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Zp;-X? ; - ; . ' . LITTLE AI1 *JU. Little Ah Sid Was a Chinese kid? A cute little cuss, you'd declare. With eyes full of fun, And a nose that begun Right up at the roots of his" hair. Jolly and fat Was this frolicsome brat, As he played through the long summer day; And braided his cu(T As his father used to In Chinaiand, far, far, away. Once o'er a la^m, ^ That Ah Sid played upon, ix uuixiu;c we new m uie spriiij:; " Melican butterfly " Said lie with winking eye, c' Me catenae and pull oH urn wing!" Then with his cap He struck it a rap? This innocent bumble bee. And put its remains In the seat of his jeans, For a pocket there had the Chinee. Down on the green Sat the little sardine, In a style that was strangely demure, And said, with a grin _ # ' That was brimful of sin, "Me mashee um butterfly, sure!" Little All Sid Was only a kid, iSTor could you expect him to guess What kind of a bug He was holding so snug In the fold of his loose fitting dress. " Ki-ya! ki-yip-ye!" Ah Sid cried, as he Hose hurriedly up from the spot, "Ki-yi! Yuk-a-tan! Daraum Melican man! Um butterfly belly much hot!''" THE STATE PREiss ASSOULVTiOX. A Goodly Gathering ia Charleston?What the Xewspaper >Ieu Did at Their Meeting. (From tlic 2*ews and Courier.) The thirteenth annual meeting of the Press Association was held at the armory of the Washington Light Infantry Thursday night. The attendance of members was not as large as it has been heretofore, owing to the fact that a good many of the members arrived on the late trains. The following members were found present, however, and the meeting was .called to order by the President, Col. M. B. McSweeney: Hampton Guardian, Col. M. B. McSweeney. Aiken Journal and Review, Mr. L. C. Ligon. Aiken Recorder, Col. C. E. R. Drayton. Florence Times, Col. C. H. Prince. Spartanburg Herald, Mr. W. M. Jones. Sumter Watchman and Southron, Mr. N. G. Osteen. Barnwell People, Col. J. W. Holmes anc Mr. C. C. Simms. Deutsche Zeitung, Major Franz Melchers and Mr. W. K. Fiber. Charleston Dispatch, Mr. S. D. Hutson JS'eics and Courier, Cap:. F. W. Dawson Capt. J. L. Weber and Mr. J. A. Moroso Union Times, Mr. E. P. McKissick. Pee Dee Indc.c (Marion), Mr. P. B Hamer. Marlboro Chronicle, Mr. J. DuPre Als brook. Laurensviiie Advertiser, Col. J. C. Gar lington. Laurensviiie Herald, Col. T. B. Crews . Anderson Journal, Major A. S. Todd. Messrs. C. H. Prince and J. A. Morose were elected secretaries. The reading o: the minutes was, on motion of Ma jo: Melchers, dispensed with, and Mr. W. M Jones, the annual orator, was introduced and read an address on the subject of rail road discriminations. The address wa thoughtful, practical and to the point, anc was heartily applauded. At its close Capt. F. W. Dawson move* that the cordial thanks of the Associatio: be tendered to Mr. W. M. JoDes for hi eminently thoughtful and suggestive ad dress. It touches, he said, matters o: special importance to us at this time, fo' within the past few usys an instance ha; occurred showing that a certain railroai management had no more regard for thf interests of the people of the State ihan ? child would have for the puny ant-hills be neath his feet. He also expressed the hop* that the address would be placed at th< disposal of the Association for publication The matters it treated of should be brough to the attention of the people of the State. The 21ews and Courier, he said, would b( giaci 10 puunsn 11. The motion,' seconded by Col. C. S. R Drayton, was unanimously adopted, and the secretaries were directed to procure s copy of the address for publication in the JS'etcs and Courier. On motion of 3Ir. C. H. Prince, the address was also directed to be published in the minutes of the Association* The president then stated that he had received an invitation from the Neves and Caurier for the members of the Association to go on an excursion around the harbor to-day. The invitation was accepted and the arrangements announced. The president was also requested to convey the thanks of the Association to the "Washington Light Infantry for the use of the armory for the meeting. The Association then entered upon a dis cussion of matters of interest to the profession, the principal topics discussed* being the rates for foreign advertisements and the regulations of delinquent subscribers. The discussion was participated in by Messrs. Jones, McSweeney, Drayton, Dawson, Prince and others, and elicited a very full expression of the views and experiences of the members. The meeting, after hear u?v trea^uru. icpuxt reau x ?jr -jaujui Franz Melchers, took a recess until 9 o'clock Friday morning. The Association met at the armory of the Washington Light Infantry at 9 o'clock Friday. After the ejection of officers and finishing up the business, the members and their triends adjourned from the armory to the Ferry wharf, where they embarked on the steamer Pocosin, placed at their disposal by the Netzs and Courier Company. The visitors were taken up the < Ashely river to the new bridge, then down to Sumter, and afterwards* ran up the Cooper and Wanao rivers, getting a glance at the picturesque scenery on the banks of the Wando. The party landed in the city about 2 P. 31., allowing the members participating in the excursion to Xew Y.-rk abundant time to prepare for the trip. The editors sailed on the splendid steamship Seminole, of the Clyde Line, which sailed from Union wharf at 5.30 in the afternoon. The State Press Association met at nine ^ o'clock F:iday morning, President 3Icj Sweeney in the chair. The first question discussed was the selection of a place for the next meeting. ? Sir. Ligon suggested Greenville, Major Todd suggested Anderson, and Sir. Kutson suggested Charleston. After much discussion the three cities named were, on motion of Cant. Dawson, referred to the consider ation of the executive committee, with request to sclect the place and name the time for the next meeting. The election of officers for the ensuing year was was next held, Capt. F. Yr'. Dawson being called upon to preside in committee of the whole. The following officers were unanimously reelected: " President, Gen. 31. B. McSweeney, of the Hampton Guardian. First Vice President, Col. Charles Petty, of the Carolina Spartan. Second Vice President, Captain T. H. Clarke, of the Camden Journal,. Secretary. Major J. B. Bonner, of the \V/->c+ jlvuc it wou twvym wv. Treasurer, Major Franz Melchers, of the Deutsche Zeiiung. Chaplain; Rev. Sidi H. Brov.no, of the Christian Neighbor, The Association then adjourned subject to the call of the President Responding to the invitation extended to them by the ^Setcs and Courier, the members of the Association assembled on board the steamer Pocosln at 10.-13 for a pleasure trip around the harbor. The voy'nge was from the Ferry wharf round the Battery to the New Bridge, and thence to Fort Sumter and beyond. On the return, Sullivan's Island was skirted, Mount Pleasant touched, and thence up to the Wan do river, into Cooper and along the east water front home again. With a dozen cr so editors on a holiday, it goes without saying that a delightful trip was had, and such was the expression of ieeling by all on board. There was an abundance of refreshments of the quantity, quality and character suitable to the occasion, and therewith other lis? * ? interesting matters were frequently dis- j cussed witli a refreshing unanimity of j opinion. Upon the return of the steamer to the i city an impromptu meeting of the visitors ! was called on the forward deck with Gen-! eral McSweeney metaphorically in the j chair, ilr. W. M. Jones, of the Spartan- I burg Herald, thereupon offered the follow- ; ing resolution: Resolved, That the thanks of the Associa-: tion be returned 10 Cap?: F. W. Dawson, i of the News and Courier, for courtesies ex- i tended the Association during their visit to j Charleston, and especially for this delight- ; ful excursion around the harbor. The resolution was unanimously adopted. Capt. Dawson responded briefly to the resolution, saying that it must have been a delightful trip, indeed, if it had furnished the Association as much pleasure as it had given the Xecca and Courier- to entertain them during their brief stay in the city. r -3- ? o-f -p/vot* mirmtoc 1 nc party ius>t:iuu?u&.tu. ai a, itn : after 2 o'clock. At u.30 P. 31. the following members of the Association left the city on the steam ship Seminole for New York: Messrs. 31. B. McSweeney, Franz 3Ieichers, H. C. Watts, A. S. Todd and John A Moroso. "I WANT THAT MAX." Reasons for Thinking Albert Sydney Johnston Was Killed by a Private. Chicago Inter-Ocean: As a general { role the most impartial personality that 11 ever got acquainted with is a bullet in ; battle. It is perfectly democratic and fair, recognizing neither rank, station, age nor quality. There are some exceptions to this rule, as, for instance, when a bullet is directly aimed at some conspicuous officer and fetches him. I think it was a special bullet that killed Albert Sydney Johnston, and the reason why I think so is this: In the Shiloh fight Pugh's brigade, to which I belonged, was strung along the rail fence, having the cotton field and peach orchard between it and the Confederate line. Across this field and orchard the enc-my made three or four magnificent charges, and was terribly rermlsed each time. Captain Johnston, j the son of the General, frankly acknowl| edges those defeats in his account of the j battle contained in the biography of his ; father. The repulses caused much demoralization in the ranks of the Confed erates, but after awhile we could see thai their line was re-established in greal shape. Then we saw the General riding down the front while the men cheerec nirn with a great deal of enthusiasm, We all supposed that Gcreral Beaure gard was in command of uie enemy, fo] General Johnston's name was not fa miliar to us and Eeauregard's was. Ai he passed along the line our boys said t< i each other: "That's Beauregard! That's Beaure ; gard!" Just at that moment a tail, gaunt fel . j low.ni a state of intense nervous excite i ment. and carrying his gun at th< ! "trail," tried to break through the lin< where I was, with the intention of climb . ing over the fence toward the enemy. challenged him sharply: "What do yoti want here? What regi ment do you belong to?" "Fifteenth Illinois." "Go back to your regiment; you havi * no business here. Go back!" "Oh d)n't stop me," he said. "Le 2 me go, I want that man on that horse.' Before I could prevent him he ha( broken through and scaled the fence. watched him zigzagging along from trei to tree until he reached the log hous* s above the centre of the field. Thi 1 brought very near the enemy, anc if he took a rest for his gun on the win 1 dow sill the man on horseback woulc 1 certainly be in peril. I never saw tha s soldier again, but tor twenty-five years - have held firmly to the opinion that hi * shot "that man on the horse." [ It is evident from the accounts tha ? General Johnston was wounded sever?. * minutes before he fell, but did not thin] ; the matter serious, even if he knew it a all. Ee had been slowly bleeding t< ? death for some time, and when^,t last h j faintca it was too late to save him. J. Sparkling Catav.-ba Springs. ' (Correspondence Charlotte Clironicle.) Hickory, May 24.?I see your pape: contains an advertisement of tne lamou [ summer resort, located six miles fro:: L Hickory and is readied by a drive ove: > six miles of the best road that can b< found in Xorlh Carolina. Here you wil j find the Sparkling Catawba Spring; t which is fast gaining a reputation abroac for its great healing qualities. Wo hav< ; just returned from the Springs and fin< - everything in apple-pie order for th< comfort of guests. Dr. E. 0. Elliott ?S ' i Son have added largely to their capacity for entertaining guests and can nov easily accommodate 400 people. Th< | grounds are beautiful and parties wish ; ing to be away from the noise of a hote can have rooms in cottages located 01 the grounds, of which there are abou' thirty. There will be a band of musi< ; at the Springs throughout the entir( I season and the young people who like t< trio the lisrht fantastic toe will find her* J a good baH room and the best of musi< as well. You can get here baths o? anj description, from the plunge bath in the ; large building erect-, d especially for th< purpose, with a swimming capacity o: 30x35, but surrounded on either side bj convenient dressing rooms. You car . also get hot air and vapor baths ii needed. The bowling alley is first class and is a good exercise to work up an ap petite for all the good things that is furnished on the tables by the proprietors. v>. o have visited nearly all tbc summer resorts in North Carolina, and we feel justified in saying that we believe there is no place in North Carolina 01 in the South where one can find bettc: water, better air, more beautiful scenery and better accommodations than the j Sparkling Catawba Springs. ?iie Cottcn Movement. The New York Financial Chronicle, in its \veekiv cotton review, says that for the week ending Friday evening, the 27th instant, the total receipts have reached 9,765 bales, against 10,626 bales last week, 12,66G bales the previous week, and 13,077 bales three weeks since; making the total receipts since the 1st of September, 1886, 5,1G8,2SS bales, against 5,165,339 bales for the same period of 1S85-6, showing an increase since September 1, 1SS6, of 2,949 bales. The exports for the week ending the same time reach a total of 13,986 bales, of which 4,659 were to Great Britain, 241 to France, and 9,087 to the rest of the continent. The total sales for forward delivery for the week are 820,600 bales. For immediate delivery the total sales foot up 1,728 bales, including 500 for export and 4,22S for home consumption. The imports into continental ports for the same period have been 62,000 bales. There was a decrease in the cotton in sight, Friday night, of 49,150 bales as compared with the same date of 1SS6, a decrease of 73,562 bales as compared with the corresponding date of 1885, and a decrease of 241,310 bales as compared with 188-i. Old interior stocks have decreased during the veek 5,500 bales, and were Fridav night 98,278 bales less than at the ! tiuLUU j^ciiuu ?a$i j cm. -Luc iwciuia at the same towns have been 8,795 bales less than for the same week last year, and since September 1 the receipts at all the towns are 25,652 bales less than for i the same time in 1SS5-6. The decrease in amount in sight, as compared with last year, is 66,679 bales, the increase as compared with 18&U5 is 709,9ii bales, and the increase over 1SS3-4 is 6S3,209 bales, ' Is that the rebel yell?'' asked an Oliioan | the other day. "No," replied a courteous colonel, "it is only an ice cream cake man."' BRIC-A-BRAC. A LITTLE LADY. 1 know a little lady Who wears aliat of green, All trimmed with red, red rosc-s, And a blackbird on the brim. Slie ties it down with ribbons Under her dimpled ebin; For oftentimes it's breezy Whcn she comes tripping in. She'll drop a dainty courtes}', Perhaps she'll throw a kiss; She brings so many hundred That one she'll never miss. With laughing, sunny glances She comes, her friends to greet; There's not another maiden In all the world so sweet! Her name? The roses tell you! 'Tis the blackbird's tune! This smiling little lady Is just our own dear June! A pitched battle?A base ball game. Bonds of iniquity?Defaulting bonds. Kip and tuck?"What the dressmaker ' does. Should telephone appliances come under I the head of hollo ware? An overflow meeting?That of two gushj ing maidens after a long separation. Grand temples are built of small stones, I 3 ?1'TTAn CTt-? oil r?T7f>ntC I UilU iJIL'Ut iivco juiaut uy ui. oujuu viv?v. j A half column of scandal will sell more paper than a three column sermon. Cure for dyspepsia?Give a huDgry dog a piece of meat, and chase him till he drops it. From a smart hoy's composition on babies: "The mother's heart gives 4th joy at the baby's 1st 2th." Woman loses considerable time before the looking-glass, but man loses more before the social glass. It is the journal that was not started to ' fill a long-felt want that usually fills it the quickest. The paper that becomes a "phenomena] success"' before it is a month old is the shortest lived. The paper that is most frequently alluded to as "our esteemed contemporary" is the ' most hated by its rivals. The perpetual motion problem has cosl ' ?50,000,000, and a small boy at church sti! remains the nearest approach to a solution. A wag, speaking of an unsuccessful actor, l said: ' 'Ambition egged him on to the stage "r and disgusted audiences egged him off it.' [ If tramps would only scour tin-pans a.' thoroughly as they do the country, ho^ ^ useful they would be. r! Arc fat men likely to be better men thai . i their leaner neighbors? It is certainly difl 5 cult for a fat man to stoop to anything lov ) I see that a genius has constructed ai engine of paper." "Yes; wonder what kinc of an engine?" "Stationary, of course." Satan would have to skip around prettj . lively to find mischief enough for all "th< hands" that are "idle"?to do. j A lady may surely be expected to maki -> a gi eat noise in the world when her ores I is covered all over with bugles. [ Despise not tne day of small things: th< ballot of the small man counts just as mucl . in the returns as the vote of the giant. In England people never "go to bed;' tbev "retire." Moreover, they never "ge 3 up;"'' they "descend" in the morning. J It is very bad taste for a "wife to growl a t her husband for tracking mud into tb * house?for what is home without its mud 1 der? I Sunday school teacher (to Ah Sin, tin 3 laundryinan)?"What are the wages of sin 3 Ah Sic?Sleventv-five cents a dozen. X< s checkec no washee. 1 Chinese are said to live on next to notl - ing. but they are Sybarites in comparisoj I with New York It" ins, who support a: t entire family on ?2 a week. I The most absent-minded of men is th e professor who, when he hears himse! knocking the ashes out of his pipe, wil f.! crv. "Come in." ] - J 7 11 A lady and gentleman accidentally touch i I ing each other's feet under the table. '"Se t! cret telegraphy," said she. "Communioi 5 of soles," said he. e The blacksmith is a queer fellow. Whei he goes on a strike he refuses to strike, am when he refuses to strike he keeps on strik A lady says this talk about when girl ; ought to marry is sheer nonsense. Th r | question is not when they ought, but whei s j they can. 1 Tie government has sent one millioi r young shad to the Pacific Coast. If the: ~ do well people there can pick a bone wit! 1 the Chinese as often as they like. ? . "Why is a 'young lady's' age after sh 1 reaches twenty-five like a floral weddim j bell?" asks an outsider. And he says it i * I ''twnnsp it is nflvfr tnl'fl " I A Connecticut woman claims to be 11' 1 years eld, and she probably is, for we se< " j by ihe papers that she knows how to mak< r old-fashion pumpkin pies. 2 A widow of forty-six, who has had twen j ty-oue children, wants another husband * One who has had experience in running a: 1 orphan asylum preferred. ^ The editor who bemoans the decadena I of American homor makes a most disma '; failure when he attempts anything in th< ) humorous line himself. | The man who carves at table is either ar ' ass or a hog. If he takes the best piece foi T himseif, he is a hog; if he doesn't, he's ar i ass. : I There is a glacier in Alaska movini ;; along at the rate of a quarter of a mile ? r j year. In this country we have no glaciers but we have messenger boys. It is estimated that one million house eats are used for the fur trade annually. So they do not mysteriously disappear from the back fence in vain. "Got on your husband's cravat, haven't i you?" asked a neighbor of Mrs. Bilkins. 1 "'Yes." replied Mrs. B. sadly; "it's the : only tie there is between us now." SIk? He's a very knowing dog; why, v.'ir n it's ten o'clock papa always closes the house, you know, and then Carlo barks; he's going to bark now. "Sam, why are lawyers like fishes?" "I don't meddle wid de subjec', Pomp." ! "Why don't you see? 'Cause dcy am so j fond ob debate." Delightful absent-mindedness of a Ger; mau professor. Professor?What a couple I of bonnie little children, dear baioness! ; Twias. I suppose? Baroness?You have guessed rignny. rroiessor?iire nicy ootn yours? Some one who asks. "Will hair grow after death?" seems to be troubled -with a suspicion that a bald headed angel 'would look rather peculiar. "If a man could only catch fish as easily as lis can He about it!" laments an editor, lie could, if he only understood fishing as well as he does lying. Shops that sell at fair profit have no margin witli which to '"give away" articles to I their customers. These so-called gifts are the result of an overcharge or a sacrifice of good material. It has been decided that hereafter bride'scake cannot be sent through the mails in letters, as the regulations prohibit the sending of packages which weigh more than 40 pounds by mail. Two fair white arms are around my neck, Her lips to mine she doth foudly press, i And I know she is trying to get that check i I promised last week for a new silk dress. i j "Tobacco kills sheep-ticks," according | to an agricultural exchange. Then by all j means provide your sheep with tobacco. It : is true :hv.t it is a filthy hacit, but it must I be preferable to ticks. "Women are not inventive, as a rule," ; says a writer. Any married man wliose wife invents a new hiding-place for his pipe and slippers every day will not agree with this statement. A German prima donna remarks that in the Fatherland the ladies believe exercise is goou for the health, and do a great deal of walking, while American ladies seem to be afraid of hurting themselves by walking. Marriage is a slice of bread and butter, spread with iam, given to overgrown chil dren. The jam soon disappears, and nothing remains but dry bread?though even that is sometimes appreciated. The way to wealth is as plain as the way to market. It depends chiefly on two saEaamaMangMM?n??a?BB*?a words?industry and frugality. That is, waste neither time nor money, but make the best use of both. A dreamy -writer says it would be curious to follow a'pound of silk from its spinning until it becomes a lady's dress. "2so doubt; but most men would prefer to follow it after it became a dress, and while the lad}' was in it. What a relief it is, after suffering for ten days with a jumping toothache, to climb a dentist's stairs with a heroic resolution to have it out if it kills you, and then find that the tooth-puller is absent from town. Now is the farmer's soul serene, His joy intense and utter; The tax "on oleomargarine Means higher price for butter. "I love your daughter better than I love my life," "said he to her obstinate father. "Well," replied the heartless man, "go and commit suicide and let her get rid of you. That won't be much of a proof, but it will be satisfactory to me." "It seems to me that the lard is diminishing rapidly, Man-," said the mistress to the servant girl. "Yes'm," was the reply of the maid, "out tnen you Knew wneu you bought it that it was short'ning." It does not constitute a marriage engagement, according to the laws cf this State, to call a girl your darling blue-bell, even if you are squeezing her hand at the same time. It is simply an emphatic compliment. Professor Proctor says thai the world will be a .solid glare of ice in 60,000,000 years, and asks: '"Where shall we get anything to eat then?'' To the man who is unable to determine where his next meal is coming from, this seems to be a needless curiosity. It is well enough to embroider "Goodnight" in sleepy colors on a pillow sham, but when the bolster is stuffed with prairie *- ^ waHvapo io rr tn PcAf*. Hity, aLiU IiiC HicLUtiCoo xo wv 1 brate its golden wedding, the hospitable 1 wish is too sarcastic. "If there is such a thing as justice in this world, I mean to have it," is what the : burglar remarked as he left, with his booty, the hou rv of the lawyer who had charged I him j the day before for clearing him ! when under arrest for house breaking. A:i old lady hearing that a kindergarten ; was to be established in her town, said, em1 phalically, "Well, they'll never make it , pay. Everybody around here has gardens of their own, and vegetables can be had for ' nothing here in the summer time." ' "You say the trout weighed 10 pounds'?" , "Yes, sir; it was the biggest trout I ever ! saw." "And he got away from you?" "Yes." "Will you take an oath to that?" "I'll take no more oaths; I swore enough r when he got away." . The average dime-museum has many curiosities that are well worth seeing. But | we will venture to say that not one of them 1 can boast among its varied list of attractions such a phenomenon as a man whe J can umpire a game 01 case Dan ana give 2 perfect satisfaction to both sides, and nevei by liis decisions create a single kick. 2 Mohammed says: "Woe unto them who s give scant measure and exact full measure from others." This may all be true; but 3 the average bar-tender can y3nk you t i spoonful of beer and a mug of foam, anc palm it off on you for a glass of beer, anc ? never allow his feelings to mar his profe? t siomd smile, Mohammed or no Mohammed If there is anything that sickens a smal t boy and makes him feel about as uncom e fortable as David Davis in the dog days, ii . is, ivhen he is sitting on a pile of stones surreptitiously viewing a game of base bal through a knot-hole in the fence, to hav< ? some one step ud behind and kijk th< ? f K, dbUiJCO UVULA UUUCi JUJLJJLL. 3 There is a time to laugh and a time tc sing, and a time to be merry and a tim< 1 to weep: but there is no time in this wide 1 wide world to button a brand new, four 1 ply linen collar on a celluloid collar-buttor without wishing that some one had inventec e a few word of heavy calibre to fill a loug-fel' f want. 1 When the cool breeze of evening has sub sided sufficiently to enable the mosquito t( remain in one spot, and a man is swinging idly to and fro in a hammock, and thai a mosquito comes near him, it fills him witl keen disappointment to strike out witt 2 might and main at that insect, miss him I and go flying out of the hammock anc down the stoop from the force of the blow, "What is the proper use of Sunday'?' s asks a religious weekly. The answer is s( e numerous that we haven't space to print it, a The woman with a new bonne thas one answer, the man who loves fishing has an 2 other, while the owner of a pair of fas' rr horses may differ from both. The base j ball 1st seems to think that the proper us( of Sunday in the West is to play a game for the championship; but in the East, he 1 devotes the lay to explaining how the lasl = four games lost by his nine might have beer s won." There is nothing so diverse as the diversity of opinion in regard to the proper ' use of Sunday. e 2 IIULES FOR GOSSIP. If anything unkind you hear * About some one you know, my dear, Do not, I pray you, it repeat j When you that some one chance to meet; For such news has a leaden way Of clouding o'er a sunny day. 1 But if you something pleasant hear 5 About some one you know, my dear, Make haste?to make great haste 'twere weu? r To lier or him the same to tell; For such news has a golden way Of lightningup a cloudy day. > John Sherman and the 1S77 Affair. ; In Wellington, where he is better known than anywhere in the world, a great change : of sentiment has been going on in his favor. For a long time he was under the shadow of the Hayes unpopularity not confined to Democrats. It would amaze a good many . people to know how frankly eminent Republicans repudiate Mr. Hayes. Himself, a , harmless, well meaning man, he inc irr-:d all the odium of the tool of his party. Tlie wisuom ol xo n is mure iiiun uouuieu among Republicans id Congress to-day. : The}' scarcely repiy to allusions to it or. the lioor of the House and Senate, and it would scarcely be overstating it to say that they recognize an error of judgment. No belter proof could be brought than the fac-t that ia the last Presidential campaign, during the season of doubt, there was everywhere, among Democrats and Republicans, an expressed determination to have no more 1S7G doings. Whether John Sherman arrived at this opinion or not he remains silent.? Neic York Mail and Express. Railroad Accidents. The freight train on the South Carolina Railroad which left Columbia at 8.30 last night met with an accident just beyond Kingville. A cow .was run over at the point mentioned and was knocked from the track, but rolled back from an embankcint r?onc?>/l A11 monf r\f x xut ciuu. i4.c?w.va iuv/ u^nuiiii^uw kjl cuvvjij.! cars. W. A. Steward and William Kirkwood, brakemen, wore slightly injured, and some of the cars were pretty badly wrecked. The wreck was cleared in ample i time for the passage of the regular train bound for Columbia this morning. A freight train on the Spartanburg and Union Railroad collicftd with a material train ;this morning at 5 o'clock, about a mile from Rich Hill. The engines Were slightly damaged, but no one was hurt.? Columbia Beard, June 4. Storm Signals. As the coming of a great storm is heralded by the display of cautionary signals, so is the approach of that dread and fatal disease, Consumption of the. Lungs, usually announced in advance by pimples, botches, eruptions, ulcers, glandular swellings, and kindred outward manifestations of the in[ ternal blood poison, which, if not promptly j expelled from the system, attacks the delicate tissues of the lungs, causing them to ulcerate and break down. Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" is the great remedy foi this, as for all diseases having their origin in bad blood. It improves the appetite and digestion, increases nutrition and builds up the wasted system. The young man who stood on his own merits became very much fatigued with the performance. The Anderson doctors are kept quite busy now. GENERAL NEWS NOTES.: r Items of Interest Gathered from Various j Quarters. ( A Cre in New Orleans destroyed $30,000 < worth of property. t Crops in the vicinity of Air Mount, Miss., have been ruined by a hailstorm. < The decrease in the public debt since the ( 30th June, 1SS6, is ?92,804,1)21.:; i. Buffalo Bill proposes to continue on ; speaking terms "with the English nobility, . as long as it pays. 1 Jay Gould is down with a bad attack of , neuralgia at his country home on the Hudson. A distinct shock of earthquake^was felt in Jamestown, Is. Y., on Tuesday morn! ing, but no damage was done. The Prince of "Wales is said to have "dropped" a comfortable fortune on the i result of the last Derby race. It is estimated at the Treasury Department that the public debt has for the month of May been reduced about ?10,000,000. ? Sixty-two bodies have been recovered from the Udstone pit, near Glasgow, and twelve are still entombed. The Comptroller of the Currency has appointed a Receiver for the Palatka National Bank. The Synod of the Reformed Presbyterian Church of America has adopted resolutions against post office work on Sunday. The National Bank of Palatka, Fla., is embarrassed, and the Comptroller of the Currency has ordered an investigation of its affairs. A fire in Hamburg, Germany, on Tuesday night, destroyed docks, quays and nth fir nronertv. valued at several million marks. "Walter and GharLs Davis, brothers, desperate characters, of Perry county, Indi ana, were lynched on Monday for outraging a white girl 14 years old. The news from Italy indicates that there can be no reconciliation between the Vatican and the Quirinal with the restitution of the Pope's temporal power. The Young Men's Democratic Club, of Hudson count}', N. J., has organized a movement to secure funds for a monument to the late General McClellan. Buffalo Bill is being overwhelmed with social honors in London and with requests to contribute sketches of border life in America to various English journals. Mrs. Frank Leslie, now in Paris, will go to the City of Mexico in September, to aryvncm fop tVi*. Tvnh1i><>ti"nn there of a Snan ish-American newspaper. Oscar "Wilde's latest attempt at literature is a short novel of the blood and thunder species entitled "Lord Arthur Saville's ' Crime; a Tale of Cheiromancy." ; The late Jomes Lick left $100,000 for the decoration of the San Francisco city hall. Competitive designs for a group of bronze | statuary to be placed therein have been ; called for. The outcome of the late political crisis j in France is said to be the placing of an 1 unusually economical administration in ! power. JBoulanger is greeted with great ' enthusiasm. I It is said that when John L. Sullivan was in Leadville, Col., recently, he went to church and put ?400 on the contribution plate. The contribution plate is shown in j proof of the assertion. The Princess of Wales has presented , Mrs. James Brown Potter with a handsome gol'cl bracelet, set with sapphires and dia' ? ? ***/-! f\r> o-iif/^rr-roTkl-k lntfm* filler? Txritli J IUUUU3, OUU *wbuv..i. Ai.AAvv* *?**.*> expressions of friendly regard. ; A Washington -correspondent says: I am told by one vrlio ought to know that the j President will not consider an appointment > to the vacancy on the Suprene bench till fall, as there is no necessity to do so. 1 John Sherman has made a big speech bei fore the Illinois Legislature and a gatherl! ing of Republicans. He compared the t records, of the two great parties, in ^politics and finances, and urged the necessity of Republican ascendency. > Richard "Williams, in attempting to jump on a south-bound train passing over the t James river bridge, fell a distance of 60 , fppt. balow. Strance to sav. he suffered I j only the breaking of bis collar bone and t I soine severe bruises. II The boiler :in the Hitchcock Manufactur. ing Company's works at Cortland, N. Y., , exploded Monday, demolishing the engine. room, killing one man and mortally ' vrounding two others. Cause unknown. j Sentence oJ: death has been imposed on Mrs. Chiari C'ignarcle, of New York, who t was convicted of murder in the first degree . for shooting her husband. She was con? demned to be hanged in the. Toombs prison ; yard, Friday, July 22. : Miss Anthony, known as the only "lady t, j lawyer of Dublin,''having brought suit for 11 ?10,000 against Sir John Arnott, proprietor i of the Irish Times, dismissed her suit, "without prejudices," because one of the jurors laughed at her. Since the adjournment of Congress, Senator Riddleberger has devoted his time entirely to his newspaper and his law practice. In less than three months he has actp'l as senior counsel in six important i C!--es in his State and gained every one. A prominent official who has talked with the President says that he has decided to give the vacant Justiceship of the Supreme Court to some Southern man, but the se! lection will not be confined to the late Judge Woods's circuit. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania susj tains a number of decisions of lower Courts, irom wmcn appeal was uikcu, ueuyiu? uuc right of the S:ate to tax mortgages. The decision cuts off about half a million dollars revenue, bat settles a long vexed question. The General Assembly of the United Presbyterian Church has been earnestly discussing the question of instrumental music in public worship. A protest was entered by several members against giviDg any money from the mission fund to congregations using the organ in public wor! ship. ! John Doyle, an ex-policeman of BaltiI more, who Las quite a local reputation as a wrestler, defeai.cd Matsada Sarakick, the Japanese athlete, in a catch-as-you-can match, winning two falls out of three. The j match was for $250 a side, and was a splenj did exhibition. i The boiler on an elevator in Huntingdon, W. Ya., exploded Monday morning, killing three men ana badly injuring three others. A dozen besides were more or less injured, and one man is missing. The elevator was run by the boiler of an old locomotive that had been condemned. Tne trial of Sharpe in ]New York, gave rise to rather a lively scene on Friday. His counsel ?rew violently indignant about the charge that some jurors had been tam pered with, and tlie State's attorney retorted very sharply. The proceedings were of no public interest. A horse drawing a carriage containing three ladies and a gentleman, became frightened at a train near Kansas City, Mo., on Monday night, and ran violently against a freight car. One of the ladies was killed, and the others were mortally hurt. The gentleman suffered no serious injury. An autograph letter of John "Wesley, which has just been sold in London, contains this sentence: "For natural sweetness of temper, for courtesy and hospitality, I have never seen an}* people like the Irish." The Xew York Herald naively remarks that the Tory Ministry did not put in a bid for this letter Wm. H. Council, a colored Democrat from Alabama, has complained to the Inter-State Commission that the \Vestern and Atlantic Railroad charged hirri first-class fare, but made him ride on a "Jim Crow" car. He asks tlic Commission to award him $25,000 damages, with such other relief as may be proper. There have been two attempts within the past few weeks by the prisoners in Sumter jail to effect an escape. Last Saturday the janitor while taking the prisoners their morning meal missed one of them, and while looking for him he was struck over the head by the missing prisoner who was hiding behind a column. The janitor in a few minutes overpowered his assailant, who was then put in irons. A St. Louis paper states that the Mobile and Ohio road has drawn the color line on excursion raLes to the meeting of the Knights of Labor in Mobile on August 8. ?t?WH?BtBBttSflaMMSBBBMB?JBEMt rhe tickets secure privileges to a particular j :lass, shutting out great crowds. The "way j his is done is by stamping the tickct col- j. >red, so that none but persons of the African race will be able to avyil themselves of he rate. A. G. Hill, a traveling book agent reprc-1 senting a Cincinnati house, called cn Sdtur- j lay at the house of Mr. Terri, a farmer i .iving near Corsicana, lex., and, finding! ao one at home but Tern's daughter, gross [y insulted her. She ordeved him oil and j informed her father who was at work in : the field. The father purued Hill with a I shotgun, and, overtaking aim at the next j farm, shot him?from the effects of which ! uc uicu in a iv;? ^uuic. ? While the funeral profession of the late i Dr. TV. W. Wilson, a well known New ; Orleans physician, who was buried at Pa- j ducah, Ky., was en route to Mt. lventon cemetery, a runaway horse in the cortege | overturned the hearse containing the body and smashed thing? up generally. 3Irs. Joseph II. Johnson and Mrs. Chiles H. Johnson were thrown from a bugey in the confusion and seriously injured. The hearse was totally wrecked and a new one had to be procured before the procession could procecd to the cemetery. Congressman McAdoo, of 2s ew Jersey, well known as a personal and political friend of Mr. Randall, has been talking about political prospects. He says that Mr. Randail will not be a candidate for Speaker of the House, and Mr. Carlisle will be re elected; that the tariff can be reduced if the Speaker will form the Ways and Means Committee by the exclusion of "extremists" on both sides; that there will probably' be 100 amendments offered to the Inter-State Commerce act, and he expects that the commission feature will be repealed. SOUTH CAROLINA NEW?. Spring chickens are scarce, small and high-priced in Anderson. The proposition to buy a steam fire engine in Marion was defeated by a vote of 29 to 4. The doctors report a good deal of sickness in Laurens county. Mt. Carmel's public schools will run four months and three weeks. Greenville is iroing to have another cotton | factory with Col. Hammetat the head of it. j "Children's Day" was duly observed by the Methodist Sunday Schools all over the State. I Col. A. Coward, post office ins]>ector, is | making a tour of the State in his official ca [ pacuy. j A great number of deaths liave occurred among the negroes of upper Carolina during the past week. The new cotton factory at Mountain Shoals will probably develop a town of 2,000 inhabitants and a cash cotton trade of 12,000 bales a year. The Town Council of Laurens, in accordance with the provisions of the new charter, has been working convicts on the streets in default of payment of liines imposed. The election in Newberry Township on the question of subscribing ?10,000 to the Columbia Newberry and Laurens Railroad, will be held the 9th instant. The Rev. J. Hawkins, D. D., of Newberry, wishes it known that he has not ap plied for admission into the South Carolina Conference of the Methodist Church. Marion county is movsng as one man for the cotton factory, The interest in this enterprise is by no means confined to the town; it is being felt all over the county. Uncle Gideon Yeargin, living in the neighborhood 01 juorron, Anuerson county, bought com for the first time in forty years, the other day; but says if nothing happens he "will have corn to sell next year. Mr. "W, H. Lane, of the Broad River section of Newberry, sent in a cotton stalk IS inches high, with two shapes on it. He says he took it from a thirty acre field, and that it is a fair sample. Hewlett Sullivan, said to be the third richest man in Greenville county, and who was one of the most widely known and marked men in that part of the State, died Monday at the residence of Doctor J. P. Latimer in Greenville. The Turkey Creek canal, of Sumter, has been cut through from end to end. The contractor now"has a gangof workmen going over the line and putting the finishing touches on the work wherever it may be needed. The work will probably be finished next week. Col. J. T. Barron, of Columbia, general attorney of the W. C. & A. R. R., says that a branch road from the main line of the Wilson and Florence road is sure to be built via Little Rock to Bennettsviile or Tatum Station. Early (Monday morning a colored man named Robinson went to a field in Brushy Creek section of Anderson county, where Kobert Anderson, also colored, was wci-king, and, without saying a word, struck Anderson in the head with a hoe, inflicting a fatal wound; it is thought. Col. T. J. Moore, living near Spartanburg, a few days ago, with the aid of one assistant, took SCO pounds of honey from twenty-fiivehiyes of the Simplicity pattern. From some of the hives he took sixty to seventy-five pounds. His wife and daughter packed about 400 pounds of the honey in shipping boxes in one day. The quality is very fine, the season having been about dry enough for honey. A plan is on foot to purchase the Female College property in the suburbs of Spartanburg and turn it into a preparatory and training school to Wollord College, and at the same time furnish boarding accommodations to all students who desire to' 'mess." The Southern Christian Advocate says that the scheme is meeting with much favor among methoditts. It has been brought before only two district conferences, and already more than one-third of the necessary $9,000 has been raised. A ir<01 1'ICCJ lor .uarnogc res*. Camden, N. J., is a good place fur marriages, and the clergymen there make t. good thing of it. Those who do the most mairying are the Rev. J. Y. Dobb'ns, Methodist; the Rev. J. J. Sleeper, Episcopal; the Rev. J. J. Ileisler, Methodist, and the Rev. Isaac W. Ragley, Baptist. Mr. Dobbins averages 140 couples a month, and as his average fee is ?4 a couple, he mtifces about $8,720 a year. Mr. Sleeper unites about GO couples a month, receiving about the same average fee. He has a diagram lithographed, showing the most direct route from the ferries to his house. Altogether the clergy of Camden must make fully $25,000 a year out of the marriage business. ?Faith travels by an unseen track to honor and glory, neither shall anything turn her aside. Her way may not lx plain at this moment, but it shall btmade so. God is with those who trust in him; and what or whom shall we fear when God is with us? In due time the hand of the Lord shall be seen. If bilious, or suffering from impurity of blood, or weak lungs, and fear of consumption (scrofulous disease of the lungs). Lake Dr. Pierce.s "Golden Medical Diseovsrv," and it will cure you. By druggists Will purify the BLOOD mnalata the LIVER and KIDNEYS nnd BjE8TOa| theaudVIGStti of Appetite, IndigestionJLr.ck of TB3BBfga\ Strength and Tired Feeling absolutely cured: Bones, inns- i cles and. nerrec receive new j force. Enlivens the mind ^""raiilh and supplies Brain Power. j - 1 ? - Simennj? iron: computing I " la 8? Q peculiar to their sexwill find | bMUIRVi fnDB. HABTER'S I20N | TONTC a safe and speedy cure. Gives a clear, healthy complexion. Frequent attempts at counterfeiting only add to thd popularity of the original. Do j not experiment?get the Oeigdjal and Best. g Dr. HARTER'S LIVER PIU-S?, , k ' B Care Constipation,Liver Complaint and Sick g i Headache. Sample Doso and Dream Book 13 i \mailed oa reoolpt of two cents la postage, f j THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY. ! St, Loalv, Mo, I mmmm ?-?????? Killed By a Spider's Bite. 3Ir. Geo. Kibitz, of Xo. G50 5th avenue, Xew York, was dandling his little one-yearold son on his knees Saturday afternoon, when he noticed a dark .sray, short -legged spider crawling on his clnld's hand. "Before he could brush the insect away the child gave a cry of pain and its hand began to smell. A doctor was called and pronounced the child poisoned by the spi- ] uer's bite. Sunday evening it died after intense suffering. The Ottawa Fall Improvement Compam* will open their books for subscription of stock on the 13th of June. When ?20,000 have been subscribed an organization will be effected. I Sensation! Why is it; that three bottles ofp3. _B. B.i are sold in Atlanta to one cf; any ether blood remedy, and twice as much consumed in the State of Georgia as any other preparation*? 2s"o one need take our word, but simply ask the druggists. Ask iho people. They are competent witnesses. Sis houses in Atlanta are buying B. B. B. in five and ten gross lots, find some of them buy as often as even two months. Why these unprecedented sales here at home with so little advertising? Modesty forbids us making a reply. Had B. B. B. been before the public a quarter or J*df a century, it would not be necessary to be bolstered up with crutches of page advertisements now. Merit will conquer and down monoy. $1.00 WORTS $500.00 For four years I have been a sufferer from a terrible form of Rheumatism, which reduce' me so low that all hope of recovery was given up. I have suffered the most excruciating pain day and night, and often while writhing in agony have wished I could d^e. I have tried everything known for that disease, but nothing did me any good, and have had some of the finest physicians of the State to wcrh on me, but ail to no effect. I have spent over $800 without finding relief. 1 am now proud to say that after using only one bottle of B. B. B. I am enabled to walk around and attend to business, and I would not take $500 for the benefit received from one single bottle of B. B. B. I refer to all merchants and business men of this town. Yours, most troly, E. 0. GAB A. "Waverly, Walker county, Texas. Demonstrated Merit. Spakta, Ga., May 15, 1S8G. Blood Balu Co: You will please ship us pe:<: first freigbt one gross B. B. B. It caves us pleasure to report a good trade for this preparation. Indeed it has far eclipsed ail other blood remedies, both in demonstarted merit and rapid sale ^ith us. Roziep. & Vabdzman. All wlio desire full information about the cause ->nd cure of Blood Poisons, Scrofula and Scrofulous swellings, ulcers, Sores, Klieuma lism, iviuiu-y i.ompiaims, (.auuxu, ei.v , secure by mail, free, a copy our 32 pajre Illustrated Book of Wonders, filled with the most wonderful and startling proof ever beiore known. Address, BLOOD BALM oo., Atlanta, oa. mm mm vm CATAWBA COUNTY, N. C. New'y fitted op wi;h new Hotel and Fu-niture for over 400 quests and the proprie oi-s would be jrlad to see all their old and many new fr;ends here. The medical properties ol the water are unriveled for Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Liver, Kidney and Urinary diseases, 6ener.il Debility and Nervous Prostration. Healthier location not to he found. BATHS COMPLETE. Cool, Shower. Warm and Hot. Sulphur, Hot Air snd Vapor ! atlis. tine Band of Music and all Amusements kept otrirst class Watering Places, Write for catalogue. Dr.. E. 0. ELLIOTT & SON, Proprietors. mam Froia the World's Best Makers, AT FACTORY PBICES. Easitsst Terms of Payment Slgbt Grand Makers, and Over Three Hundred Styles to Select From. PIANOS: Chick8ring, Mason & Hamlin, Mathnshek, Bent and Arioiu ORGANS: Sasoi & Hamlin, Orchestra! and Bay State, Pianos aad Organs delivered, freight paid, to all points Sooth. Fifteen days' trial, and freight Paid Both Ways, if not satisfactory. Order, and test the Instruments In four own Homes, COLUMBIA MUSIC SOUSE, Sr&ach of LUDDEN & BATES' SO'tJTEEEN MUSiC HOUSE. WIIC2S AND T3SJIS THE 8 AILS. 3W._THIT3TP, Kanajrw. IpOil auC iEpg^gJ by "Engineers, i ?l 9VP98 V-JMechanlcsandall 11aUfiftft . m Fanners. $> - m _mii. 1 ^ frjaAperfectLercfln qtnrira* = TS1ASOG* JllinentfarRanraadEnflJff. = Hlluilaa UmAXmrn L.ULL. sn f[ -j n | &r UllUitlU UCIUl.li a wlcan?, m- ;1 of waterfalls, laveilng latmv Li Aissrte1? liaam/ ?36 J' 1 . v% double ertenboa M \ target rod, $6loc; B| M \ 'rita tripod 57.00 f m m Satisfaction abV F M ^ fi\ soJuteJy guarB anteed. *- Ask W? :J&> $7,00 \ Jforcircalar, 1 IWtCftf HMHTim, Tffc ' PITTS CAKMEfATIVE.! FOR ISFAXTS A.^D TEETHING CHILD KEN. An insi ant relief for colic of infants. Cures Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Cholera Infantum or any diseases of the stomach and bowels. Makes the critical period rn* : r j t t. -1 ux xucLiiiL;^ baiu <aiu easy. is a saie ana pleasant tonic. For sale by all drnggists, and for wholesale by Hcwakd, Wellet & Co., Augusta, G3, I a?? | tfc IiVioit twenty years ago I discovered a 1: nounced It cancer. I have tried a number of p ncnt tcnefit. Among the number vrerc one or gj was lUe fire to the sore, causing Intense pain. S S. S. S. had done for others similarly afflicted. ? the second bottle the neighbors cou'.d notice th p S| health had been bad for two or three years?I S3 ualiy. I had a severe pain in rr.j breast. Afte: ^ me and I grew stouter than I had been for seve La little rpot about the size of a half dime, an< every one with cancer to give S. S. S. a fair tria Sins. XA>*CY J. McCONAUC Feb. 16, l^. Swift's Sr>ecific Is entirely vegetable, ar impurities from the blood. Treatise on Blood v-, . THE SWIFT AIL HUMORS, ^ from a common SIolcli, or Eruption, t; the worst Scro*uIa. Salt-rlienm, i: Fever - rores," Scaly or Rongh -1 Skin, in short, all diseases caused by bad blood are conquered by this powerful, purifvinjr. and iaviscratinjr medicine. Great Ealing Ulcers rapidly heal under its benisn iniiaencc. Especially has it manifested its ;>otency in curzner Tetter, Hose RaSn, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Scrof^ uloas Sores and Swellings# Hipjo-Tit disease, fTliitc Swellings, Goitre, or Tiiiclc Neck, and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents in stamps for a , large treatise. with colored plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount for a treatise or Scrofulous Affections. "THE BLOOD IS THE Liix^' Thoroughly cleanse ic by using Dr. Pierce'* (iolden Ztledical Discovery, and good digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spir? its, and viJal strengtl;, will be established. CONSUMPTION, : which is Scrofula of t3ae JLvings, is arrested and cured by this remedy, if taken be- J fore the hist stages of the disease are reached. J From its marvelous power over this terribly fat al disease, when first offering this now celebrated rcme<ly to the public. Dr. PrERCE jught seriously of calling it his u on- WWl sumption *' but abandoned that 99H )::i;ne as too limited for a medicine -which, from its wonderful combination of tonic, er strengthening. alterative. or blood-cleansing; nnri-biiious, j>c-ccoral. and nutritive propertic?, is une-iuo'ed, net only as a remedy for consumption. but lor ail Clircnic X>i*? ; cases o? the 3 ------ r-. >v>/rS 5 Binno : li?&\ mm luiiijoi Jf you feci dull, drovrsy, debilitated, have ; sallow color of sicin, or yeftovrish-bvown spots ! on laco or body, frequent headache or dizzi! nesf\ bad taste in mouth, internal heat or chills, alternating- with hot fleshes, low spirita , and gloomy forebodings, irregular appetite, ! and coated tongue, you are suffering from lEur.igessicn, Siyspepssa, and TorpUl ! Sjlvcrs or '*?5iIiou5?es?.? In many I cases only part of these symptoms are expei rienced. As a remedy for ail such cases, I Dr. Piercers Golden Medical Bis* j co very 13 unsurpassed. t For Weak JLuzijrs, Spitting of j Dlood, Shortness of Brcalli, Bron* chilis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and I kincred affections, it is an efficient remedy. 1 Sold ur Druggists, at $1.00, or SIX j SOTTAS i'or $5-Cf>. ? Scad ten cents ir. stamps for Dr. Pierce's * ! boo'.: 0:1 Consumption Address, I *V<irI<i?s Dispensary ITIo&icaV j elation, 663 Main Street, Buitalo, N. T. jiug|$508 REWARD ! r*y / is offered by the proprietors j .'%/ ir. i of Dr. Ssge's Catarrh Bemedy i --s \ i0~ a case of catarrh whica i m they caanot cure. If you ??* have a lischarge from tho nose, offensive or other vise, partial Joss of smell, taste, or hearing, weak eyea, dulipala or pressure in head, you lave Cauynrk. Thousands of cases terminate in consmnption. Dr. Sage's Catarrh xtEtEOY cures the worst , cases of CatarrJz. *4 Co Id tn the Head.'5 ! and Catarrhal Headache. 50 cents* i m winkle & co. n==5==p>] manufacturers, I COTTON 6INS asd PBEsfiJ . ' j Cotton Seed Gil SCiils, Cotton Seed Winters, Cano JliZla. Saw 3Si2?s, Slzaftics', PcIIejs, Hangers, "Wind Kills and Castings Pumps end Tanks. i COLT) MEDAL awarded at Cotton* ExposI, tion, Atlanta. Ga-. Dallas, Texas, and Charles- ' ! ton, S. c. Write for prices and terms to E. Van Winkle & Co., Box 83, ATLANTA, GA. MOTHER'S FKEFAft BID . MAKES Child-Birth Easy! The time lias come imea the terrible agony of this critical period to woman's life can be avoided! A distinguished physician, who spent It years !n this branch of practice, left ti e cbtld-b^anng woman this legacy, 1h3 mother'. Fe^nd, and to-day there are thousands of women who, hav'neusediliis remedy before confiwmeiit, -1-e up and call his name bie.-scd. We cm prove all we claim b livin2 wlme s'-s, and anyone intereiited car. C211, or hare their, has hands ca .i-rl c/./i tho nrlcrfrtil wfc:cti wo caua t puoilsiL All cirajrgi-48 *e!l ;l For particulars addrets BtiDnsi.D r.EGCLATOB Co., Atlanta, Q* f OH.AKLOTTE ' V -" * t ? " ?WflPSfMISJ L - &ii y ifi. jSESSM B?Gli\S SiPT. 7, 1887. I X* O DsSI 1TUTE for YOUNG LADIES -l i ii; the South has advantages supeI rior to those offered here in every departi merit?Collegiate, Art and Music. Only experienced and aecomnlislvd ; The building is lighted with gas, warmed ' with the best wrou^ht-iron furnaces, has ! hot and cold water "baths, and first-class : appointments as a Boarding School in ! every respect?no school in the South has ' superior. Seduction for two or more from the same ! family or neighborhood. Pupils ch rged only i from date of entrance, after the first month ' of the session. For Catalogue, with full particulars, ad: dress Key. W>L E. ATKINSON, Charlotte, jN. C. ,3 Cruel" ii&TF ? Ittle sore on my cheek, and the doctors pro hyslcian3, but without receiving any permatwo specialists. The medicine the7 applied I saw a statement In the papers telling what I procured some at once. Before I >od used at my cancer was healing up. 2Iy general had a hacking cough and spit blood contin: taking six bottles of S. S. S. my cough left ral years. My canccr has healed over all but I it Is rapidly disappearing. I would advise J HEY, Ashe Grove, Tippecanoe Co., Ind. a seejr.s to care canccrs by forcing oat tfce S and Skin Direases mailed free. . B SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.