this Salvation Army," continued the condemned murderer, his tell-, tale face adding .strange Ins candid words. ' 'I ou^rit to know them; I have been there-J^yseif and the officers have taljjworwTth me about it." , "There is a class of young girls drawn into the meetings,'' he went on, "who are easily enough influenced by the officers, and are controlled by the otiicers and men for their own purposes and for bad purpose* and those are girls they are after. I don't know as I can just exactly describe the influence they have over them, but it just controls them, and lots of them have this influence. " ' "Perhaps ihey mesmerize them," quietly suggested the newspaper man. "Yes" said the slayer of Soy and the suitor of his sister, "I put it ail down as something like that." "You know this is the general character of these soldiers you associated with, then," persisted the newspaper man. "Yes; I know it from my own .experience, and I have talked it all over with the officers." "I imagine you mean your observation, not your personal experience." "Yes; I mean my observation," and again the uncanny, malicious expression stole over the features of the man, and the visitor did not regret that his disagreeable task was nearly ended. "Van Brunt," said he, "from what you know of this army, and from the position in which you And yourself, what do jou think of the general eneci 01 me practices of this Salvation Army?" The witness was. a competent one, and it was the last question the interviewer ever expected to address to Iiobert Van Brunt, and the answer came with a rapidity that carried conviction with it: "I told you some good people get into the Salvation Army, but the. enthusiasm wears off in two or three weeks and they i^et to be as bad as the rest. If the Salvation Army altogether was swept from the earth it would be better; better for everybody." Aew Servitude iiz Russia. According to the St. Petersburg correspondent of" the London Daily News, the , project which Count Tolstoi some days ago presented in the council of the empire, and aiming at re-establishicg a new kind of ser- : vitude for the Russian peasants, has produced a deplorable impression. By this scheme eighty million Iiussian peasants. will be plaecd in complete dependence upon : new functionaries with exceptional arbitrary powers enabling them to inflict penalties and imprisonment without appeal to any ! tribunal. Count Tolstoi himself states as the ground J of this project the necessity of subjugating j the peasants who begin to feel themselves i human beings. He is pleased at playing j this part, and declared in April 1SS2, a j short time before he was appointed minister 1 of the interior, ?'3Iy name will be sufficient j to strike the revolutionary element with, j terror." War Aasoa^ Rt-;>al>ii<-aaii. j W. J. Whipper, Probate Judge of ibis county, was .arrested this week, brought before Trial Justice T. G. "White, of Beaufort, on a charge of official misconduct, corruption in office, fraud, oppression in office, preferred by one Thomas C. Scott, of his own color, who claims that Whipper has, officially and individually, de- i frauded him.. Robert Smalls, S. J." Damp- i field, and a number of other prominent ! colored citizens are material witnesses. ! Whipper was bound over in the sum of.: $i,oeo to appear, 3Iessrs. J. F. Ilucbtings. ' S. A, Schcper and Sammy Green going bis security. It is due to Whipper to say that he has been the attorney for Smalls in the contest against Congressman Elliott and claims that Smalls owes him $13$ for * services in such capacity and refuse - payment. ?Port Royal 1 'ost. i Ruskin says that Athene, the Goddess of Wisdom, wore bang?. We shall still enter- 1 tain a favorable opinion of the woman un-; ' til some inquisitive person ui-ocvers that j she chewed gum and wore four gold rings j pn one finder. I1 GENERAL MCWS >.OTE8. ] < ' i item." c! Intercut Gathered from \ artoun Quartern. j < The Marquis of Salisbury Is soon to be !; made a Duke. |, Carrutliers & Co., grain brokers. New; York, suspended Thursday. The Southern Baptist Convention has begun its session at Louisville. The Inter-State Commission has concluded its labors at Memphis. The Florida Legislature is still in a deadlock over the balloting for Senator. The shoe 1 asters and fitters of Cincinnati have surrendered after one day's lockout. A disease called the pink-eye is said tor j >e prevailing among horses in Edgefield. I Mrs. Langtry will pass the summer in the Yosemite Yalle}*. Mrs. Cleveland is a member of the Albany Indian Association. Queen Kapiolani. of Hawaii, and her suit have arrived at Washington. Dion Boucicault is laid up with inflammatory rheumatism. Tn OWncri nV.nnf 000 l>od-ftftrriershave gone out on a strike. James Grant, the novelist, is dead. He was (hi years of age. Ex-Senalor Thurman's wife is seriously ill at her home in Columbus. Three cases of leprosy have been discovered in one family "in St. Martinsville, La. The great Russel Sage was fined $100 by Judge Donahue, of New York, for failing to serve as a juror when drawn. George Gould has just been elected President of three of his papa's Southwestern railways. The First National Bank of Starkville, i Miss., has been authorized to begin busi ness with a capital of ?50.000. One hundred houses were destroyed by fire in the town of Eperies, Hungary, Thursday. A quantity of dynamite has been found in the luggage of a stranger who died in a hotel at Madrid. It is reported from 31erv that the Afghan rebels have severed communication between Herat and Cabul and Calcutta. The fertilizer works of M. Dorsey, at Highlandtown, near Baltimore, were destroyed by fire Friday night. Failures for the week?United States 153, Canada 29, total 1S2; against 191 last week and 192 the week before. Queen Kapiolana is going through a round of festivities at Washington that fills j up her lime pretty thorougniy. The military credits passed their second ! reading in the Reichstag by a large major| ity, the Socialists alone opposing. Gen. Villacampa, leader of the military ! revolt- in Madrid last September, is dying in prison. Judge J. T. Willis, of the Chattahoochee circuit, died at his home in Columbus, Ga., Friday night. During a thunderstorm at Sumter Friday two horses belonging to Win. Bogin were killed by lightning. It is reported at Bucharest that disorders of a serious nature occurred at Jassy and a number of arrests were made. Charlie and Ellis Kaily fought in Gainesville, Fla., on Saturday "night. Charlie was killed and Ellis badly wounded. It is officially stated in Berlin that Ger-, many has no intention of proclaiming a state of siege in Alsace-Lorraine. I The Prattville, Ala., cotton factory has | been sold at auction for $24,500. lt'will ; be repaired and put in operation at once. I Jas. B. P.iley, wholesale boot and shoe ! merchant of Louisville, has assigned. Liaj bilitfes ?50,000; assets unknown. One member of a party of regulators, I who attacked a brothel at Winchester, O., ; on Friday night last, was killed, j Mr. ParoelTs cold is more serious than | was expected, and will probably keep him ; in Ireland for several davs to come. ? - ~ , V, .V Tiie danger 01 moo violence iu me uwe I of the two Louisville negroes, who assaulted Jennie Bowman, is thought to be over. The committee of the German Reichstag I has approved Bismarck's budget with but I one exception, the estimate for artillery. The Legislature of Yv est Virginia is no : nearer electing a United-States Senator than | at the last session^ 7h5"Empress of Russia is an indefatigable dancer and possesses an enormous appetite. Mind-reader Bishop's wife has filed her j petition for divorce in the Supreme Court i of Massachusetts. | President Cleveland will go to hear Patti I sing this week and afterwards look at Fore1 paugh's circus. Lady Randolph Churchill is one of the j most active canvassers in London for the ] Queen's J ubiiee contributions. ! In New Haven, Conn., building operations ar? almost totally suspended on account of a strike of the carpenters. A. & H. Straus, furniture dealers of Cincinnati, have failed; assets ?-10,000: liabilities S50,000; preferences ?57,000. J. W. Boughton A Cu/s scrccn and wood ' carpet factory, Philadelphia, was burned ! Wednesday night. Loss about ?75.000. ! Senator Camden has withdrawn from the | contest before the West Virginia Legislaj ture. J The Chinese iKsrt;on of San Jose, uai.. was destroyed by lire "Wednesday after| noon. Loss ?75,000. | F. 31. White, for fifteen years President. ; of the ^Mississippi and Tennessee railroad, j died Thursday night. i Judge C. J. Faulkner, Democrat, has i been elected L" nited States Senator by the: j West Virginia Legislature. i The First National Bank of Decatur, | Alabama, capital $100,000, is authorized to ! commence business. I Congressman Randall is about again in | Washington, and will soon start for his old | country home near Paoli. j Senator Cameron will accompany Gen" j j eral Sheridan on his annual tour through : : tiie Yirgicias this month. j Numerous petitions are still being re! ceivcd by the Inter-State Commerce Comj mission for and against the "longand short i haul." i At Winchester, Ya.. Judge .Clark set; j aside the verdict of murder in the first de; gree in the Ridenour case and granted the l prisoner a new trial. The Intcr-State commerce commission * ..j ^ I compieiea 115 JJlouue seasiuu uu Urttuiuiij, and will begin its New Orleans session toj day. General Saletta, the new Italian comj mand^r at Massowah, has proclaimed a ! state of wa? ia Massowah and its dependi encies. Special telegrams to Zrsdztreet's from leading trade centres indicate a moderate improvement in the movement of general: merchandise. Roswell P. Flower liiw added a million or more to his already large fortune during the past twelve months by shrewd investments in Indiana real estate and stocks. The Criminal Court oi St. Louis decided yesterday that it has no jurisdiction over the case of * otheringham, the express messenger. Richard Preston, woollens and tailors' trimmings, of Boston, has Sled a yoluntarv petition in insolvency. He owes ?100,190. On Monday evening, at Xicltolville, near Watcriowu. X. Y., Charles Morrow, in a fit of drunken rage, killed his wife and himself. il berl. Lion Mutt hows, of l>:rmiDgiu.in. ;> student in the Alabama State University at Tuscaloosa, was drowned in the "Warrior river Tuesday while bathing. On Monday night a young farmer's dis- \ contented wife near Grand Kapids, 3Iich., dosed hersel and two children with "rough on rats'' with fatal results. ~ | The big bridge between Xew York and j Brooklyn is being treated to a new coat of j paint, and it will take about 20 tons of paint Lo cover it. Albany, X. Y., is one of the three great 3 ielegraphic centres in this country, having ; }ver '200 wires. Xew York, which stands I irst, has 600 wires. 3Iiss ilary Garrett, sister of Kobert Gar- i rett, has made a proposition to the trustees <. )f Johns Hopkins University to Settle on ! Jie institution. !% Semi official denial is given tbe report in j 3t. Petersburg that the negotiations of the : English and Kussian Commissions on the j Afghan boundary question had faiied. The Xew York Mail and Express says: "Miss Kose Cleveland will soon become a teacher in a prominent private school for young ladies in thu nity." The storekeeper of the warehouses, known as Atmacenes de Depositos, at Havana. has disappeared, and is said to be a defaulter in the sum of $400,000. The Sloss Steel and Iron Company, of J Birmingham, has closed a contract for the j erection on Xorth Birmingham of two 125 ton iron furnaces. A statement is made that the "crib" in Lake Michigan is in a dangerous condition, and liable at any moment to collapse and cut off the water supply of Chicago. 2s. O. Lauve, ex-President of the Texas Underwriters' Association, and one of the leading insurance men of the Southwest, died yesterday at Austin, of Bright's disease. " Representative Dearuen, ot rnuaueipuia, Pa., astonished his fellow members of the Legislature on Tnesday by knocking out a bigger Philadelphia member with soft gloves. There is some disagreement between the i committee or the Virginia Legislature and j the Commission representing English bond-; holders. A settlement is unlikely. The Memphis Avalanche's fund for an equestrian statue of General Forrest now amounts to $5,000. It was opened only ten day s ago. W. Darwin, of England, who has been in Norfolk as a representative of British stockholders of the Norfolk and Western railroad, is a nephew of the great natural ist, Charles Darwin. H. (). Wills, a reformed convict, is telling the Christian people of Ohio how they | can go to heaven, and taking up the usual evangelistic collection when enthusiasm attains the proper pitch. D. E. Keith, cashier of the Bank of Eikton, Dakota, is under arrest liiere on the charge of robbery. The bank is closed and its fixtures are being attached for taxes. Daniel C. Birdsall, editor and proprietor of the Hartford 'Telegram, was arrested Friday night on a charge of embezzlement and false entries in the books of the concern. There were two legal executions in New Mexico Friday. Henry Anderson was hanged at Socono and Theodore Baker at j Springer, Colfax county. Both had been convicted of murder. i Ex Alderman Tuomy, of Xew York, I dropped dead on the street on Monday, and when picked up had $25,000 worth of securities on his person. 31. C. Lock wood, who leads the labor movement in Cincinnati, is a Baptist preachcr, but doesn't speak of immersion to his Anarchist contingent. Pdcr "Wise, a prornine \night of Labor in the coke regions of Pennsylvania, while in Pittsburg yesterday, said that all preparations have been made for a long strike. Several candidates are already mentioned for the Solicitorship of the Eighth Circuit to be vacant next year. Col. J. L. Orr, the incumbent, will not stand for re-election. Peter Smith, the condemned murderer of John Hannan, a night watchman, was hanged in the Tombs prison, at New7 York, Thursday. He had nothing to say and no requests to make. John 31. Lewis, eclorcd, of Cincinnati, who has been a trusted letter carrier for 12 years, was detected in stealing two letters which had been placed in a decoy letter. He confessed his guilt. Monday night while riding in a buggy Mr. and" Mrs John Carbell, of Vienna. "Wis., v.-ere shot by some unknown person sneaking behind. Carbell -.lied instantly and his wife will not recover. On Monday night two men named Brown and O'llara. who were sitting on the Bah> more and Ohio track, near Sjaoweitn station. Penn.. were stracfeT by a shifting engine and instantly killed. < The officers of the Union Trust Company, of Philadelphia, announce that the approximate embezzlement of James Is. | Tagg&rt, lately teller of that company, is ; $20,000. | The boilers of the tov;boat J. C. Pishcr | burst 3Ionday at Wood Kun, a tew nines ; below Pittsburg, Pa. Oue man was in1 stantly killed arid two others fatally injured. W. J. Whipper, now Probate Judge of Beaufort county, is in jail on the charge of malfeasance in office. Ke tried to gel out by habeas corpus, but Judge Aldrick refused his petition. Le Paris states that France has concluded a defensive alliance with certain other powers. and that henceforth France will not alone in the event of an aggression against her. Gladstone lately declined to attend an anti-vaceiaation meeting on the gro^. id that he is busily engaged in opposing the compulsory inoculation of the whole Irish nation with the coercion bill. | ilrs. James Brown Potter has decided to make ker first appearance in this country at Washington, whjepe her recitation of "Ostler Joe" is still alluded to a? the dramatic event of the century. Edwin Booth's reappearance as a capital ist is noted by the New York papers, which record a $29,000 loan of the great tragedian to Ephraim Drucker, of Grand street South ? Fifth avenue. Real estate is given as security. Col. W. H. Boiioo, ex-superintendent of second-class matter in the .Chicago post office, convicted of embezzlement, has uee^ seaic-???;l to four years' imprisonment. The Pope iias c^mmoned three Cardinals to confer with him upon tie question of a reconciliation with the Italian government and to arrange conditions upon which the Vatican wiii ccss^nt to negotiate. F. Tenney and W. H. Crosby have filed a ; bill in' equity against Dwight Doclittle to j dissolve partnership and restrain the de-. fendant iroift mienenng wun me muua^emost of tlie National liotel, Washington. The Rev. Sain -Jones lias &een called home by z telegram announcing the serious. illness of his wife, This leaves the revival services in Minneapolis jn charge of the Kev. Sam Small. Vv. 2. J)insmore, who bought the itfew j York Academy of Music some days since: for ?300,000, has just sold his little pur- j chase to YV. P. Douglass at an advance of $130,000. 3Irs. Polk, the widow of James K. Polk, the tenth President of the United States, is over SO 3*ears of age, but she is in good health and she possesses a memory of unimpaired vigor. At Wilmington, Del., the house painters in all the shops have struck for $2.50 per day. a raise of 25 cents. Two of the largest employers have granted the increase, and it is probable that the others will follow. About 100 ?uD?arians in the Mount Pie.-.sunt coke district of Pennsylvania have left for their native land, saying ihet the strike will last five or six months and they can live cheaper during that time in their oven country.' The government majority Li tbe House of Commons has rejected Mr. Gladstone's amendment, and adopted the motion that the House wili cot treat the Times's language about Mr. Dilioa ^ a breach of privilege. At Waterburv, Conn., all the carpenters, j neariy 290, quit work yesterday because I the employers refused to give them the I same v. :igcs for nine Jiours wcrK ks nicy \ rcctivot! !: > season for ten hours. The listers unci flttc-r* in Cincinnati, numbering GOO, having daelijsed to go into the usual annual arbitration of wages, have been shut out, and trouble in the shoe ; trade is apprehended. j A Suakim dispatch says thai deserters report that Hadcndowa Arabs, assisted by Dther friendly tribes, have dislodged the ; Soudanese rebels from Kass&fc, and cap- : ,ured Osman Digna and Abu Girga. * : In New York James P. Farrell, shawls J md woolen has failed; liabilities $230,000. R. Herman & Co., manufacturers of Jer- < ;ey and knit goods, have failed; liabilities i j-50,000; assets the same. < The crooked liabilities of James Hunter, 1 i prominent Philadelphia merchant who iisappeared some time ago. cow foot up t ; ?800,000. So far he successfully conceals |1 his whereabouts. 1 The French government has decided to j suppress the performance of Lohengrin in ' the future in. Paris, if it continues to be ! accompanied by anti-German demonstra-; tions. " ! On Friday last, between -i and 5 o'clock in the afternoon, Mr. L. V. Claxton's dwell ing in the southeastern part of Edgefield count}', was burned, the lire originating from a spark from the chimney. The management of the Asheville and Spartanburg railroad Laving promised to comply with the lav.* touching the running of railroads, the Commission has suspended its investigation for 30 days. Twelve out of IS negroes working in the Coosa Tunnel of the Georgia Central Railroad were killed Wednesday by the premature explosion of a blast. The one white man present escaped. Miss X. li. Cuuimings, now the Librarian" of the Department of Justice at Washington. is a daughter of a former Justice i;f_ the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania and is regarded as one of the best authorities on ' ? ;av? ivua.i iii . Eighty new members were received "Into ! the fellowship of Plymouth Church on ; Sunday, and even ?>Ir. Beeeher's friends are j beginning to admit that Emerson was rigLi j when he' snid: "Every man is wanted and no man is wanted much." The Chinese government has ordered that every foreign missionary in China must hold a passport from his cws govern- ? raenr, in order that his nationality may Be ! shown. All other passports are declared invalid. | Seventy-five to one hundred thousand ! dollars of the funds of the "Will County j National Bank of Juliet.. 111., are missing, f The cashier is in Canada with his wife, but! his father has made arrangements to make \ good the shortage. A personal encounter took place Friday ! on the streets of Atlanta between C. S. Aiwood, of the Ecening Capital, and J. F. Burke, captain of the Gate City Guards. Atwood drew a cowhide and Burke used a cane. They were parted by oilicers. The threatened insurrection by the Greek population of Crete against the Porte's authority has quieted down, and French and English men-of war, sent, to to the harbor 10 oe present in case ui ciuciu^parling. About $100,COO of the funds of Will j county, 111., National Bank are missing, j Cashier Knowles is in Canada. His coun- ; sel denies that, he is a defaulter, and says \ his father will make good tbe shortage | which was caused by mismanagement. Tbe Comptroller of the Currency has; declared a third dividend of ten per cent. in favor of the creditors of the Exchange j National Bank of Norfolk, Va. This! makes in all forty per cent, on claims j proved, amounting to ?2,8S8,086. At Danville, Va., the leaf tobacco sales for April were 2,i<JG,lll pounds, at an | average of s8 per hundred. Sales to dntg j sin^e October last year have been 14,110,"' i 313 pounds, at an average of $3.5 i per i hundred. Rev. Charles Ward, the Engiewood, N. 1 J., rector, recentjy accused of attemptingj to murder his wife, was found dead at the ! home of Judge Drew, his counsel, at Bock- j lane! Lake, Wednesday afternoon. It is j supposed that he took an overdose of ] chloral. The Popfc has received a letter from Em-1 per or William in whijh the Emperor thanks the Pope for his wise and conciliatory co-: operation in settling tbe ecclesiastical bill, and expresses the hope that the present rc-1 ligious peace will never be disturbed. A lire Wednesday morning "cn Julia j street, New Orleans, between .Magazine and j Camp streets, destroyed much property. ! j O'Connor cc Son are heavy losers. Laugh-: I lin Lyons, a paralytic, and his three-year-j I old grandchild perished in the flames. To- j j tal loss $100,000. j The Iventuckv J^^aadcratic Convention ! nominated _Gea:*Buckner for Governor by The nlatform endorses Cleve-j land's integrity and devotion to principle. ; but favors""honest civil service reform." The platform is the joint production of j Hen-y Watterson and Johu G. Carlisle. Monday afternoon the steam sajvanr^ planing mili of Mr. Richardson, ne?;r , ui- ; hall:;. was accidentally burned, together i with 20,000 feet of lumber. Loss about: ?2,000. Mr. Lee, living near the mill, lost j his lu-u.se aud contents, together with his i barns, stables and a year's supplies. Edgar Boulingay, of Xcv/ Orleans, shot. and killed a negro barber named Jvinard, ! at El Paso, Texas. The quarrel grew out j of the charge for the barber's services. Boulingny was arrested. His father was a member of Congress and a Judge. The Czarina has donated 100.000 roubles j to Ge;.\ Gresscr, Prefect of St. Petersburg,; in recognition of his services in frustrating j the recent plot against the Czar's lire, and ; the Czar has granted Lim a pension of' 0,000 roubles as a reward for his services i In arresting the Xihiiists. It h reported, that the Czar has decided j that the sentences of death pronounced j against the Nihilists convicted of complicity in-the recent attempt to assassinate him shall be commuted to imprisonment at hard labor for life in the crises of all but two of the condemned. A Hamburg paper reports that com j plaints are being made of the failure of the systt.ni of government subsidies to steamship companies. The Vulcan and North i German Lloyd companies complain of! great losses, the advantages expected not j iiavjag uceu gaiiicu. Editor McGuire, of the Quebec Mercury, was sentenced to six months' imprisonment and $200 fine for charging Mayor Langelier and his brother with having received a larg^ sum of money from a contractor for securing tko copM*act in connection with city work. John J. Cornelson, of Louisville, iiy., who assaulted and cowhided Judge Reid, causing Jiim to commit suicide, and who was sentenced to for three years, has been released on a writ of habeas corpus by Magistrate Stofer. The affair has created a sensation, because Stofer ignores the decision or the Siais Supreme Court. It if reported that in consequence of the refurai of the European powers to take pari iu the Paris exhibition the French government coa&mplate postponing the opening until 1890,'in order to dissociate the exhibition from the celebration Ol the hundradth anniversary of the revolution. Miss Asia Leigh, of Paris, requests the press to contradict ii;c c-tatement that she has collected tlie whole of the ?00,000 needed for the land of the British and American young Men's Home in Paris. ou? fhr> firtf ivn-indnl nf OUC JLitlO J w? ,/wv ?r-jM..w~v . ?20,000, -which secures the house, and has | Still ?40,000 to find. TheCannadian minister of fisheries has brought to Ottawa the fisher}- correspondence." It is a bulky volume, covering the period from ISSi down to & very recent date. Much of the correspondence has already appeared, ?nd it is only the later dispatches which are of public interest at this time. The Atlanta Opera House was packed with distinguished Georgians, who assem- i bled in mass meeting io ^rptest against the j coercion bill now before the British Par-; liament. Governor Gordon left a bed of sickness to preside over the meeting, and i was so ill Li' ?.ad to return home before it 1 adjourned. ' Speaker Carlisle has just been inter- j ' viewed in Louisville, Ky. He says that he j ii no? a candidate for United States Sena- ' tor. b'U he v,*ou:a not dec-ine to serve. He ! thinks a tariff reform biii must be framed ! hv the ne.v JIou?e, that the tobacco tax is j , Ji'kyjy la be sbolisbed as a compromise aisd j J thatiiiair's bi-11- z job lo deplete the Trcas-; i ury. " j ( Mr. Mullock, a prominent member of i Parliament and a leading Toronto lawyer, 1i has introduced a bill in Parliament adopt- j s ing some of the provisions of the United j ] States'Inter-state Commerce bill. The mostI f important provision relates to the diserimination of rates; it is substantially the lone : md short haul section of the Unitc-d States ! law. After a recess ot o.io reek tlic Florida ^ Senatorial caucus met and resumed i, balloting. The first ballot resulted: Perry ; ^ ;G, Bloxham 31, Pasco IS. Four ballots ;l ivere taken without decisive result. Senator j } Wall, a supporter of BIoxLum, moved that j i :he State executive committee call a con-? a mention lo select a Senator. The motion } ivas laid on the table by a vote of 52 to 33. j Mis; Ilclene de Rothschild, only daugh- j ,er of the litle Baron Solomon de Roths :-hild. of Paris. will soon marry Captain | Van Smesseir. a young officer of the Bel-,: gian army. 3111 e. Heiene will ultimately ; possess about ?30,000,000, and has already ; purchased the splendid mansion of the late Baron Lucien Uirsch, near the Champs ! Elysccs, as the future residence for herself j and her husband. While Thomas A. Edison and a number I of friends were standing on a pier at lus j simmee Springs, Florida, the other day, the structure collapsed and all of the party, "PrlicAn inn ATrc fi-ililnnri.ofell I into the "water. A number of residents I who sav.- the accident rushed to the rescue. \ Mr. Edison and Mrs. Gililand saved them-; selves by leaping from the erackliDg tini bers. Tiie new officers elected by the Southern ! Baptist Convention in session at Louisville, ! Ky., are: President, Dr. Mell, of Georgia;! First Vice President, L. B. Ely, of Mis- I sf-uri: Second Vice President, J. A. Hoyt, ! of South Carolina; Third Vice ]-'resident, | Jlaroldson. of Alabama; Fourth Vice Pres- j ident, W. E. Hatcher, of Virginia: Dr. L. Burrows, of Georgia, and Dr. 0. F. Gregcry, of Baltimore, are the Secretaries. "'Twenty years ago," says the Cleveland Leader, "no photograph was more often seen than that of President Lincoln sitting 'with a big book on his knee and his little sen Tad leaning against him and looking at it with him. The book was then thought . to be a bible, but it wasn't. It was Photographer Brady's picture album, which the President was examining with his son while some ladies stood by. The artist begged the President to remain quiet, and the picture was taken." The Hon. George C. Gorham. ex-Secre- j tary of the Republican National Committee j and ex-secretary of the United States Sen- ; ate, is f.ne of the shewdest political observ- j ers in {.Lis country. He Uimks tnatil Elaine is renominated by the Republicans in 1SSS he can carry but seven states. Tlie states conceded to Blaine' are: Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Kansas ar.ti Minnesota. Mr. Gorham is a warm friend of Mr. Conkling, and is be-1 lieved to be deeply in his confidence. His J prediction concerning Blaine's strength is j significant. Jefferson Davis has written a review of j Gen. Wolseley's life of Gen. Lee. Mr. | Davis takes exception to many of the English General's statements, and while not finding fault wit** the superlative opinion of Geu. Lee's military ability expressed in the book, he shows very plainly that he j considers Gen. Wolseley's criticisms of1 other Southern leaders unjust and unwar- j rantable. The review is written in a very \ caustic style, and contains interesting mat ! ter in the way of inside estimates of the j relative value of the services of the Con- j federate leaders. ' When the war broke out, a Southern j merchant went to the North to live, leaving ; his chief clerk in charge of his estate of ; about ?400,000. After the war, the cleric i sent the merchant a statement of the con- j dition of the fund, promising to settle up | ' * ? * ? A 1 4.1. ~ i alter ir.vime. ii. lew trays ago iiu iimuc ujc : final remittance to the merchant, now a ; resident of New Ilavec, Conn. The whole j amount was $648,000. The names of the i parties are withheld. One is a wealthy j banker South, the other a wealthy mer-1 chant in New Haven. ROSSES 0.\ SHERIDAN. A iiiat the Latter Bide Up the She- ! nar.douU Valley in Peace, bat ?Liite the Crow, | Carry Ilia Provisions wltli Him. The Winchester (Va.) Time# prints the j following letter from General Rosser: "Usivebsity ok Va., May 2, '87. .To jfnjor Holme# Conrad. M v Deak Major: I have seen it reported" recer.ily in the newspapersJl*&trXxcn. P. H. j Sheridan, U. S. A..^contemplates, at an j early d^rauUHSrnde up the Shenandoah : Yr.ncyT I had hoped that our beautiful j valley should never again be desecrated by ! his foot prints. Cold, cruel and brutal ] must be the character of this soldier who I fondly cherishes memories of the wild. ! wanton waste and desolation which his bar-; barous lories spread through the valley, j laying in a-hes the beautiful and happy j homes of innocent women, young and j 4i?4-'U'?S children and aged men, and who j over these ruins boasted that now a crow I cannot ily over this valley without carrying j its rations. General Sheridan has done; nothing since the war to atone for his bar- j harism during the war. We have not for j gotten that during his reign in New Or- j leans he asked that our fellow-citizens of j Louisiana might be proclaimed banditti in J order that he might set the dogs of war on j them. I have forgiven the brave men of i the Union armies whom I met in honora- j ble war and who finally triumphed over us i in the great struggle. Among them I can ] now name many of my warmest and truest j and most prized friends: the}' are good and I true to me and think none the less of us for j having fought them. Indeed, they esteem i him highest amongst us who fought them j the hardest Sheridan is not one of this \ kind, and lie hits never accorded that peace j whit h Grant proclaimed. I now say to j you, my dear .Major, and to our gallant ; comrades who are now in the valley, that I j hope you will allow this man to make his j triumphant ride up the valley in peace, but j have him go like the miserable crows, car- j rying his rations with him. (Signed) Yours, truly, Thos. L. Rosseb. ."Vlslhodist Chifrch (statistics. The ecclesiastical year of the Methodist Episcopal phurch, South, has ended, and the hist returns Iron: annual conferences are in. The ligures for the ecclesiastical year 188G-7Jaas been footed up. There are 4,434 traveling preachers; 5,989 local preachers; 1,056,028 members, making a grand total of ministers and members in that "church of 1,065,451. This shows an increase over ISSo?6 of 28 traveling preachers; 4d local preachers, and 75,383 members, and a totai increase of ministers and j members of 75,457. The average number of members under the pastoral care of each pastor is 240. j The church has 11,207 Sunday schools, j in which 7 7,510 ollioers and teachers instruct j 211,519 pupils. The increase over the year ! 1SS-5-6, is 555 Sunday schools, 5,543'officers ! and teachcrs and 50,772 pupils. "This means, that if every member of the Sunday school is also a member of the church, there are not less than 275,000 members of the jleihodist Episcopal Church, South, who j nave no part in the Sunday school work." The church and Sunday school membership is housed in 10,051 church buildings? about J00 members to each house. There were baptized during:the year 33$71 infants, an increase over last year .of 4,325, and 7i,7S0 adults were baptized. Last year the Indian membership showed an increase 01498, and this year an increase of G27. There is still a remnant of colored membership, who have not joined the colored Methodist Church, and they now num her GTo members, an increase for this year of 126. This increase occurs mainly in North and South Carolina, but chiefly in the latter State. There was marked pro- ; gress and prosperity in all departments of church work, presaging even more hopeful results for the }'C:ir 1SS7-8. i .Mrs. I'lcvelondVs i*iiutograplis. J I-he Bernard for Mrs. Cleveland's photo-1 graphs is"ai 'active u rt was at the time that lady lirst entered the White House as its mistress. The photographer who ]jer- 1 waded her to give him sittings for twenty- ' ilvs negatives last summer has sold over 1 50,000 and is still printing them at the rate s A 2u0 a day. lie thinks that when the j 1 :uii year of sales is up, 100,000 of his pic j * Aires will he sold. The net profit for the j r irst wgai 3 after the negatives were * v/;i-> Vvr.OyO, as much as the ; 1 President received i'or a year s izt+'iye as. * Governor of Xew York. What portion of j hi: goes to Mrs. Cleveland, if any, the ihotograpiier emits to mention, but a man j 1 ? ?> tl.a o'ttincrc wnilld I liirc-'.vu CU'JUgu hj cw-uiv | lot be apt to overlook the matter of caring e 'or most of the profile himself. t' tUe S^onve^t T'lan in Ohio ^ Is said to be George C. Arnold, of f. Cleveland, O., who less t>an one year s .go, owing to chronic liver trouble and j Wright's disease of the kidneys, weighed j. ess" thaii ninety-five pounds, bnt by ? ising Dr. liarter's Iron Tonic has gained b a strength and weight until now he is c Omitted to be the giant of Ohio, * h BRIC-A-BRAC. Polished delivery?Cuffs and collars from , the laundry. Where uprightness is desirable?la the i; skating rick. -j Potatoes never grow larger than marbles t in Greenland. e The forests of Scotland furnish ten thou- z sand deer annually. c A society for the suppression of societies c for the prevention of things is talked of. When is a man like a brick? When he is hard pressed. Crushed watermelon is the popular shade 1 among colored people. The turn of the ' tied" ?Starting home- ' l MA TT-n/LKnor tvzrs W LUU tiiLCc li*\s n ?,**?/ The most useful thing, after all, in the j "long run"?Breath. A tell-tale?The story about shooting the , apple. ] Australia has over 10,000 distinct species of flowers. No sea captains ever dreamed of forecas- ' ties in the air. The so-called deserts of Arizona are now covered with grass a id flower?. A promising young map.?The fellow who always says "I will see you later." "No, sir; I don't hire out to that farmer. . His fences are barbed wire, and I can't get a minute's rest on 'em." The hurrying men who loses his lii'e by jumping from a ferry boat before it lands, gains nothing in the long run. "Are you a Home Ruler?" was asked of a candidate at the last* election. A voice answered, "No, but his wife is:" A young lady repels the domestic slandei that she is''fluctuating." .''For I'm always at par?to buy me something." "Love is the toothache of the heart," says a French proverb. And laudanum is frequently applied to cure it. A man shot at a hen -with a revolver, and hit $ neighbor who was sitting on the fence watching him. Both are agreed that the bullet glanced from the hea. The chap who left his landlady ia the Inrch being asked why he changed his board ing-place, said it was on account of the strong "owed her." A scientist now de#ares that the tip of the nose is the home of the soul. It u:is certainly often shown where departed spirits have gone. Denarrer-minded man totes a short string, by which he measures de good qualities o' ae men whut he meets: but his own good p'ints he measures wid er cloze line. We agree with a recent writer that "It's all nonsense to say that eating pies is unhealthy." It is trying to digest them that raises the mischief with one's health. "What can ever be a substitute, John, for the affection of a sister?'' "Well, sis, that depends a good deal on whose sister it is." "Johnny, do you know the tenth commandment?" "Yes'm." "Sayit." "Can't," "But you just said you knew it, Johnny." "Yes'm. I kow it when I see it." The fact that there are twenty-seven hundred languages is no consolation to a man when he is spattered with mud from head to foot *>y a passing wagon. An exchange wants a definition of the phrase "hopping mad." A man, we would say, is hopping mad after stepping on the ; point or a tacK. An Irishman, watching a game of baseball, was sent u > grass by a foul, which struck him under the fifth rib. "A fowl, was it? Och, sure, I thought it was a mule." A correspondent wishes us to give the number of people who would be living if none of them had ever died. We shall j take our aext vacation to figure it out. ~ "Is it true that when a wild goose's matedies it never takes another?'' asks a young widow. Yes; but don't worry about that" The reason it acts that way is because it is a goose. Health journals insist upon people reposing on the right side only, and claim that it is injurious to lie on both sides; but we don't know where they will find healthier men than lawyers. De insecks is sometimes got more sense dan a man. When you sees a pusson fcolin' 'roun' er ho'nets nest, yer may know dat de pusson, 'stead o' de ho'net, is er makin' er mistake. "Did you break your father's will?" "Yes." "I suppose, then, you are quite rich now?" "2so; poorer than ever before." j "Howis that?" "You see,-I broke the will, j but the lawyers broke me." Jay Gould ventures the opinion: "Stocks j ought to go up now; only artificial causes ! can keep them dow$.'' A warning to the j little fellows perhaps,' to get in out of the j wet. it spems 10 pp every man ior iiimseii in ; this world. The icemen go arouns with j smiling faces, little caring that the cold i which gives them their harvest has ruined j the peach-crop again. ..: "Kind words can never die." How bit ' terly does a man realize that terrible truth ! when he sees all the kindest words he ever I said in his life glaring at him from his pub- j lished letters in a breach-of-promise suit. | "How can I find out all about the young j lady to whom I am engaged?" asks a prospective benedict. Has" she a younger brother? If so, consult him. A gentleman once said of u. discontented friend, that he believed when his friend reached Heaven and could find fault with Nothing else, he would complain that his j liaJo'didn't'fit hici'. ."Podsnap, don't you think pen manu: facturers are a bad lot of people?" 'Net particularly; why?" "They make people steel pens, you know." "Ohi" A North Carolina negro having heard that ex-Governor Jarvis had been appointed. Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Brazil, said to a friend: '"Governor Jarvis has been appointed an extraordinary preacher to the penitentiary in Brazil." A dude was seen the other day, followed ! by an attendant, who mrrisd something j that looked like a small telegraph pole. It' was, howevier. only the dude's walking-j stick. Fashion has ordered them so large j this spring that it takes a man to carry one. j Mr. Talmage says: "The chain of life is made up of a great "variety of links, long i links and small links, iron'links, gold links^ beautiful links, ugly links, solemn links 1 and mirthful links; but they are all part of one chain of destiny." True, very true; I ' but why not add missing links, sausage ' links, bobolinks and lynx? According to an ancient philosopher, 1 "from 'sleep comes digestion."' It is said 1 policemen have the best digestions in the S world, which' fac* would seem to refute ' the oldphilos?or ratherj perhaps, maybe? j but, after all, come to think about it, the a ancient gentleman's theory may be all ri glit. e Perfectly Correct. "I went up to see s the plan of Mrs. Bartholomew Jones's house * the other day/' said Brown to his friend on the street car. "She was very enthusiastic about her new improvements, and so on, and told me the gem of the whole house f, m-mlr! hp n Jipniuifiil an&nai .<tairnase. Ha. i .' ba, ha!" Sunpk"'ns?"Well, i don't sees nyLhing remarkably funny about that. She i probably meant her back stairs.' ,, t A CS?arac:eri*t!c Speech. ^ In one of our churches recently a rail- M oad ccndu^to^ wjjs taken into membership, g ind when confirmed the excellent pastor: fj nade to him the following characteristic j g ipeech: "My dear brother, I "welcome you ! a o this chu'ch. >!oy your round house be g illed with engines lired by the Sre of faith; nay your tanks be tilled with the precious 89 vater from the purest fountains, and your g rain land in the grand depot of heaven.p rj'nch!jur<i Advance. A i'rlatcr'a Err^r. Crr-^i-A none r\f nH<rav<n1->I fHfl nrint- ! B *-7 rv aig Hit, uuvv/'.'h^j u*jw ?/**?? __ r's copy said, but lie set it up, sweet are g he uses of advertising. Sweet, indeed, to a hose who in sickness- and suffering have 0 een the advertisement of some sovereign j emedy, which upon trial has brought them ? rom denth'; door. "The best thiDg I ever I aw in my paper was the advertisement of L )r. Pierce's 'Golden Medical Discovery""! * > again and again the testimony of those j g *ho have been healed by it of lung disease, j 1 roncbial affections, tumors, ulcers, li\er | omplaints and the ills to which flesh is I ? eir. 1 11 Tbe Southern Baptist*. J The Southern Baptist Convention now j a annual session at Louisville, Ky.. is com- ; ?osed of all the Baptist churches South of * . hat is kuov;ii as 3Iason and Disou's lins. 1 The number cf delegates present is est;-; ; cated ai 1,500. representing all the South-' \ ra cities, 14,-iSS churches and 1,030,000: : nembers. Each delegate represents ?100, i * o be used for the home of foreign mission ; iuxing the year. The Charleston Cu.<om Hut::-.'.-. S The Augusta Chronicle publishes the fol-1I ov;ing letter: ; r '"Your efforts in behalf of unfortunate , democrats who, with large families to sup- ? >ort, cannot get employment, while Re : j jub'icau vagabonds are getting fat up jn ; Democratic patrrvr.a^v, is Kaw-tv.rthy. i [ rie 2Tew* and G/aru-r. la ?? Mr. ; i Jervey and ?pc :kl!^ for him. a-.ya ! It.it :V c Republicans retained hy him v c.. r it the request of prominent Den:t;cn<ts. < Who arc those prominent Dehiocra'.s? Who tvish RcnuUicr.as retained in oiEce under!3 Democratic rule? The voters of C haritet ' want thoir names badly. "Will Mr. Jervey , jive tbcai lo us'.' X^mocjjats.*'. , T!v LJ.r.nhigh.-i:; K Jirc: iinrst. ,v A L was in Alliens Friday who : brings us so;n<- I??ng expected news Birni\:-.:Lani. He says that one day this : week vi ,5'J0,000 worth of paper there wo:;' to pre and reai estate U forbid; Mid ; ' excite:; uc(K(a j.o deinanii. He .?::ys :h .l:' th people :?rb>?rreai;y excited, fur -l<-y , realize the ; iiiat the predic e-i c li tj^e | is now al-j -: < a ^he:n and it \v;ii ; ;in; i thousands. This is 2rsl seri ;:t3 I eial disaster that has cditt^upon Binning-; i hain, and it will doubtless fe-ouickly foi- ; lowed by others that will prick the bubble i of fictitious values and bring property in the place down to its legitimate price\Our informant further says that the ore fo\nd around Birmingham is only Ct for stovN^ and piping and' can never l*e made into: steel. Til- i, of course, renders it unfit for ' steel rails, and greatly contracts its sale.? ; Athens Banner. From trie Artist vTiio XooK Cr. Gr. Hoffman's Photograph. Hickokt, X. C. I send you to-day half dozen photographs of" GK G. Hoffman, of Conover, N. C.} and I must say thai; your medicine has done wonders for Mr. HoSman. It seems like raising the d:-ad to life; he loohs fat and hearty now, and they tell i me when he commenced your medicine i he was nothing but skin and bones. The j sore on his breast is healed over, and you I can see the one on the forehead is heal- j ing up from the top. I wish it had been I I so that I could have taken it when he i was at his worst, but I could not leave | my office and he lives some distance from j here. Yours resnectfuliv, A. McIntosh. j This man. G. G. Hoffman, Las risen! ' by the use of Botanic Blood Balm (B. B~. B.) to his present wonderful improved condition. In a short time his boneless forehead will be fully healed, and he will stand a monument of humanity raised from the verge of death. Few persons ever recover from sueh a low state, being on a djing bed from that fell destroyer, blood poison, with the bone of his forehead rotted and taken out 2vx3 inches by the doctors, and glvtn out to cis. From shin and bones, wrecked by blood poison, to health and sound fiesh is the work of B. B.. 3. Not many such desperate cases may | be found, but when they are they should j not despair of recovery, as B. Bl B. will i cure them. j" When this medicine can cure sueh extreme cases, is it not reasonable that it | will cure all cases of blo'cd poison of less j violence, as it has clone in thousands of! instances? The Mayor and doctors of Conover j. will verify the awful condition from ; which Mr/Hoffman was raised. B. B. CO. 1 ESS ONLY TROS ?7! RON if TONIC!; "Will purif7 the BLOOD regulate ) tfce' LIVER and KIDNEYS and | >52PV__3?a toSTOBE the HEALTH and VIOVgjSeSKgfc OK of YOCTE. Dyspepsia,Want ^eg?jfig3? of Appetite, Indigestion.Lack of j i W?^ Strength end Tired Feeling ab- ; solutely cured: Bones, in us- j ^SfSggEa^ clea and nerres receive new ] force. Enlivens the mind : ^=SSSHk. and supplies Brain Power. | a ^ SSSSS Scffering from complaints 5 Sjfl B peculiar totheir sex will find & J S ?? in SB. KAF-TEX'S IKON j TONIC a safe &nd speedy cure. Gives a clear, heal- | thy complexion. Frequent attempts at counterfeit- I ing only add to the popularity of the original. Do ; not experiment?set the Original and Best, a Dr. BARTER'S LIVER, PILLS V ; 6 Cn~e Con3tipation.I.iver Comclaint and Sick ft t ? Headache. Sample Doss and Dream Boole S ^mailed on receipt of two cents in postage, y I THE l)R. HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY. St. Lonl*. Mo. CHARLOTTE I FV:W r-"s T< | sMIiS M^iiiUiSsI - _ i VfO INSTITUTE for YOUNG LADIES | L n in the South has advantages supe- j ior to those olfered he:e in every depart-j nent?Collegiate, Art and Music. Only ; 'xperienced and accomplished teachers, j _ Che building is lighted with gas, wanned I J vith the best wrought-iron furnaces, has I lot and cold water baths, and first-class i ippointments as a Boarding School in j very respect?no school in the South has j q uperior. 1 ''or Doard and Tuition in everything [ in full Collegiate course, including j ancient and modern languages, per : r session of 20 weeks SiOO! V Deduction for two or more from same !1amily or neighborhood. Pupils charged j sj nly from date of entrance. " j o: For Catalogue, with fail particulars, ad- p ress Rev. W3L R. ATKINSON, ? Charlotte, |N. 'J. j & - -CWflc. Jn JJiiOVLt twenty years aeo I discovered a iittl icuncfed. it cancer. 1 havs tnea a aumoc? or poy: Dent beaeilt. Among the number were cne or tw waslite fire to the sore, causing Intense pain. Is; S. S. S. had done for others similarly afflicted. I p the second bottle the neighbors could notice that health had been bad for two or three years?I ha< ually. X had a severe pain In my breast. After ta me and I gre*v stouter than I had been for several z little spot sbout the size of a half dime, and It ev<ery one with c-ncer to give A S. b. a fair iria^. 2Xrs. SAXCY J. iicCOXAXJGH] > Feb. 16, ISSC. Swift's Specific Is entirely vegetable, and s< impurities from the blood- Treatise on Blood am _ THE SWIFT SP: MlWIH?lilUHB ' i,i. '? ^z.1. STC3KOR8, .' r.i .1 coram.-.; Zliotels, or Eruption, > rite worst Scrofula. Salt-rlieum, 5 ?*!ver?sores," Scaly or Rongh (kin, in short, nil diseases caused by bad ^ ilcod nre conquered by this powerful, puri- * vl:-:A and invigorating medicine. Great Ulecr* rapialy heal under its be-""-. lijm intiuence. Especially lias it manifested \ ;s ' oter.ey i:i <-:>rinjr Tetter, Rose Hash, \? Soils, Carbuneics, Sore Eyes, Serotinus Sores and Swellings, Hipoi::t Disease, "Wliite S\relliiigsu ioiere, or Thick ?.'eek, and Enlarged S lands. Send ten cents in stamps for a ac?c trcat;<.'. with colored plates, on Skin >is":!ses. or the same amount for a treatise >n Scrofulous AlToetions. "T2IE I5ti.OO?> IS THE LIFE.? ^uoroughiycjwinse it by using Dr. Pierce's ' n-:?fovcrv.2iids:ood if HULV ii iic.vuivtv? ?? _ m s -- v Ingestion, a fair f kin, buoyant spirts, and vital strer ;tli, will be established. CONSUMPTION, . ;:ieb Is Scrofala o? tae litinjars, is ar- j <tc*d and cured by this remedy, if taken be-lV thi? last stores of the disease are reached. om its marvelous power over this terribly disease, when llrst offering this now . :?brated remedy to the public. Dr. Piehce thought seriously of calling it his "Cou c:rc,J' but abandoned that me as too limited for a medicine which, from its wonderful combination, -of tonic, er rrrensrthen ing. alterative, or blood-elcansmg, afl ]>.t:o;ai. and nutritive proper- W a remedy nsumptlon, Out fur all Clsrcuic Diofl M .If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated,'2J saliow color of skin, or ycllowisu-brownB B on face or body, frequent headache oco|| B ness, bad taste in mouth, -internal chills, alternating with hot Hushes, IotB H and gloomy foivlxHlings. irregular gB B and c.>ai<-d tongue. you are 6uffeririB B Ittdigosttoaj I>y*pepsia, and B K??vor, or <wBii!ou?aen?." In 91 B c.is ^s only part or these symptoms are^l B K^ncod. As a remedy for all such. DrTtficrcc's Goldon J2cdicajjy* B coverWis 11 ^unwssed. MB For TfKA? Hlocd, Nbort?c*? of Brcatb, Broiim cliitis, Aslhtca, Severe Coughs, and^^^*^ oir.^rinnq. it is an efficient remedy. ser.o 7>y Druggists. at $1.00, or SIX BOTTLES for $5.00. < Send ton cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce's book 0:1 Consumption, .address, 4 World's Bispcitsary Medical Asmociation, CC3 jiaia Street, Bcffalo, N. Y. iMgI $500 REWARD tCsf ? is offered by the proprietors rT? ' %> of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy r".v \ $ for a case of catarrh which W they cannot cure. If you a&tirX . x? have a discharge from the nose, offensive or otherwise, partial loss of smell, taste, or hearing1, weak eyes, dull pain or pressure in head, you have Catarrh. Thousands of cases terminate in consumption. Dr. S:;ge's Catarrh Remedy cures the worst cases of Catarrh? "Cold fn tlio Hcadj" and Catarrhal 22cadaclic. 50 cents. PlOSandORGANS From the World's Best Makers, AT FACTOBT PRICES. Easiest Terms of Payment Eight Grand Maker*, and Ortr Three Hundred Styles to Select Fro*. HI A MAO . CMckerirg, Xason b Hamlin, Eathnshek, Bent and Arlon. ORGANS: Hason & Hamlin, Orchestral and Bay State. Pianos and Organs delivered, frdgkt Mid, to all points South, Fifteen daya' trial, and Freight Paid Betk Ways, 11 not satisfactory. Order, and teat the Initrumenta 2a your Own Eomes. ^ COLUMBIA MUSIC HO031, Branch of LUDDEit * BATES' SOUTHERN' MUSIC HOUSE. PRICE A5D TOMS TH* SAX* I. W. TBUMF, BMDFIELD'S 1 A Specific for all diseases pe- a "*-ssS2Sgt^^5 Iculiar to womea, such as Pain-H *"** I'al, Suppressed, ?r Irregular K ? Menstruation, Leucorr&osa org Swmtes, etc. H V MALE ? If taken daring tbe C 'IANGeS EOF LIFE, great suffering anca fidabger wtil be avoided. REfilMTOR! Send for oar book,* 'Message to Wo man," mailed iee. bkad7isld Eegclatoe Co,, Atlanta, 6a. PI > i a nrf a II I Farmers, <v % CC A perfect Leveling I nttrnfc TERRACING, gTOmentlorBiBraad Engirt|y DITCHING, /|\lMSiSS3 |qb?D G, ij leveling. / i / ?' % double extentioa L. / 8 % target rod, $6.00; # 1 ' ? with tripod 57.00 / I \ Satisfaction abr / 8 |a| ,-a solutely gTiari acteea. Aslc Jer- $7.00 s^jrorcircitiar. Automatic level Co., Na*hvjllCi Tmb. ?1TTS CARMISATIV^' - 5 FOH !.\FA.\TS ,1>P SEETHING CHILDREN. Ail instant relief fcr colic ofjinfants. ores Dysentery, Diarrhcaa, "Cholera afantum or an-"diseases of the stomach ad bowels, flakes the critical period ? Teething safe and easy. Is a safe and leasant tonic. For sale by all druggists, j-1 for wholesale by Howard. Willet Co., Augusta, Gal i f 8MP3? Cniol'il*^ I ^1. & e sore on my cheeky and tlie doctors T>rc- gl il&aai, out without ixccirtLS any 0 specialists. The mcdlcine they applied Sj iw a statement la the papers telling what rocured some at once. Before I had used my cancer was healing up. Sly general jg , 1 a hacking cough and spit blood continuing six bottles of S. S. S. my cough left years. 2Iy cancer has healed over all but is rapidly disappearing. I would advi?? EY, Ashe Grove. Tippecanoe Co., Ind. eeras to cure cancers by forcing out tha g 1 Skin Diseases mailed free. EC1FIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, 6a. ^