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' - - . ':-v GENERAL XEH8 NOTES. ! ei Items ol Interest Gathered from Various Quarter*. j \ George TV". Cable is about to settle down a? a Bible-class teacher in Boston. : vt General Sheridan is conquering cock-; I: tails at historic Xc-vr Bedford, .'lass. I a: Jacob Sham has been sentenced to four ! years' imprisonment and $5,COO fine. ? Tie President and Lis party are having a r delightful time at Forestport. X. Y. The New England shipyards at Bath, s 3Ie., vrere burned Friday. Loss ?100,000. 0 J. R. Whipple, of Young's Hotel, Bos- r ton, carries an insurance of ?500,000 on | his life. ! i itid 3Irs. John Jacob Aster have r gone lO their Newport villa for the sum- t mer. Jay Gould does not smoke. He vents | c his tendency in this direction to smoking i the other fellows. - Simon Cameron "will sail for Europe next Wednesday, accompanied by Colonel Selt- i i zer and Larry Jerome. ! ; Despite the efforts to roust him, ex-Sena- j ] tor Conger's son still holds the postoiSce j ' fort at Washington. j Root Post G. A. R, of Syracuse, In. Y., j ' invited President and Mrs. Cleveland to i J visit Syracuse. !' Judge Allan G. Thurman has written a i1 letter, positive!}* declining to be a candidate for Governor of Ohio. " J The military elements in Sofia is turbu- j lent and is calling upon Major Peteroff, tVm now "VTi. tctor nf Wor In rpsicp The New York and Mobile Steamship Company "was organized in New York "Wednesday with a capital stock of So0,000. Cholera is rapidly increasing in Sicily. Of the 200 cases at Catania 140 have, proved fatal. t Queen Kapiolani has left New York for San Francisco. There was no demontration at her departure. A terrific tornado and hail storm is reported in Dakota. Houses were blown down and the crops ruined. Several of the police have been arrested . at "Wexford, Ireland, for assaults upon women in ejecting tenants. A large new bridge on the Illinois Central Railroad, near Chicago, fell on Saturday and killed seven workmen. The Government has engaged a tug to take supplies from Tampa to~the persons quarantined at Egmont Key, Fla. .Postmaster General Yiias, m a ietter to a postal clerk, thoroughly disapproves of the proposed convention of postal clerks. Five hundred workmen in the Swift Iron and Steel Works, of Newport, Ky.. have struck on account of a reduction of wages. Holmes E. Puryear, the murderer, of Dinwiddie county, Va., has been respited *11 1 OtK A >1 cmef In the Educational Convention of Chicago Wednesday resolutions were introduced urging the" passage of the Blair bill. Grape rot is reported all through the Piedmont section of Virginia the crop is virtuallydestroyed. The President and Hrs. Cleveland have arrived at Holland Patent, X. Y. They are the guests of 3Iiss Cleveland. T^nrvDMoo T?oilrAOr? rKrPf-tWS I have declared a dividend of 4 per cent, on ' the preferred stock parable August 1. > W. A. Gainer, of Royal Centre, Indiana, shot and killed his wife, whom he took for a burglar, Monday night. The National Educational Association is in session at Chicago. Eighteen thousand people were" present at the opening session. Archbishop Corrigan is visiting personal friends in the northern part of 2\ew York State. Adjutant General Drum is said to be in iftlinifc XJLCCXi li-i, UUU. Xiio wav army is foreshadowed. Ex-Secretary Manning gains no weight, and, according to the World, takes but little interest in passing events. Blond in. the famous tight-rope walker, will return to this country before long after an absence of 20 years. Mr. Blaine is now at Kidgraston, the beautiful place in Scotland which Mr. Carnegie rented for the summer. President Gilman, of Johns Hopkins University, has been invited to accept the presidency of the University of California. Th/i in P.-iTis "Fridav in com- i melioration of tlie fall of the Bastile was observed in an orderly manner. The Lawrence cement works at Edayville, N. Y.? were burned Friday morning. Loss ?140,000; insurance ?31,000. A. D. Hill. Vice President of. the New York Stock Exchange, suddenly expired in I the Exchange about noon Friday. The Inter-State Railroad Commission i will take a recess about the 1st August, J and make a tour of the Xorth. Secretary Lamar will leave Washington the latter part of this week for Macon, Ga., where he will attend the wedding of his daughter. Advices from Honolulu to July 5 state that everything is quiet and the new Government 'is working smoothly. The Gibsons are in jail. The local option election which was held in the Stonewall district, Virginia, Wednesday resulted in a victor}' for the "wets" by something over 100 majority.' The Catholic Herald, a New York paper -?which sustained Dr. McGlynn in his erratic course, has suspended publication for want of patronage. Thp volunteer fire department of Char lotte has disbanded. The trouble arose j ^Siit of bills made by the department, which the overmen refused to pay. Archer -^lartin, colored, was hanged at Rockingha^S2J-^C.% Tuesday, for the murder"of Henry"5tt?xeil, colored, in May last. Mrs. Craig and her niec&,-Miss Allie Phillips, were caught midway on-a high trestle near Dalton, Ga., Tuesday morning and killed by a train. The Emperors of Austria and Germany will meet on Monday next to decide upon a policy with regard to the election of Prince Ferdinand to the Bulgarian throne. Ia Cincinnati the Court has rendered a j decision declaring the Fidelity Bank charter j forfeited. The proceedings -were instituted by Comptroller Trenhbim. The French Chamber of Deputies, by a unanimous vote, has refused to accept the resignation of 31. Flouquet as president of the Chamber. A gunpowder magazine exploded at 3Ias sowah Tuesday night. Seven Italian sol j diers were killed and 13 severely and 30 j slightly wounded. Thp r>nnvpr.tion of !?en>:r:il managers of ; '?the Southern railroads, which has been in session at Fortress Monroe, adjourned last night, Frederick Krupp. the well' known German metal founder and steel gun manufacturer of Berlin, died Thursday in his villa near Essen, Prussia, aged 75. Mr. Chamberlain has submitted the new 1 Ccofter bill. It does not meet the entire j *r>rww?1 r>? Ornfter members of the ^.V.? ? House of Commons. Cate & Dwinnells, shoe manufacturers of Wadley's Falls, Newmarket, 2\ew Hamp- : shire, have failed, throwing 100 hands out j of employment. * < On account of over-production, the leather manufacturers of Newark, >T. J., *>ave resolved to stop working in hides after July 30. j A fire occurred at the brewery of the ] Louis Bergdoli Company, Philadelphia, ] Friday morning, causing a loss ?115,000; covered by insurance. j An immense sugar refinery at Montreal 1 was burned Friday morning. Loss esti- f mated at half a million dollars. Insured e mostly in American companies. r John Daily, who killed Joseph C. Kennedy in "Washington a few days ago, Las c been indicted for murdi , and will be tried d shortly. He pleads ""emporary insanity. i Mayor Hewitt refuses to have his rest o broken by reporters, and wards them off j " by saying that lie isn't reacmg newspapers i during his stay at Saratoga. ^ The Secretary of the Treasury has sent a silver _ medal to 3Iiss Edith Clark, of San a Francisco, for saving a schoolmate from u * drowning on August 31,1886. 3: J ' 'MaanmJlMllllttBMMMMBPgMMBI.il The 2se~x York liV/J hears that Gov-1 a: "Pjtticon -ci-i; ii.. nnnninted to the I T ecretaryship of the Interior in the event of [r. Lamar's going on the Supreme beach. 1 tr Ex Congressman Morrison has already ' h; earied of his duties as a member of ihe ' fi cter-S'ate Commerce Commission, and is ; sj axious to be re elected to Congress. al The United States customhouse collect >r I h; t Huron, Mich., has stopped 30 Canadians mm workinsr on the Grand Trunk Kail ' n< oad. I h One hundred and fifty men, including | u 2vera 1 prominent officers of the Knights t< f Labor, have been arrested, charged vrith | c; iot at Rochester, X. Y. \ The St. Louis Globe-Democrat insists that j c he President's refusal to visit that city has iot retarded the collection of the subscrip- b ions to the celebrated fund. I Ex-Lieutenant Governor J. L. llobinson, J >f Xorth Carolina, died Monday night at e lis home in Franklin, Macon county, aged I tO years. t Ex Governor Charley Fo-:ter, of Ohio, vho seems to have been overshadowed by s he greatness of Governor Foraker, is visit- t n<? JN'ew York on business of a private na- i ;ure. * 3 !>:. Standiford, the rich Kentuckian ? >vho wants to succced Senator Beck, has * presented to the city of Louisviile 140 acres e 5? valuable land, which he intends shall be used as a park. I 1 Twenty-two bodies have been recovered Df those who lost their lives on Sunday 1 from the swamping of the yacht Mystery * in New York Bay. Others are still missing J Wm. N. Flycn, a young man of 18, of T A ^in *? An Lancaster, was uruwueu iu a puu uu. Vuuday last in rescuing Wm. Funderburk, ' who could not swim and was about to sink : for the last time. The Tennessee Press Association, with . 29 papers represented, met Thursday above ] the clouds on the top of Roane Mountain, 1 6,849 feet above the sea. It will be in session several days. It is reported that the flux epidemic has assumed alarming proportions in Botetourt, Roanoke, Belford aad Amherst counties, Virginia. The mortality is greatest among children. R. F. Cowan, Supreme Keeper of Rec ords and Seals of the Knights oi Pythias, died at St. Louis Thursday. He was a Royal Arch Mason and Odd .b ellow 01 mgn | standing. The grand jury at "Washington have [ found an indictment against Oscar J. Har- j vey, former chief of "the horse claims di- j vision of the treasury department, charging i him with forgery. The French Chamber has passed Ferron's bill, adding to the number of regiments in the French army and augmenting the strength of the companies of the present regiments. The Gentiles in Utah carried five out of twenty-one districts in the first election held since the registration under the EdmundsTucker law. This is said to have appalled the Mormons. Two freight trains on the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad collided Wednesday ni^ht at Craigsville, Va. Both engines were wrecked and a bnikeman badly hurt. A misplaced switch caused the collision. Var.y>arrT Tovlnr'c file widow of Colonel Bliss, is still living in Winchester, Virginia, in gocd health and well-preserved beauty. Her second husband, Phil. Dandridge, died several years ago. The Queen on Thursday laid the foundation stone of the Women's Memorial statute of the Prince consort in Windsor Park. Seven thousand persons were present, chiefly women. Details of the explosion of the powder magazine at ilassowah, on the 11th inst., show that ten Italian soldiers were killed and seventy injured, and that camp prop- j p.rtv worth ?21)0.000 was destroved. A disastrous fire occurred at 59 Broad way, Xew York, Tuesday night. E. & H. .T. Anthony's photograph "material store was destroyed. Four firemen were overcome by the heat. The Georgia State road lessees, through President Brown, have made a demand on the Legislature for betterments estimated ! at $3,000,000. The claim will be contested, i The Parneiiites are trying to induce Mr. j Gladstone to visit Ireland during the early i operation of the Coercion Act, and he encourages them to hope that he will be able to go. A circular has been issued by the Grand Army oE the Republic denying the reports of the want of harmony between that organization and the St. Louis celebration committee. The striking cokersof Uniontown, Pa., remain firm and refuse to resume work of their old wages. Additional forces at Pinkortnn's rr.pn havr? !iftftn to the re gion of the strikes. The iron steamship Merrimack, of Boston, has gone ashore off the coast of Little Hope Island, on the coast of Nova Scotia. The passerigers claim that thdr baggage was plundered by the crew, who obtained whisky and got drunk. The Government receipts so far this month amount to $10,693,507 and the expenditures, including nearly $12.000,00U pension payments, to $18,561,102, making an excess of expenditures of $7,067,535. On Zvlonday lightning struck the house of John Bankhead, near Opelika, Ala. Two 01 jqis caiidTi u \.ere Kuieu uy use s-truse, while Ills wife and his ether child were paralyzed. The trial of Col. George Johnstone, of Newberry, for the killing of Mr. Lambert Jones, has been postponed till the fall term of Court, because Judge Pressley, sitting at Newberry, is connected by marriage j with Col. Johnstone. Tbe Parliamentary Fund Association of New York have arranged a monster reception for Lord and Lady Aberdeen on tbeir arrival in New York from the West. They also sent ?2,000 to Parnell for use in his home rule fight for Ireland. Baker Palmer, of Philadelphia, has been held in the sum of $2,000 by the coroner's jury to await the action of the grand jury on the charge of having caused the death of four children by selling them cakes colored with poisonous matter. A special irom LiexmgioD, jhiss., says that on Thursday afternoon It. B. Chatham, independent Republican candidate for the Legislature, shot and killed John S. Harking, Jr., associate editor of the Lexington Bulletin. Joseph C. Ken neay was stabbed to death, . in broad daylight in Washington, D. C., : on Wednesday". The slayer was John ; - ?U.*4 1 Lmiy, a WliitC iitfui, auu. tile mu:uu to liavc been unprovoked. The murdered man was 7o years eld. A "prominent politician," wbo appears to have had his hands on some lands to which he had no title, insists that Secretary Lamar and Commissioner Sparks "have ruined the administration's standing in the West." Jockey Harris, who rode Jessie at the Brighton races on Monday, was thrown from th^t animal and suffered internal injuries which it is thought will prove fatal. The mare shied at a dog which dashed across the track. J. D. Peet_& Co., leading cotton future ^ brokers of iNew Orleans, suspended on the t I3ih inst., owing to failure to receive heavy reimbursements of margins expected. A member or the firm slated that their re sumption is a question of but a few days. Civil service examinations will be held in ! s ;he South as follows by John T. Doyle, a secretary of the commission, viz.: Vicks- 0 jurg, September^; Birmingham, October 1 L; October 1; Chattanooga, October 4; Inoxville, October 6. ' An excursion train and an oil train col- o ided on the Grand Trunk raiiroad at St. j rhomas, Ont:, on Friday. The trains took ^ ire. -sine dead bodies are already recov red, and the number of casualties is even nuch o-reater. The election on the adoption of the new barter for Augusta, Ga., resulted in its .efeat. All the daily papers .supported 5 be charter, but its defeat is supposed to be awing to the machinatioDs of the political ^ :ring" now "bossing" the city. C( George Smith, a young saloon keeper. E _T 1.AA I .. r iiUit; piaee ui uuoiucjo 10 ill oavunuiui, was u: :>und dead with, his throat cut on the beach a t Tybee Island at 5 o'clock Wednesday te lorning. The murdered man was about S years of age and, although something of sporting character, bore a good reputation, wo men have been arrested on suspicion. Bernard J. Michenfelder, a son of a Deoit brewer, died Friday morniqg from : P "Ja Wrtn V?TT O Yv/jf Hoo* ; JI y urupuuuiu. xi.c <* re weeks ago. On Tuesday the first tl niptoms of hydrophobia appeared, and, ti "tcr suffering terribly, he died in one of g is convulsions. V Suspender Jack, the cow-boy, who is now a. L loggerheads with Captain Bogardus, b for the letter's blood with true back- c oods fervor. "All I want," he says, "is \ > in <1 mom with Boirardus. Let n aeh of us be given a gun and a cigarette. Ve can take aim by the fire in cach other's ig-ircttes." u Defaulter Harvey graduated at Lafayette p ef->re he was 20, in the same class with f. Lssistant Treasurer William E. Smith. A j,' ear later he was elected professor of mathmuties in the Wyoming Seminaiy at uogston, but he subsequently resigned 'o his position to go abroad. * The election to decide the question of ubscribing ?25,000 to the capital stock of ' he Georgia Carolina and Northern Rail- . oad Company was held at Chester, S. C., \ esterday. At an early hour of the day it vas evident that the advocates of subscfip- c ion li3d won. me ngai. wujacu. flection by an overwhelming majority. s The Maryland Hominy and Corraline ' \Ii!l in Baltimore was destroyed by lire s Friday. Loss ?30,000. The flames communicated to three adjoining warehouses s ind the large roller flour mill of the Gam- j ? 5i ill Manufacturing Company. Damage j c ~ wnmlnncoc <&1fl PiOO rmrt fn thft flour I I /KJ ILl'O yiv,vvw mill $200,000. i Michael Davitt has "written a letter to 1 John J. Delaney, ox New York, in which t .e says that many of the royal constabulary in Ireland lock upon the coercion law -with t detestation and that many of them desire ( :o emigrate to Can aria or the United States, t but fear that their present connection with i tbe force w.-ald stand'in the way of their ] progress m. America. , ( *V;in Phon Lee, the Chinaman who was ! < graduated from Y^le this 3-esr, and has ! married a New Ilaven girl before going I ioto journalism, is short, slender and j bright-eyed. He wears spectacles and is j pe:"t in his manner. Chauncey M. Depew i i referred to him as "an orator before whom j j Senator JEvarts ana 1 kiusi ioo:? 10 our f laurels," since which time New Ilavenites ] saj' that Yan's head has been swelled. In Pickens county, S. C., Wednesday, j j while Meredith llansell, colored, wrs at | ' dinner with his family, a bolt of lightning i struck and passed through the top of the i . hou-e, instantly killing Mansell and one of ! " his children, ifsnsell's wife and another ! . child were terribly shocked and cut and ; bruised by splinters from the rafters. Two more of his children were severely shocked 1 but not seriously injured. Friday morning the west-oouna ireigm train cn the Burlington and Missouri Rail road collided with a stock train, about four miles east of Lincoln, Neb , on a small bridge. The bridge caught fire, causing a cor fiagration. "which consumed both engines "and thirteen loaded cars, including two of cattle. Tbc train men all saw the approaching danger in time to jump and escape seriou3 injury. Damage about $200,000. Thfi coroner's iurv in the Tvbc-e murder case sat all Wednesday niglat and adjourned I frcm the island to Savannah the next morn-< ing. The result of their investigation "was the finding of Thomas Cassidy guilty of the murder of George E. Smitb." ilaggie Farrel, the courtesan, who was with Cassidy on the trip to the island, was named in t he verdict as an accomplice. The cvi deuce is wholly circumstantial, but points i strongly to Cassidy. Botli Cassiciy and the j woman are in jail. ; S. G. McDaniel, a conductor on the. Savannah Valley Railroad, recently a resident of Laurens, is in trouble. Some . years ago he married Miss Sweariogen of ' Edgefield, by whom he had two children. . Then he deserted her a-nd married Miss . Nelson of Laurens. The first wife hts ; tried to get a divorce, but thus far without result. McDaniel claims to have got one. She declares she cares nothing for SicDaniel, but wants to get back her little . daughter whom, some months back, she 1 temporarily left with her mother-in-law. j A fire in Mobile Fridny destroyed the old 1 3IaUhews cotton press. Mrs. Charles Smith, who lived on the upper floor, perished in the flames and in the sight of the spectators. The family were brought out, 1 but the woman return?d to get her money 1 and retreat was cut off. An incapable fire j department Is ttoe cnuse or me woman's der-th. She might have been rescued, but ' the hook and ladder truck went off in a : wrong direction and the woman was dead i before it arrived. Loss ?4,000; no insurance. The latest news from Stanley, the African explorer, is that on the journey from Leop oldville to Lonkolela he encountered and had to overcome serious obstacles. One of the greatest difficulties he found was to replenish his stores. The threatened scarcity of previsions greatly excited a number of his men, and it became necessary to punish the malcontents with severity to reduce them to subiection and save the expedition. ' Stanley himself is ill from the excessive ; heat. The expedition left Bolobo on 3Iay ; 11 and was expected to reach the Congo at , its confluence with the Aronhonim by June j 6. - btanley's programme was to encamp at this point, there to await the arrival of Tippoo Tib, who i3 approaching ' from Stanley Falls with provisions and a force ' of several hundred more men. < Did They Kill ifce Wrong Man? , A special dispatch from Charlotte, X. J C., says that a case was concluded on Sat- ' day in the Swain County Court which , abounded in many peculiar incidents. ! Auoufc a year ago &Mtvu lugraui, a yvuug . farmer of that county, kiiled a neighbor named Sherman Welsh, by stabbing him with a barlow knife. Ingram then disappeared and -was not beard of for nine months. The sheriff of the county, who was a cousin of the murdered man, organized a posse to go in pursuit. They got on the track of the murderer in Rabun county, Ga., find followed him down through Toccoa, Danielsviile and Washington to Au gusr-i. a.i me latier piace iney aeciarea they had captured their man and put him ( out of the way. When the story was told in Swain county people believed it. Dr. | War J, an uncle of the fugitive, at once i started on horseback to traverse the same route, and stopped over night with Col. D. ? W. Meadows, of Danielsville, Ga., who : rendered him valuable assistance. The 1 result was the discovery of a decapitated * body, which the old man took to be that of J Aaron Ingram. A diligent search, how- 2 ever, failed to locate the head. The fact s af the matter was that Iogram had given f his pursuers thu slip and made his way r icrcss the country to the Indian Territory. 1 There he fell into the hands of two old r citizens of Swain countv, who had hea d I :>f the murder and the reward of ?700 for v ;he murderer's capture. Ingram resisted r irrest, was shot down, and lingered be- ? ;ween life arid death for several weeks be- ^ "ore he could be brought back to Swain :ounty, where his trial began last Thurslay. CoL Meadows was brought all the ivay from Georgia to conduct the case, md secured for his client a verdict of manilaughter, for which he was only sentenced , o seven months in jail. ? Ghastly Trophies of Victory. V ? ' c T* T.. 1 -f ? "NT * 4? do.vth\y, jujv iu.?isews irom native n ourccs lias been recieved to the cfifect that & , battle between the troops of the Ameer ?f Afghanistan and insurgents recently ook. place at Mashaki, South of Guzni, nd that the Ameer's forces were victorious. ?hev *re said to have captured 160 Andars nd Tarakis and to have sent the heads of 00 of the -'-lain to Cabul. A large force of ti aghuri and Hazarahs subsequently de sj eated the troops of the Ameer, who is now Tv ending reinforcements to his army. | ^ '** | ta 1 Had a Dreadful Cough, ' And raised a considerable amount of lood and matter; besides, I was very thin, bf ad so weak I could scarcely go about the pi ouse. This was the case of a man with oi jnsumption arising from liver complaint, a: [e recovered his health completely by the th se of Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Dis- ^ jveiy." Thousands of others bear similar stimony. In a tight box?Sardines. ol< Conceit. There is nothing more amusing to eople who know, than the pretension 1 nd conceit of those v:ho only think i iey know. A long time rgo. when 1 lore were some slaves ercn in New Ea- ] iand, one of the celebrities of East rindsor, Conn., was "Doctor Primus," 1 large, fine-looking negro. He had een the slave of a distinguished physi- ; ian, Dr. Wolcott, who resided a. Windsor, on the west side of the Conccticut River. Primus was employed by his rnasler 3 prenare medicines and to attend him ; _ . t i _ T?o .1 UJS V151 Id XlUiJLi u;;u5c uu iiuuou roved himself to be so able ami so aithful that the doctor, n gratitude for .is services, gave him his ^oedom. The negro's attendanceo?his master j mi his experience in mixing druss had j ;iven him a little medical knowledge, j finch he determined to lurn to his own j ccount. As soon as hi: became a free j nan, he moved over to t he other side of j he river, and, annonnc ng himself as j Doctor Primus," laid it. a small stock J if drugs, and waited for patients. r[1!. ,?, AMmn f/vn Pmmn.; I IIU V XKJ L X liUiklil IT ao tnd there was no oth(r physician in he village. As business grew, Primus's elf-esteem increased. One clay, he was sent for to visit a lick child in Poquonnock, on the west ide of the river and beyond where his >ld master lived. He want, and oh iiis eturn called upon Dr. Wolcott, who jave him a hearty reccp ion, and asked cvhat business had brought him across ,he river. ' Oh," answered Prinus, a little inlaled, ."I was sent for to see the child of >ur old neighbor at Poq lonnock; but I :o:d the mother that there was nothing rery serious the matter., and that she aeed not have sent so far for a physician; that you would have answered jusi u n t It# 'Wilritj* JL UULIO O U Musings. How is it that the people who are so persistent in giving advice are generally the ones who need it most? Every street corner has a crowd of able-bodied loafers who never could make a living, bnt every leafcr in thecowd is a repository of advice and information as to the * t*/\m tr\ moKi ?a 1 ivincr UC.-U ?.VT JW. .v , ~ 0. There is the fiend who tells you that if yon would quit smoking cigars you would save S'oOO in a yej.r. He has the figures an(l statistics to prove it, and points with pride to the fact that he doi-s not chew or smoke. When you nsk him if ho saves $300 a year by his abstinence he will be obliged to admit bh;shingly that he nevjr saw $300 in his lire and would feel rich if you would Lend him a quarter. *> ? *? M Koe ?1 / ?<1 rtf AVAwflliri/* J jman ?? 11 kj .iao xaiii vi auvvuij buiufrom pounding sand to sawing wood is always the one who can tell how a government should be operated. He can show conclusively that i: he were president everybody would b.irich and happy in Jhree months, but lie cannot show conclusively that he is of any use in the world further than to consume provisions and keep beer from growing stale. A man of brains and business never needs the advice of these moral wrecks an-.i when it is forced upon him unin14 e/?ni?<?Alrr V* u irrATxtnro'l of ? ilv'l JO UUU cu?i i isi*J jr i, v >? iv w that he sighs for the absence of the fool killer.??>l. Louis Whip. Irish Tenants Charged With Scalding the Police Acquitted. London, July 15.?Tull reports of the first criminal trials which took place yester iay for resisting evictions v ith scalding water accompaniment have just reached here from Limerick. Justice Johnson presided it the assizes. It seems that on the esaa:e of the E.orl of Devon a sheriff, thirty constables and eight bailills had evictc-da tenant named Hailiban. Th? * /? triAncnnl r?f timber and rocks. Six men and three women?part belonging to the family of the tenant and the others being neighbors? we-e the resistants and indicted. Evidence was given by tiie bailiffs establishing beyond a doubt the identities of these of Lhe accused who ttrew boiling water and scalding porridge end used pitchforks, through the onlice made by the beseiging bailiffs. It was distinctly shown that one of the prisoners thrust a red hot iron bar through one of the orifices, burn ing an emergency man. Local solicitors appeared for the accused and watched the case, but liere was no barrister; Not a bit of evidence for the defense was adduced and no address was made in favor of the prisoners. Justice Johnson summed up point.-xlly against the prisoners, but, after delibeiation, a majority of tne jurors favoring acquittal, they were discharged, the jury roundly scolding the unknown dissentients. Five men were next tried for riotous conduct at another eviction on die same estate. In this case however, some witnesses did testify against the police , charging them with barbarity. In a short time the jury acquitted the occused, amid the cheers of the spectators. Special telegrams tc Bradstreet's 3how rather more than a proportionate volume of general trade throughout the jountry, especially when we take into n4-V*n -TT"i4-a-?*Tr/}TviTi fT /\"f Q VXUVIUU UXAV> XJLLI/VsJ. TUUlUg VA c*r 3ay, the hot weather, tLe midsummer season, the annual or semi-annual stocktakings, and the incident checks to activity in industrial lines. In New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Baltimore, leading staple markets have been quiet. Dry goods in Eastern cities have been iull, boots and shoes fairly active, and leather quiet. At Pittsburg general irade has been fair only, and prices have Deen firm. No special features are reported from Onio and Indiana cities, the fall trade has begun at Detroit, however, and the movement of goods is better than it was one year ag >. Chicago's rolumo of transportation equals, if it loes not exceed, that of the preceding ffeek, and orders in leading lines are noiceably on the increase. At Burlington, [owa, business is improving. St. Joseph reports the situation satisfactory and >etter than last year, though the volume", s smaller than a week ago, while Kan-1 ;as City's trade movement is good, even >risk, in staple lines, except in grain, sew Orleans and Galveston likewise end favorable reports, die largely to avorable "crop prospects. Leading aoney markets are quite active. New fork reports less stringer cy, and rates tormal, but Boston and Kansas City >ankers quote higher rates of discount, ntn demand exceeding araiiaoie supdies. The Western demand for moving he crops has begun, but all lines of rade are borrowing more f::eely, noticebly at Chicago. Pianos and Organs. All of the best makes. $25 cash and alance November 1, at spot cash prices n a Piano. $10 cash and balance Noember 1, at spot cash prices on an rgan. Delivered, freight l'ree, at your earest depot. Fifteen days test trial ad freight both ways if not satisfactory. Write"for circulars. N. W. TRUMP, * Coltur.bia, S. C. Honry Waterson's physician lias posively forbidden him to make any more >eeches inthe Kentucky campaign and is prescribed a summer of rest This ] hard on Watfcerson for Ire loves to >( Ik. It is also hard on the people of < entucky for they love to hear him. 1 Minister Manning has given a grand j ill in the City of Mexico. This item . operly belongs in the society column : Sunday issue, but it is so seldom that minister of the United Stakes does any- 1 ing that we are constrained to give s miediate notice of this event.?Phila- t sldhia Times. c c The heart grows weary but never gels ^ i. d I e One Kind of Reading. And how few persons who can devoto r but an hour or half an hour a day to reading and study, take due thought as ^ to how they can make the most of their little leisure. They rtud li. a desultory svay whatever comes to hand, and think that if they had more time for books . they would soon become much better informed. But the half hour a day, if used in the wisest manner, would make j a vast difference in one's mental growth as the years glide by. An incident occurs to me that well ii- j lustrates this. A pretty maiden-hair fern, growing in a flower-pot, was given to a young girl, hopelessly ill with ? spinal disease. It proved . thing of beauty and of inexhaustible interest, as the delicate, graceful fronds came up, one by one, and'slowly uncurled. There was a little pot beside the fern and under its spreading fronds, in which grew an aloe. By-and-by the sick girl noticed in the little pot some tiny ferns, * scarce an inch high, quite unlike the maiden-hair. Whence came thev? Her C interest was aroused- She was no botanist, but she wanted to learn some- t thing about ferns. She could use her eyes for reading but five minutes at a t time, and noli more than twice a day. A book on ferns came to her, and an- | other, and another. Friends, knowing her interest in ferns, brought them to , her fresh and green from the woods, or sent her pressed specimens of rare 1 varieties gathered in distant lands. Sometimes a visitor would read to her from one of her precious books, but only for four or live minutes. "1 cannot remember more at a time," she 1 would say, "ana you nave reau euuugu for me to think about for a long time." 1 It is now some years since the maiden-hair fern was given to her, and she i has become an authority as to the species and culture of ferns, and is an enthusiast in regard to them. It is true that she has become educated m one direction only, and is not particularly | well-informed in other respects. But is it not a great gain that she should talk about her ferns and their wonderful method of reproduction, awakening her listeners' interest and teaching them many things worth remembering, rather than to dwell chiefly on her pains and privations? It is many years since she wns able to step out of doors, but when yoa are with her you do not think of her as an invalid, so interested and interesting is she. r|^! /% { A wrvf m A11C nl 9 n k JLlit; giuvvux ui j,..? would not be a matter of absorbing fa terest to all persons, but the habit of reading thoughtfully and carefully what we read, and of retaining it 5n memory, is a great factor of mental growth.?Boston Trarscrivt. Indolence and Industry. Clouds of smoke belched from a sravel-heap on Fifth avenue, opposite Delmonico's. A furious fire was roaring in a section of iron tubing under the heap, which it was heating to a proper degree of caloric to be of use to the sfrn^t-nivintr mnn. Arnnnd the frlow ing mound gathered as squalid and miserable a group as ever camped by the roadside over in Jersey. Swaddled in rags and shuddering in the cold wind they cracked their cold knuckles over the hot pile, and two or three gnawed frairmcnus of food like hungry wolves. With the smoke billowing up in whirling clouds of dun and black commingled, the piles of Belgian blocks, the smoking pitch boilers, the carts and wagons of "the contractors, and the bare park dripping in the November f /livryyTrt tlin rvinlnro woo Ann fhnf: T1A artist could have passed by unnoticed. But it is not the tramps alone who find comfort in the contractors' fires. When the workmen knock off for dinner they gather about them in picturesque groups. If you want to note the contrast between absolute and hopeless usclessness and patient industry you can do it with a glance at these contrasted groups of Lilt; iiiwii wau vYUiJa^ auu cutu tucu. uxou.u and those who do not. The laborers view their squaiid neighbors with small favor. The si<rht ot these hulking idiot's with their hands in their pockets, looking sullenly at better men earning their honest living is not calculated to make the better men good-lempercd. As one of them put it: "God knows, sir, it's no crime to be out of work in this town. But to be willing to be out of work, like those vagabonds, is enough to make any decent man tired. Tha i big fellow there was offered a job to handle dirt this morning. What do you think he told the boss? That ho i was not a ditch-digger. But for three days he has hung about here and has not been too proud to pick up the scraps we throw away."?Cor. New York News. Vanderbilt's Tomb. A writer in the New York Graphic j says: I paid a visit not long ago to the UIU liVil J uv kw'iUivtL A<7A??.u\ay wbere the Vanderbilt crypt is built As you enter the gate by the little wooden church, before you is an ordinary vault, where a man watches night and day, and here the body of the great millionaire rests for the time being. Following the road that leads to the left through the woods, you come after a few minutes upon the large scpulchcr ae j - ~ l-i- j- .11 it-A : --4.-1 signeu 10 contain au luat j? ujuiuu ui t the dead railroad king. It is in a sequestered, lonely spot, and a sense of isolation conies oyer you as the great, massive tomb is first seen. It looks much like a Moorish receptacle for the dead, with the two round cupolas of granite rising from the embankment at the back. The front of the tomb is of blocks of white granite beautifully and wonderfully carved, and through the two side gratings can be seen tail urns, each bearing an inscription. It is proposed to lay out ten acres of ground about the tomb la a pars. According to a Washington correspondent the officers of the navy arc not particularly pleased with the decision of the secoud comptroller, which holds that travel between the United States and Alaska is foreign travel, and therefore that no mileage can be allowed for ! :it The officers think it but just that ' PK Attul rnAMITTA OAlYtA AAn . ?? J *14.^j ouuuiu icvcuc oumu wuoiu.ui atiuu when going to Alaska as it is regarded : as the most'unpleasant duty in the service. The fourth auditor, when the matter was called to his attention, decided ' that travel from the United States to Alaska was simply as from one port of 1 the United States to another, and mile- J age could therefore be recovered by any ' officer making the voyage under orders. 1 His decision was, however, reversed. rt-i ?> _ t Four generations live in the house ^ of J. U. TurcoUe, of Lowell, Massachu- t ?2tts?his daughter, aged six; her moth- c er, aged thirty; his mother, aged fifty- s three, and her mother, aged eighty-one ? years. d Dr. Douglas, who is said to have lost his health in caring for General Grant, s has <rone South to spend the winter. n _ I William W. Story, lawyer, architect, c Doetand sculptor, and son of Justice e atoiy, has been made a D. C. L. by Oxford University. He is one of the " :ew Americans who have received that b legree from such a distinguished auhorifcy. " ? 1 The Governor of Kansas has written a li etter to the Associated Press denouncing if untrue the telegram sent from St Joseph * o a Chicago paper, stating that the closing n >f the saloons in Atchison, Kansas, had a rat off the revenues of the city to an extent f< rlrich promised to clog the wheels of gov- sj raiment. B - ',\ rffTBTTT in 1 ? ?mpcaa bric-a-brac. caught. 80 >ver the lattice there clambered a vine, It? tendrils in arabesque tenderly clung 'o the cool slender bars in the shade of the pide, i w. That sheltered us there where the song-, ev sparrows sung. j w ls sweet as a rose in the pale pick and blue j at Of her thin fleecy robe, with a bud in her i P1 hair, j ls fair as a tropic bloom fresh with the dew, : ;c She mused by my side ia the cool morn-! te ingair. , , Pj low did it happen?' I really don't know, j q Her lips were like rosebuds?soretempted, i I fell- ri 'Oh, nobody saw us!"?I started to go, 3* When a wee voice?"1 seen '00 an' Tm doin' io icll!" tl A pointed letter?A. b Some fastidious ball clubs own 500 bats. P "Wonderifdentistseverextractcuberoots? 1 f; Dry toast?A toast at a temperance meet- j u' "6In the drama of life the clerk plays a It :ounter part. * o "Yes, my son, yes; dun is the future ^ ense of due." ' ^ When is a man not a man? When he < urns into a lane. ? The man who wears light boots never ? xembles in his shoes. q To a contented mind a closet is equal to a I palace. t< It demands a giant's strength to subdue ^ he weakness of love. * The more you collar and cuff a Chinaman ' :he better he likes it. A rich girl may be homely, but she will v never know it by hearsay. 2 A man's funny bone, we presume, ena- t bles him to "laugh in his sleeve." v Verandas are health givers, inducing people to live more in the open air. A burglar seldom does his work alone. He generally has jimmy with him. As the milk gets poorer the milkman j gets richer. It s true without being a par- ] adox. r It is hard to believe that a man is telling 1 the truth when you know you would lie i were you in his place. i Formerly the foolish virgins naa no ou; : now the foolish virgins are too free with the [ kerosene. Why a man boots his dog but merely { shoes his hen has never been precisely de- < termiDed. < When lads with gripings sore abused t Will of the apple green partake, J Jim A. K Ginger introduced < Will be to festive Belle E. Ache. < It i3 hard to make a bad actor or a bad ] cigar draw well without a areat deal of : puffing. The author who wrote "There is beauty i ( in extreme old age," probably never tackled j j an over-nursed egg. ; j There are men who do not want to be I ' President, just ar there are young women j who don't want to get married. "How shall I stuff a deer's head?" asks j ? ? ? ? ? -5?* Q+mm-CP !frtfffr onrl a ixjrres^uimeLiu oiuu n, MULL | gumdrops, you simpleton. j . A man has hard work to convince his ;. wife that he does not own the earth when j , she gets him into a bonnet store. I The phrase "blind as a ba-," should be j i revised so as to read "blind as a bat afier a | curved ball." , It is not merely the individual, but soci- J' ety, that suffers by every idle, every selfish, i; p.ve-rv mf-fin. and evefv uniust man. Friendship is very poetic and romantic, and all that, but as a general thing when a : man wants to borrow ten dollars be will do better if he goes to an acquaintance. BEFORE. Two lovers they were, and they walked 1 down the lane "With the aimless ease of?well those in , love. He was nervously twirling his walking cane, ( And ahe was fixing her glove. He turned and looked, and looking, sighed j For her whom he wished to have for life, ' jl aliu ilvlivcia. xiio i.'j t uiiviv His nwo, dear, darling wife. * * ***?*? AFTER. Married they were, and she sat alone Up in a tenements floors high; A baby lay in her lap, 2mHbe4une ^ j She sang was a lullaby: ?-- j "Sleep, baby sleep, there is naught to fear, ] Papa's not coming back home to-night: < He's up for six months for beating me, dear, And the Mayor- said the sentence was , light." ; He who is taught to live upon little owes ' more to his father's wisdom than he that ; has a great deal left him does to his father's j uuc? The lyre, it is said, was critically sug- i gested by the bent bow. This is probably < the reason that"beaus have been such liars i ever since. ] A million girls rolled into one would not 1 have a tithe of the vanity of a man whose < youth is past and whose old age has not be- j gun. < A girl discovered that a month's work in- ( creased the size of her hand by one size of r a glove, and she quit workiDg faster than you could drop a hat. Among the "hundred bsst books'' the j' pocket book ranks first. If it is sufficiently j1 robust there will be no difficulty in select- j ing the other ninety-nine. "What is the best way to manage v. | ( man?" asks a feminine correspondent. The ;: answer to this old conundrum is, "Don't 1 let. the man know you are trying to manage ; him." A merchant who wanted to marry every ] pretty girl he met was adjudged insane. The sequence isn't natural. If the merchant were after the homely girls then he was crazy. A Haverstraw woman, who believed , there was "good luck" in having a bird fly in the house, chased a canaff" bird in, and ? in doing so upset and b^e a ten-dollar mirror. i pamman eolf ?e o ttoTttqli"n nrdtontirp ! . VV/LUUiVU iXUU 10 (? TaiUUl/lV Vuvkiv, and in some measure a remedy for all blood diseases among animals. It is destructive j of parasitic life, and a preventive of fer- i ments which are present in blood diseases. ( /\ n KJ CUUIU 5>t LLLUU UUL JfcliU W ; ^ Willi what a deep devctedness of woe > I wept thy absence, o'er and o'er again ? Thinking of thee, still thee, till thought grew pain, s And memoiy, like a drop that night and day j Falls cold and ceaseless, wore my heart c away! d Labor Notes. The Brooklyn L Road strike is about r aver. The company ran 14 out of 3-3 trains j ^ Friday. Eight hundred workmen at the Black Diamond Steel Works of Park Bros., Pitts-; Si imrg, Pa., haye struck because the firm re- j a fused to reinstate a number of union men | previously discharged. Six families have been evicJcd at Leisen- j o ing, in the ceke regions. They walked j I >ut peaceably and made no resistance. i E rhe vacated bouses are occupied by other j p vcrkmen. | aA party of 110 men have arrived at Pitts- j >urg from New York en route to the coke | egions, where they will take the place of i _ he strikers. The operators have accented j he offers of the Eastern bureaus and new j | nen -will be sent to the region as fast as the B trikers are evicted from the company's E ouses. The Pinkerton men are still od iuty, but so far have nothing to do. A committee of the Connellsville coke ! trikers have arrived at Harris burg, Pa., to I equest Governor Beaver to remove the. 'inkerton men from the coke region. The j ommittee, however, failed to see the Gov- j rnor, who had left for "Warren. I A dispatch from Pittsburg, Penn., says: 'Notwithstanding the shut down of the last furnaces on account of the coke strike, ne ore shipments from the lakes show a irge increase over last year, and it is esti-1 lated that the production this year will be ! ,000,000 tons in excess of what it was in j 886." * * * Delicate Diseases, affect iog j lale or female, however induced, speedity j nd permanently cured. Illustrated book I 1A Aonfo in cfomrva WatWo T"^TOTvm_ I Ji~ X\J VA/Uio ua oiauijb/o? it vim A/wyvu i irv Medical Association, 663 Main street, I iuffalo, N. Y. ' THE TORRID WAVE. ] i me Remarks by the Clerk of the Weather? j j Xo Hopes ol Immediate Relief. t Tniir i??Thp torrid! i IT ACni*nTiv^, tj <j.ij a j.. - eather which has prevailed in nearly j ? ery section of the country during the past j ^ eek is not due, the sign;d office says, to j ! ?y exceptional causes, and no relief can :>e j cdicted at present. The weather, how-j f rer, was considerably cooler to-day in j t irne parts of the United Urates than yes- J t -day. During the past 24 hours the tern j -j jrature has fallen from 6 to 12 decrees in f ? - - - . - J 1? Western Dakota, Wyoming, .Jioatana ma * olorado. A cool wave "has also made ^ self felt in Korthern Texas, Indian Ter s lory, Arkansas and Louisiana, where a 1 rop of 4 to 20 degrees has occurrcd, al- { lough the thermometer s:Dl hovers around < ie eighties. The warm weather has also 1 een broken in the Lake Superior region, * 'ennsyivania, New York and the .New Ingland States by a reduction of from 4 to ' 3 in temperature. The heat continues < nabated in Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, ilin- j L-;>ta, Eastern Dakota and the South Attntic. States. Fort Sully, Dakota, at 3 v>!r?r!r to duv. "Washington lime, enjoyed 1 xe distinction of being"the hotte&t pbce J i the United Stales, with the thermometer t 102. Huron, Dak., and Atlanta, Ga., allowed with 93; North Platte, Neb , Duuque, Iowa, Indianapolis, Jnd., Lynch- . urg, Va., and Norfolk, Ya., with '-6, ana i Joluaibu?, Ohio, Louisville, Ey., an a j )odge City, Kan., with 04. In Washing- \ :>n the maximum temperature was S3 ' "he coolest section of the country to-day ' ras the Lake Superior region, and Duiutb, j linn., returns a lovrer temperature man ; ny unclevaied city in the United Sut'-i, lainely, 56. The weather has also been ery comfortable in New England and r.t TWrttirt 1VT:> \UliiiCIU i\cn J. u:iv.. jjli. ., . be thermometer registered 65, and at Os- j vego, K Y., it was but 2 warmer. Robs Her Husband and then Deserts Him. Papers in a rather sensational divorce uit were filed at Indianapolis recently by lieutenant James W. Graydon, of the Tnifpd States Navy, the inventor of the lew metliod of using dynamite in warfare, a his complaint the Lieutenant states that vhile he was engaged in making experinents for the Chinese government at Hong long in 1885, his wife asked him to give ier a blank check on his bank to enable her .0 get whatever money she needed for lousebold expenses. He was ill at the ;ime and readily complied with her request. She* immediately filled out the check for ?27,000, the amount of the entire balance ,o his credit. After drawing the money she sailed for the United States. "When bis contract was fulfilled with the Chinese govjrnment he came to this country to hunt for his wife and children, but has been unible to find them. The business failures occurring throughjut the country during the Inst week nurn- j bercd for the United States 140, Canada 30, x>tal 170; against 154 last vret-k and 181 Uitweek pifcvious. A NAMELESS CASE. My case has been a very curious ore for about thirteen years. At inters!s of About one week I would be attacked with *pelLs of severe and most excruciating train, always commencing in the region of my kidneys. The pain would then go upwards and affect my body and head, and seemed to penetrate my very eyeballs, creating tns most intense suffering, lasting about eight hours each spell. I resorted to all kinds of medicine without benefit. Several doctois treated my case, but none gave relief. I finally used B. B. B. as an" experiment, and to my utter astonishment all pain and sufvanished after nfinff- three doses. To the present time X have used three botiies, and not a pain has ever returned. I do not know what was the matter, neither could my physician name the somplaint. The B. ?. B. acted finely and powerfully upon my Mdneys; my appetite has been splendid and my constitution buiit up rapidly. B. Teoiias, Constitution, Ga., May 6, 1886. TTm"mnflf? nb fid Tn hot. tv I am 55. Broke down twelve years igo, and have not been able to work ^gcs. Have lost proper action of my iripsaStHegs^ For five years scrofulous sores liave appealed on my scalp and nose, and at same fxSrmjeje&ight bejan to f<JJ, and for three yeais^ave been 10m parativfcjy blind. Have been ts^atea by eminent physicians of differfen*-, schools without a cura. I Have taken five bottles of B. B. B. (made at Atlanta, G-a.) and all scrofulous sores are gradually healing. Inflammation about my 3yes has disappeared and there is some improvement an my vision. Am very much benefited and" relieved and bey in to feel like a bey again?feel good. Mj rtreDgtli and activity are returning in my legs and hips. The B. B. B. acts vigorously upon my kidneys, and the great quantity of matter that has been forced Dut through the skin is utterly incredible, often so offensive in odor A3 to-proluce nausea. I refer to all business men Df LaGrange, Ga. P. Psorairx. LaGrange, Ga., -January 13, 188(3. All who desire full information a'oout the *ause sn tl cure of Blood Poisons, Scrofula ana crofulous swellings, U leers, sores, Kbeuma Lism, Kidney complaints. Catarrh, etc . car; secure by mail, free, a copy our 32 paee lllus :rated book of Wonders, fllled with the mo^t tvonderful and startling proof ever belort iaown. Address, jbWoo Balm <'o., Atlanta, GaCHARLOTTE DrwAT s rasspfijutfin? t ILVJtllV lilt SESSION BEGINS SLPT. 7, 1887. KO INSTITUTE for YOUNG LADIi& in the South it as advantages sux*; lor to those offered hexe in every departnent?Collegiate, Art and Music. Onh experienced and accomplished teachers. ri:<^ building is lighted with gas, warmed vith the best wrouvht-iron lu maces, has lot :>nd cold water baths, and first-clast tppointments as a Boarding School ir very respect?no school in tiie South hat .uperior. ?t?dnc!ion for two or more from the stme i or neighborhood. Pupils ch .rged only roL'i date of entrance, after the first mOLtJS 1 if the session. lor Catalogue, with fall particulars, ad ireas Kbv. WiLK. ATK1SSOH, Charlotte, U. C. ] )XE OF THE FIXES! RESORTS L\T j THEJOUTH. i m w .1' .. !* i PL * us fiu-fieaifflg wm ^prmg-s, GASTON COUNTY, N. 0: " 5 Tiiis elegant Summer Ecsort is novr pen. Accommodation equal to the best. ilevation 2,000 feet abpve sea level. lates $2.00 per day, $10.00 and $12.00 ] er week. For circulars or information idress the proprietors. COZZENS & THOMAS, All-Healing P. O. r j \ Not only shortens the time of labor and :esseas the pain, but it greatly diminishes toe danger to life of both mother and child, and leaves the mother In a condition more favorable to sueedy recovery, and less liable to Flooding, Convulsions, and other alarming symptoms. It* eSlcacy in this respect entities It to be called Tub Mother's Friend, and to rani as one ojr the llle-saving remedies of the nineteenth, century. We cannot publish certificates concerning this remedy without wounding the delicacy or the writ era. Yet we have hundreds on file. fend for nnr iTrt\rntyieTo ? ryiiiiad fwo Bju2fteld Rsgchtos Co., Atlanta, Ga. CUiiES ALL SU3IOH8? . jKKM rom a common Ulotcli, or Eruption, o the worst scrofula. Salt-rheum, 'Fercr-scres,'' Scaly or Bocgh Tl* ??? ikin, in short, all diseases caused by bad V flB| >]ood are conquered by this powerful, puri- , IM invigorating1 medicine. Great Valine Occr's rapidly heal under its be- JU R lisrn influence. Especially has it manifested fl jfl potency in curing Tetter, Hose Baih, HP 'oils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes,Scrof- B B iloas Sores aud Swellings, Hip oiut Disease, White SveuingS| loiire, or Thick Neck, and Enlarges -Jfl H Hands. Send ten cents in stamps for a jm H arge treatise, with colored plates, on Skin diseases, or the same amount for a treatise . >n Scrofulous Affections. HH "the BLOOD JS THE LIFE^' I ?- 1U..UIC thoroughly cleanse it by using- ur. jrx?w. ? ioJdei: ITScdical Discovery,and good ' : s.-?esJio::, a fair skin, buoyant ?pir- JhM .iii, ana vital strciijrtli, will be established. CONSUMPTION, -v, JB vhich Is Scrofula of fciie Lungs, is ar- N4|^| f$ted and cured by this remedy, it taken be- 0 fore the last stages of the disease are reached. From its marvelous power over this terribly SI vrhen first offering: this now celebrated remedy to the public, Br. Pierce Lhosarht_ seriously of calling' it bis "Con v o>witiinnfld that^A. UUb name as too limited for a medicine which, from its wonderful combination of tonic, or S strenstijeninjr, s.Iterativc. or b'ood-cieansin#, H asti-biJ'ous. pcetcr?]. and nutritive proper- 1H n 'i, not o:.Iy us a remedy for HJ H ccnsumpcio::, but f<..r ?u Clironic JDis- ' IWf cases cf tts r-gsSsg^M Liven Blood, and Lungs. IB If you dull, drowsy, debilitated, have eniiow color c; s.iiii. or yellowish-brown spots H oa 1'aco or LoJy, treyuent headaehc or dizzi- flfl| ness, tad tr.-re mouth, internal heat or JHE9I chill*-, alternating wiiii not uusuu), ?/? . . and gloomy forebodings, irregular appetite, to:ig-.;o. you are suffering from -<^S M '.'estio?) J>yspcpsia, and Torpi<T ?<ivcr4 or Siiioasness." In many easos only part el these symptoms are experienced. As a remedy lor all such cases, 9 Dr. Piercc's Golden Medical Sis- fl covery is unsurpassed. For Weak Lnc?% Spitting: of Flood, Shortaew of Breath, Bron- BB chitis, As:lnas, Severe Coughs, and . kindred aileetions, it is au efficient remedy. jm Sold et Dhugct^ts. ac $1.00, or SIX -MS SOTTT&ES for $5.00. -< Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce'a hook on Consumption. Address, -MB Wm World's Sisocusary medical "Asso- "t n| ciaiioc, COS Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. REWARD J hf they cannot cure. If :z~*3rX. tare a discharge from the cose, offensive or otherwise, partial.loss of smelJ. taste, or hearing:, weak eyes, duILpain IB or pressure in head, you have Catarrh. Thou- gM sands of cases terminate in consumption. ^ Dr. Sage's Catarkh Remedy curestheworst : eases of Catarrli, '"Cold In the Head?" H and Catarrhal Headache. 50 cents. - ? E. VAN WINKLE & DO. 9 ?""SS? Jj C^QitSiNS and PBESSk!- J Cotton Seed Oil Mills, Cotton seea iL inters. Caz_o Hills, Saw Sills, Shafting, Pollers, Hangers, Wind Kills and Castings^ J Pumps and Tanks. E.VAH W!N:<LECa. 1 faUiiJJ awarded at mjwwi jw.pws'v ; -rfsga lion, Atlanta, Ga\ Dallas, Texas, and Charted ' ^ ton, S. c. "Write for prices and terms to E. yan Winkte & Co., V ':M r B0X.S3, ATLANTA, GA. ff TONIC | tsaawa ^isGESSa OEcfTOTJTH. 07??fS,W?nt XSKseSSk ofAppetit*. IndicasdoiuLackoi ? TjH \gS2K3Sk Strength.and Tired Feeling *b\SS^8L solately cored: Bonet, mns. ? ^SsSSSiBl cles and nerves receive new -1 force. Enlivens the mind * ' "J and supplies Brain Power. J 99 n i ? i ? from complaint* I . P ?& 8 peculiar totheirsex will find ;rS?S aD2. HASTEKTB ZBOST TOXTC a safe ^nd speedy euro. Gives a cJ ear, healthy complexion^ Frenaont Rttempta at counterfeit- ::^h >nc oni7 add to the popnlaritT of the ordinal. Do not experiment?get the Original AifD Best, . 4 Cnr? Constip^Jon J^e^ComolateV and Sick^ Jfl ft Headache. Sample Dose and Dream Books \ mailed on rcccipt of two cents In postage, f THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY. St. Louis. Mo. IS mm mm -1 CATAWBA COUNTY, N. C. Newly fitted up wi:h new Hotel rand Fura? L:ure for orar 4C0 guests and the proprietors would be glad to see all their old and many a new friends bere. The medical properties of Mm the water are uiiriveled for Dyspepsia, Ehenmatlsm, Liver, Kidney and Urinary diseases, Senernl Debility and Nervous Prostration. Healthier location not to be found. i, ^ BATHS COMPLETE. Cool, Shower, "Warm and Hot Sulphur, Hot lir snd Vapor Kaths. fine Bancf of Music * '? md ail Amusements kept at first claiss Waterng Places. Write for Catalogue. Da. E. 0. ELLIOlT & SON, H |f$ Proprietors. PITTS CARMINATIVE! FOR IXFAXTS AXD ' jfl rEETHING CHILDREN. An 1710+071+ relief fnr /vilirt .\f fnfoTitw ' *>IH 3nres Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Cholera infantum or anv'aiseases of the stomach nd bowels. Makes the critical'period ?jg| >f(Teethicg safe and easy. Is a safe and >leasant tonic. For sale by all druggists, 4 nd for wholesale by Howabd, Willee e Co., Augusta, Ga. jfl ^ | ^3AU/1 j I A s .. ?. aPCHftdLmnacitttfro* U = TESAC2B, tfgttinenifarfUBmdEnsli* ] I m-ronss. / J VdwtSS^ 16BADM, " .jjgj / f yssrzssa m j \^1SI? - j / J^'Vsa i $7.00 \ /Qfarcabc.i ..JfSw Avtiimih Itm Co.. NA?mnwx, Tex* ">