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> \ *\ - r V ? THE NEWS'-AND BEBALD. : 1 WIXN'SBOKO, S. C. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, : : 1SS7. k E. B. H.lGSn.lLE, ) iw z> Editors. W. L. McDOXALD. j W The New York young Jadies have j / started a new craze. They have al- ' w burns of hair, each gentleman friend W contributing a lock. J Gladstone has evidently taken a * " -- A 1 AA1*3 new lease 01 me. in iaci, u*; j younger, brighter and more hopeful j than he has for years past. Secretary Exdicott, it is said, ha s j Quite recovered his spirits since he re- j turned to the State where his Mayflower ancestors once flourished. Ex-Sexatok Willia3i Maiioxe accuses Gov. Fitz Hugh Lee of "frivolous levity" in attending the theater and acting as judge in a horse race. Tydia Thompson is to make her reappearance in London this month at the Strand Theater. Violet Cameron will be one of the attractions of the company. ^ Pleuko-pxeumoxia is killing olf the Western cattle by scores; but, at last accounts, General Tattle was talking as cheerfully as though he had something to say. Henry Geoicge preaches that men cannot own land because they did not make it. That theory, it is said, relieves George of a fearful responsibility as to the ownership of his head. The following civil service problem was found on the reporter's desk in one of the roo_niaj>H.he Treasury Department: ""If a horse is sixteen '^lian&^high and oats sixty cents per bushel, how old is Mr. L;rman?" Since the recent little flurry in Wall street, in which it is said C. "W. Field lost a few millions that Gould picked up, Cyrus has become quite a jockey and in his dreams talks of horses, e3 peciallv repeating the name of Jay-Isee. Ax Ohio girl advertises that she would like to exchange a copy of George Eliot's "Theophrastas Such" for two loaves of fresh bakers bread or ten cents'worth of chewing gum. And that isn't the worst of it; she finds no takers. Ex-Makshal LocisTF. Payne com plains that Governor Hill has done him a great injustice in attacking him after he has retired from public life. Mr. Payne thinks that the Governor should instead go gunning for the Republicans in active service. The Prince of Wales and Mr. Blaine are both at Homburg taking the cure. What a bond of sympathy drinking "150 grains of salt and a grain and# a half of iron" does make between great men. It is almost as cfELcaciou?socially, as a whisky sour.?Boston TV 7.7 jasruui. * The resolutions of the Prohibition i , in State convention are in marked coutrast to those of the body that nominated Henry George. There is no compromise or ambiguity about then. They strike out straight from the shoulder for the faith their authors profess. A 117 . ?>rTTT-/-^A\? noriftw CO T?C fhof iX If o bu.Mv "Worth is building sumptuous gowns for Mrs. Cleveland's next Washington season." This is not exactly in the line of?but Mrs. Cleveland is a great deal prettier than Jefferson ever was, and who cares for Jeffersonian simplicity, any way? " Michael Davitt's declaration in his speech at Bray that "eviction is f-hf- nnlv crimp nrevalent in Ireland" is not merely an apt saying. It crystallizes an important trnth. "Were it not for the proceedings growing out of evictions the Irish courts would have next to nothing to do. If Prohibitionists persist in putting tickets in the field regularly, and the Labor men continue to spit up as they have cione in the past few months, the United States three or four years LIUIJUC Will Uittc iiuuub ao tAuviici ? ^ and variegated a collection of poliLical parties as either France or Germany has. "We welcome among our exchanges The, Carolinian, the first issue of which appeared on Sept 3. It is a bright, newsy sheet, printed in good style, and is a highly attractive sheet. It is printed at Greenville, s S. C-, every Saturday, by J. It. Shannon. editor and proprietor. "We wish I it success. One of the things which prohibition prohibits is the financial welfare of a State. The Rhode Island Treasury is $250,000 short, owing to the suppression of liquor license fees, and there are no available funds with which to pay the State police. Meanwhile it is not popularly believed that much less ^ liquor than formerly is consnmcd in |1 "Little Rhody." Governor Foraker's career bids fair to be a striking exemplification of the old adage that if you let a fool or ; . a scoundrel alone he is bound to hang himself sooner or later. lie first ' achieved national notoriety by posing j as a patriot, and he has never bobbed up since then without nauseating his hearers with a dose of the bloody shirt : or the rebel flags. ^ A protection organ, explaining the ] great immigration from Germany, at- i tributes it largely to "the fast irtcreas- 1 ing stagnation of trade and industries 1 throughout the empire." If all that . the papers claim for the tariff be true, there should, as the Chicago Times > suggests, be no stagnation of trade | and industries in a country tl:at has all the tariff it can possibly want. j "Protectionists have done service J to humanity by insisting upon the fact i that we pay to labor the highest wages j in the world. "While debate has been ] r . + ?? icacif?w???a i ii going on whether our high wages ' were because of taxation or despite taxation, economists have discovered 1 and demonstrated the corelative fact: that labor cost in our products is the j least in the world."?Daniel Jfanning. A paragraph is going the rounds * * - - ? that nearly an me women ui ujv salvation Army have a heart worked in India ink upon the right shoulder. In case any one of them is taken sick or dies away from home, or in a foreign j country, the sign of the heart will en-1 title her to care or a suitable burial at j the expense of the organization, no / U- ?l-'1? ~ ~ 1.. Jn /-rrtrt/l I inaucr wucmtu* suu is m is uwi n* standing. ^113 I Not succeeding in his scheme to distribute the surplus of the United States, Mr. "Wharton Barker is about to absorb some of the superfluous wealth of China in exchange for American skill and energy in estab lishing telegraph awl telephone lines and banks in the Celestial empire. The proprietor of the American is prone to foreign investments and has been lucky in them. The Socialits propose to form a new organization to light the George men, and this, it is said will be known as the A nti-Robbery Society. "Whether this name is the Russian idea of a joke, as interpreted by Editor Shevitch, is not clear, but there is no ambiguity about their principles. They will denounce the ownership of any means of production as simple robbery, and will demand that the wage system shall go. Now that the government majority has dwindled to scventv-eteht, and all signs point to a return to power of the Gladstone-Parneli alliance, attention is again directed to the question of an Irish Parliament A great deal of discussion may be looked for during the next few months as to what is the best form of such a body, for a Gladstone victory means home rule, and home rule almost certainly implies a Dublin Parliament sooner or later, whatever makeshifts or substitutes may interveafi. Boukke Cockean has teen overwhelmed with congratulations on the success of his eloquent plea for Jake bttarp. j.ne.uongressiiictLi is uu iiupu^ i ing figure when be gets up to speak. He j has a good voice, is tall and portly, and is always well dressed, but he has a trick, it is said, that often spoils the impressive whole. Just when you are charmed by his bearing and oratory he will throw back his coat and run his hands into his trousers pockets in a way that is as exasperating as it is undignified. The death of Gen. Phil. Kearney at Fredericksburg has always been shrouded in mystery. He was killed instantly, but the circumstances which led to his death have hitherto been kept very quiet. Geu. Pierce Young-, of Georgia, has just returned from St. Petersbug, where he was United States Consul-General. Ho was a Confederate officer during the war, and says that at Fredericksburg he and his command unexpectedly surrounded Kearney and his stafF. Young, who had been a classmate and a friend -c frv tV.r\ TTniAll Ui JAX<?1 av V j illUUV/iiVU tv WUV w ?*AVM Geueral to escape. Kearney saw the signal, but before he could take advantage of it was shot dead by the rebel troops. m ?-?- ? ? It seems that the Prince of little Bulgaria is not to be snuffed out so easily as his enemies would wish. It is said that Italy trill stand by him, backed by Austria and England. lie is enthusiastically received by the Bulgarians, including their army, which he has succeeded in mustering together to the number of 3,000. While the sovereignty of this principality is comparatively small, the question Bulgaria represents is quite large enough to serve time and time again a bone of contention for the great powers, and it may once more and at no distant day prove to be the cause of a mighty war. Whenever either of the great alliances wants a war Bulgaria will be at hand as the excuse for the conflict. The Irish Nationalists have selected two of the most distinguished of their number to visit the United States and further explain their cause and prospects to the American people. Mr. Arthur O'Connor, Member of Parliament for East Donegal, was for many wort in flip "Rritish War Office, and has acquired great distinction as a statistical and political authority. Sir Thomas Grattan Esmoade is on the maternal side of a descendant of the great Henry Grattan. Re is gifted with tbe eloquence of his line, and is regarded as one of the most brilliant of the younger I< ish politicians. The mass meetings under the auspices of the American branches of tha league addressed by those gifted missionaries will, beyond doubt, be highly interesting and influential. VTt* l-nnrvc cfonrJino* in flip AU.IW? KJ r-v/i^vjr AJ *?.* ?**v Standard an extract from the preface to his book on "Protection or Free Trade?" which book he originally published, week by week, in the Star. In the preface lie says: "While pointing out the falsity of the belief that tariffs can protect labor, I : have not failed to recognize the facts which give the belief vitalitv, and, bv U.; nil CA&LLIlljLUIUU Ul lUCJi; iav/bo, ui*vv shown net only how little the working classes can hope from that mere "reve- : nue reform" which is miscalled "free ' trade," but how much they have to hope from real free trade. By thus j harmonizing the truths which freetraders perceive with the facts that to protectionists make their own theory i plausible, I believe I have opened , ground upon which those separated , by seemingly irreconcilable differences ' Df opinion may unite lor that full application of the free trade principle : which would secure both the largest j production and the fairest distribution . Df wealth. liacklen's Arnica Salve. I The Best Salve in the world forjCuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Kneum, fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, 1 Uorns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- 1 tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is gnaranteed to give ^effect satisfaction, 1 or money refunded. Price 25 cents per i box. Fof sale by ilcMaster, 13rice*& SletcHin. " * Mr JosF-rn Chamberlain*, who is '; 1 . ) soon to visit this country as the Brit- i tish Plenipotentiary for the settlement : of the "Canadian fisheries dispute," is ; probably the most prominent of the j advanced Liberals iu the British Par- ; liament?in fact Mr. Chamberlain is a j -r-. 11- ___ 1 t i itepuDiican, ana uyius u?uwiu o | famous maxim, "a government of the j people, for the people, by the people." j lie is called in England a Radical, and ! his politics are looked upon by all true Conservatives as of the dangerous sort, j He is a statesman who holds in reserve many urasuc reiurws* Auiyu^ w&ui may be instanced the abolition of the House of Lords, that proud and venerable institution that served in the | past many noble purposes. Mr. Chamberlain is more than friendly to America, and his selection by his government as its representative on this occasion ensures the prompt and satisfactory settlemeut of the dispute. ' AYe infer from the action taken by j the merchants of Charleston and J Greenville, and from other circum- j stanccs which have been brought to our notice, that the railroads arc paying about as much attention to the Inter-State Commerce Law as if it had never been seriously enacted. Wc expected the law to be evaded, but we never thought that even a railroad company would assume an attitude of open tleHaiice, ana yet tins seems iu be just what has happened. There is but one course now for the people to pursue; they have never fully or fairly tried the virtue that there is in legislative means. Congress at its next session should repeal the Commission and make the law absolute, affixing such penalties to its infraction as will secure its obedience. There arc other remedies, loo, within the easy rcach of the Legislature which it is unnccessarv now to recount. The issue has arisen and it must be settled, and what the country wauts is a prompt ana j immediate settlement. x i sj A Come Down. At the recent farmers meeting at Anderson Mr. B. Ii. Tillman could find nothing to talk about but the lawyers. Of the GU in the State he wondered how many of them made a living, and said that "some of them sue around the court-house and reported for newspapers at Sl.oO and $3.00 a column." The correspondent said that Mr. Tillman was "pressed ior time" and was "scattering." lie was "pressed" for ideas. Some people wont call a spade a spade. For Mr. Tillman's beneiit it may be slated that a number of the G14 lawyers make more money in one year, and make it honestly, too, than he has seen since he has been trying: to boss the politics of this State. This may not be a very gratifying piece of information to Mr. Tillman, bnt we cant help that, we arc not responsible lor the measure of other people's success. A little more than a year ago Mr. Tillman was busily engaged trying to make a Gov~ Vah* trol 1 1?o Vi'IUJl VI tuv UlttlVs. -t-.vy.? has come down to the homely task of abusing a class of men who seem scornfully incafferent to his attitude, and properly so. If Mr. Tillman expects to do 'Anything a? a reformer, he must find something to talk about of more interest to the public than the private earnings of the members of the bar. Unconvinced. Oar contemporary, the Hornet, il lustrates the old aphorism, "a man convinced against bis will, ?fcc." The Ilornet, like its namesake, makes always an admirable and very plucky fight. It defends the "tariff plunder" with a zeal and ability that is altogether worthy of a better cause. When confronted with an unanswerable argument against the narrow dogmas of its economic faith, the Ilornet comes promptly forward and still denies its force with a courage that half redeems a sinking cause. It claim?, ir\r\ vcifVi Otntlfillf. fihlCGritV. 0. tr.Ol'al purpose for the "tariff plunder." Wc had supposed that this position had been abandoned by all modern protectionists; we had thought that the defenders of the system had tiling moral purposes to the wind and entrenched themselves in the citadel of nationalism, but the Ilornet insists that the benevolence of its creed reaches "the half-paid toiler of the field who has nothing in common with factors." We arc sorry that the vision of our Qontcmporary is obscured. " - I The Issue between tree trade ana pro-1 tection involves the question whether men shall enjoy equal rights on this continent; it is a question of liberty, and another struggle has commenced in which "we shall nobly save or meanly lose, the last best h?Pc or~ earth." Cotton at the South. Ronorts both from government and ! private sources indicate a slight falling offin this year's cotton crop as against the figures of 1S3G-S7. It will perhaps be less than present estimates. Cotton has a way of looking badly at this time, as a result of the midsummer droughts, but- it nearly always : freshens up under the impulse of warm 1 rains and hot suns in early September, so that the "top crop" bolls fill out while the farmers arc gathering the ( bottom and middle crops. The total < yield will, in all probability, cxcecd 1 six millions of bales, aggregating be- 1 tweeu 250,000,000 and 300,000,000 j pounds of lint cotton and about G00,- ! 300,000 of seed. i Since our Southern friends have put [ s:> vast an acreage into cotton?for a crop of this size represents a planted area of 24,000,000 or more of acres? < we trust their expectations may be < realized. There is little enough profit 1 in planting cotton at best, and those 1 who devote their time and energies to , a ] that pursuit can ill afford to lose even . the smallest fraction of the possible i recompense.- We~a^2_glad to believe, < therefore, that the presenf"~?utlook is j favorable, and that the cotton Lrrtr>rcrej_j will realize practically all that they aad a right to expcctBut how ranch better it would be s gOMtMC T.1"!?is -r;i I ? ?f?B? for the South if at least one-half of the < tremendous area now monopolized by : cotton were diverted to other a^ricul = i turn! u-es! How much better if the ] Southern farmer would set about ruis- j ing his own supplies, his own meat ] and bread, fruits, dairy and garden 1 products, thus making himself thor- j oughly independent as regards the ne- 1 ccssitics of life and using cotton merely as a surplus article! Under such a policy the South would soon grow i rich nnd nrosnerons and populous, ' immeasurably beyond any possibility j of the existing system.? Ncic York < Star. The iirantl Army's Danger. j The novts that a number of Grand , Army posts when they marched under ! a port rait of President Cleveland at Wheeling1 on JKriday trailed their flags ' in the dust and made threats tbat they ! would tear the banner down, ought i not to cau>e any particular surprise. There huve been too many evidences cf late that this organization, which started with such a noble aim and . purpo>e, has fallen into the power of ] men who regard it simply as a politi- j cal machine to further their selfish ends. i We do not consider it a misfortune that these Grand Army posts have i seen fit to offer publicly so gross an ' insult to our Chief Magistrate. "We : regret, of course, that any body of , veterans could be found who would < glory i:i a course which puts them in such an unenviable light, but If this | once-honored society is irretrievably ; in the power of pension grabbers and i demagogues, it is well that the fact should be widely known. The street in front of the window : wi.iVn Mio was pnsnend *ivl" ft fc"v I' **? 1 I cd, ii is stated, was blockaded with an 1 excited throng' all day. As the posts went inarching by the officers harried to and fro, urging their men to lower , their banners. Many Democratic members of the Grand Array, when they realized what was taking place, tore their badges from their coats and left the ranks. The excitement reached its height when Encampment No. 1 of the Union Veteran Legion of Pittsburg passed under the banner with their flags high in the air and with many of the members with their heads uncovered. II is very uviuum uizu u mc vjrauu Army is to retain the respect find the affeclion of the people that it has had in the past, there will have to b& a radical reorganization in many of its posts. We know nothing of the political complexion of the members of the Pittsburg1 Legion who made such a striking exhibition of their independence at Wheeling, but it is safe to assume that they numbered as many Republicans in their ranks as Democrats. It was not a question of politics, but whether they were willing to follow blind!v the contemptible course of the smaller Fairchilds and Tuttles of the Grand Army. It is time for the honest members of tho society,. like those of the Pittsburg Legion, to-bestir themselves if they want to save it from the wreckers now at the helm.?New Yorlc Star. -Hi ?rrrmniMiiaaaagi OUX EXCHANGES. (Edgefield Advertiser.) It is said the lynching case cost the parties concerned ten thousand.dollars, seven thousand live nnuareu 01 wnicn went to the lawyers. Judge Wallace, president of the "Wallace House Association," has appointed Hon. W. Scott Allen on the committee to make arrangements for the meeting of this historic body on Wednesday of the Columbia Fair next November. (Orangeburg Times.) The best possibie use to put criminals at is to put them to work on the public highways. This will be the means of benefitting thcgeneral public, and will bring the convicts into the least competition with free labor, and the result will be good roads at small cost. (Lexington Dwatch.) Mr. Henry Crira, of Sandy Ran, writes us that Mr. D. I). Culler killed two rattlesnakes at one shot last week. One of them was four feet six inches -.1 ' 1__ - Hi A ~ long' Witil IWC1VC ruums una it uuuuu, the otlier four feet and three inches, the rattles being shot off. (Edgefield Monitor.) Jones is not out 011 bail, and our statement of" last week was therefore incorrect. The order for hail had been granted and the amount fixed at ?10,000, but up to our latest advices the bond had not been made satisfactory to Clerk Durisoe. A ten thousand dollar freedom is not easy to purchase, especially under the circumstances surrounding Jones. , ( Clarendon Entervrisc.) < A few clays ago "Doctor" R. D. .Ried made a desperate attempt to commit suicide by butting- his brains out against the bars in the Sumter jail, ' but he was found out and chained ! down. lie is awaiting trial for assault ? and battery of a high and aggravated nature, btu it is likely that he will be adjudged insane and sent to the Lunatic Asylum. (Diiily Sun.] Xo Southern mau is ashamed of the name of "Rebel." The pare blood of heroes, the dying agonies of marytrs to principle have sanctified and glorified the name. This country was created bv Southern Rebels; one of; them presided over the exercises at | Yorktown, and another drew up that famous declaration that we celebrate every Fourth of July. (Pcctkc 'index) The exporters and buyers at the different ports have determined to deduct two pound* from each bale of cotton having side strips. It would be wise in the farmers of the county to take notice of this action, as the local buyers will also knock oft' the same amount to avoid sustaining the loss themselves. Heeding this warn ing a saving of fifteen to twenty cents 3ii each bale can be made by the farmers. (Aiken .Journal and Re tie to.) Greenville, if. C., has a pretty cemetery. It is just outside of the city, ir.d the grounds slope down a hillside io a beautiful spring. Two small oonds have been formed and are fed * fc>y the spring. These contain a great c ;nanv German carp, and as no one is \ lllowed to ash there, they- multiply c md grow to an enormous sizi), as a few 1 jrnmbs of bread will prove. Like ilmost all cemeteries this contains all , xinds of grave stones, from tho finest nonnmeut to the simple marble slab. (Spartanburg Herald.) The eS*i?>r of the Enterprise seems I poiling If he desires an V i ' i'- ? T ,1 A/.i:,,n I encounter wun mua missuw j. ucumt such combat; gentlemen dor.t seek satisfaction in that way, or so accord it; if, however, his valor is equal lo lis venom and he wishes satisfaction for any imagined wrong, I shall be pleased lo meet him anywhere outside ;be State, and accord him all that he 3esires. There are some drawbacks to this method of settling differences; iinf if ic hnffpr than innfl slin<rin?r. {Johnston Monitor.) Trial Justice White, of Liberty Hill, heard a case 111 his court recently in which Sarah Ilolloway was a witness. From some cause Sarah could not attend, but sent her t-stiinny in writing, is follows: "Edge field County, S.C. ISSTJune Mr Judge at:d to cort I do here certViof SimtiMii FVf.pmon did LiliOUIVy t Li 14 U J>/W < ? ?- ? :ome inside of Simon Holloway s inclosure ; nd did disturb hitn aud myself very much by accuseing Simon Elolloway of steilifig the said oats Sampson explain to Simon that you ire the vary grand rasscal that stold my oats, and Sampson said several Dt'her flattering words your obedient Sarah Jane Hollow-ay." (Nevberry Observer.) The parties charged with writing md posting libelous letters at Walhalla are under bond to appear at the Sioccinna fVmrt for trial. But a Dllb lie meeting of the citizens of Walhalla and Oconee county has passed resolutions ordering' them to leave the State, never to return. IIow then can they appear for trial? The parties say they a:.-c ready for trial, but the meeting says to them: You shall not have a trial; we condemn you without trial, anil banish von from the community. If this is not mob law, what is it? The parties are certainly entitled to a trial?a fair trial in the court. If they be found guilty according to law, it is time enough to banish them. (Aiken Recorder.) We endorse as nigmy practical me suggestion of Dr. i>. F. Wyman, tbat homes be built for the aged "and infirm veterans of the lost cause and that they be called Jeff Davis Homes. He proposes that this be done in every Southern State, and that this be the monument that we erect to our noble chieftain, and that the work be commenced during his life. Such a monument would be more enduring than marble or brass, and would afford relief to many an aged and infirm veteran of the glorious cause for wnich we fouffht and suffered. Now is the time to consider this matter, for in the next twenty-five or thirty years most of those who wore the grey and m&rched under the stars and bars will have departed to that bourne from whence no traveler returns. Dr. B. F. Wyman was Captain of Company F, 11th South Carolina Infantry, aud rendered gallant service on many a hard fought battlefield. (Carolina gpartan.) Last spring the Spartan urged farmers to plant sorghum enough for the home demand. A larger area than r, 1 lifla Knon nlanf-orl Thnt nil nn U>^Uai HO-O J/iMllUVM. V*? ^ land U very fair. The low bottoms seem admirably adopted to its growth. Col. D. P. Duncan says that Tyger river made a clean sweep of the bottom corn in Union county, but he saw a Held of sorghum that was overflowed and it was not injured at all. The fodder is muddy but the stalk is sweet and good. A freshet will not hart it, unless a raft bears it down. With the evaporators carefully used, a good quality of syrup may bo made. If the juice has to stand a few hours bsfore boiling, a little fermentation will begin." To correct this sugar makers use lime d^--tljo-KUc_-oi' uxo. . - ounces to forty gallons of juic \ Kmc may be put in the ba. -Al stirred up occasionally. If thc^^ling is done as the juice comes from the mill the lime is not necessary. Only clean vessels should be used to put the syrup in. (Abbecille Helium.) During the prohibition contest in Texas Jefferson Davis wrote a letter to Ex-Gov. Lubbock who was once a member of his staff. He took grounds against prohibition, while at the same time he favored temperance. The Anderson InteUiyencer speaks harshly of Mr. Davis on account of this letter. IL was wrong to do so. It is time for the newspopers of the South to let up on Jefferson Davis. He has no equal in America. He distinguished himself in the old army when a young man. lie made a great reputation in Congress both as Itepresenlative and Senator. lie was a conservative man and was elected President of the Confederate States and his duty was to light the war to the end. He did so and' suffered more than any other Confederate by his imprisonment in * ? " < t- - t 1 Fortress juonroe auer me war na.u terminated. Jefferson Davis is a man of irreproachable character. lie is a scholar and an orator. He is honest and capable. Whatever may have been nis mistakes and short comings he is entitled to the respect and veneration of every man in the South. Let onr contemporary hunt up some other scapegoat. Al.uckj* Xew Yorker Gained Thousands. Mr. Darius R. Burr, of 179 Forsyth St., New York City, is a happy combination of both the lucky and mentally wdl-balanced. On the 12th of this month he won $15,000 in the regular monthly drawing of the Louisiana State Lottery Company, and on Saturday last the Adams Express Company, which collected it at New Orleans, gave him the full amount. He stuck to his post as assistant superintendent of agents of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 32 Park Place.?./Yew York Daily News, July 2G. bAvilltf "mil'* POWDER Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel of >urity, strength and wliolesomeness. iEore iconomical than the ordinary kind;, and :annoi ue sum m uuiupeuwuu mui mc nultituds of low test, short weight alum >r phosphate powders. Sold only in cans. Soyal Baking Powdek Co., 106 Wall >t., N. Y. Sold by McJIaster, Brice & Ketchin, jrocers. " Mch8fxly FAMILY GROCERIES., ALL KINDS. THE BEST GOODS, liowest prices. J. M. BEAT! & CO. A Watt, frr.m InQfria i~X V I VJ-LilClll JliUUi i J uoii JUa Near the village ofZiilingdorf, in Lower Austria, lives Maria Haas, an intelligent and industrious woman, whose stoiy of physical suffering and final relief, as related by herself, is of interest to Endl-sii women. "I was employed,' she says, "in the work of a large farmhouse. Overwork l?n.;aght on sick headache, iv. lowed by a deathly fainting and sickness of the stomach, until I was unable to retain either food or drink. I was compelled to take to my bed for several weeks. Getting a little better from rest and quiet, I sought to do some work, but was soon taken with a pain in my side. which, in a little while seemed to spread over my whole body, and throbbed in my every limb. This was followed by a cough and shortness of breath, until finally I could not sew, and I took to my bed for the second, and, as I thought, for the last time. My friends told me that my time had nearly come, and that I could not live longer than when the trees put on their green once more. Then I happened to get one of the Seigel pamphlets. I read it, and my dear mother bought me a bottle of Seigel's Syrup, (Shaker Extract of Roots) which I took exactly according 1r\v? r? t -naf IU LLLLVVLJLUHOj ailU. JL 11CLKX IIUU taken the whole of it before I felt a change for the bettei*. My last illness "began June 3d, 1882, and continued to August 9th, when I began to take the Syrup. Very soon I could do a little light work. The cough left me, and I was no more -f-rwnKlpr! in Vn'Aflfliirwr "NVm* T tAVUM^VW- *** rv* vv?vi4in^? v " -Aam perfectly cured; and oh, how happy I am! I cannot express gratitude enough for Seigel's Syilup (Shaker Extract of Roots). Now I must tell you that the doctoi-s in our district distributed handbills cautioning the, people against the medicine, tSling them it would do no good.\ and many were thereby intiuenced-tp de stroythe Seigv.l pamphlets; l>ut> now, whenever one is to be found, it is kept like a relic. The few preserved are borrowed to read, and I have lent mine for six .miles around our district. People have come eighteen miles to get me to buy tlift rnprlu'inn fnv tlipm lrnrv.tr iii? that it cured me, and to be ^gjj^jjpfce-get - tkeT^hv klnxL I know a woman who was looking like death, and who told them there was no help for her, that she had consulted several doctors, but none could help her. I told her of Seigel'3 Syrup, and wrote the name j jr... T i. uuwn jloi iiur unit sue migm make no mistake. She took my advice and the Syrup, and now she is in perfect health, and the people around us are amazed. The medicine has made such progress in our neighborhood that people say they don't want the doctor any more, but they take the Syrup. Sufferers from gout who wer.t confined to their beds and could hardly move a finger have been cured by it. There is a girl in our district who caught a cold by going through some watt r, and was in bed live years with uostiveiiesaauu i ijeiuiiaiicpaiiis, and had to have an attendant to watch by her. There was not a doctor in the surrounding district to whom her mother had not applied to relieve her child, hut every one crossed themselves and said they could not help her. Whenever the little bell rang, which is r::ng in our place when anybody is uoad. wc thought surely it was fo: K-r; but Seigci's Syrup and I?iIIs (./.Laker Extract of Loots) saved her life and now she is as healthy as anybody, goes to , church- and ?i work even in the fields, Everybody v.-.as astonished when they saw- out, knowing how many years sho had been in bed. To-day sh^ Is her gratitude to mine for God s mercies and Seigels Syrup. Mama Haas. Shaker Medicines are now being oaI/5 in oil i-xorfi* r\ r fli *i ^t'AvI/1 or>/l JU-1 <mxx jyn-. i/."? VI c.w ??vyxj.vt. are working won dor :is shown in > the above ? ;u A. J. White. ai -,\'i rr .St. New l or... To tie Cotton Ginners -OF?. . ^l^T^r-nr T\ FMItV1LMjET. r WE invite your espccial attention to the celebrated PRATT GIXS, FEEDERS -ANDCO>DEL\SERS. For prices and terms address McMAi>TEK& GII5BES, General Agents, Columbia S. C. AugOfxGw WIDE AWAKE. "TAKE CARE OF THE CENTS, the dollars will take care of themselves." We have been tola we are tne oniy nouse in town that practices exact change. No penuriousness; our goods are marked at New Idea Prices (small profits). The odd cents belong justly to the customer. We pay it. One hundred cents saved will buy 120 boxes catches. J. M. BEATY & ERO | _ ii ?. vnrn rjrv CAPITAL PRIZE, $150,000. " 7F<? do hereby certify that wc svpcrcise the arrangement* for all Ike jlo/.fhty and Serai-Annual J)racings of The Louisiana Stat* Lottery Comvanv. an din rtcrxoriwinnr age and control the Drawing* themselves, and that the same are conducted with honesty, fairness and in good faith toward all partm, and w: authorize the Company to. 1use this certificate, with the facsimiles of cr-xr signatures attached, in lU advertisements." Coill!2*i>Ss>' GUCls* We the undersigned Banks and Bankers will pay all Prize* drawn in The Louisiana /State Lotteries which may he presented at our counters. J. H. OGLESIi V, Pres. X-ouIsiasin, Xat. I*Ic. - -v- ? r-v- *> l?r. Cj -I.n. ?? > A. BAI-DTSTN, Pres.Xev.- Orleans rCat. lik. CAKLICOHX, I'ros. Union National I5k. 0NPKECEOEXXED attbacnox: OXE'A HALF A MILLION WJrTKIBTTED. Louisiana State Lottery Company, Incorporated in 18<>8 for 20 years by the Legislature fev Educational and Charitable purposes?wit":! a capital of $1.000,000?to which a reserve fund of over ?jj0,o00 has since been added. I?1T <ii-> mv.r'vliolM'li'ir rMvrn'liir Tote ii? franchise was made a part of the present State Constitution adopted December 2nd, A. D. 1879. The only Lottery ever voted on and endorsed by the people of any State. It never scales or postpone*. Its Grand Single Number Drawings take place Monthly, and the Semi-Av.nual Drawings regularly every six months (June and December). ASPLEXIi5I> OS'PORTI'XITV TO WI\ A FO.'KTfAii. NINTH GKAND DRAWING. CLASS i, JN Til?; ACADEMY Of MUSIC. NEW ORLEANS. TUESDA Y,SKI*TJ52>1BEK 13, 1887?20sfa Monthly Drawing. CAPITA]^ PKIZE, $150,000. OTICE.?Tickets are TEX DOL-1 JUiVXiO U-\.L,X. XiUlVO, XlliUS, Tenths, ?1. LIST OF TEIZES. 1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF ?1."0,000. .?150,000 1 GRAND PRIZE OF 50,000.. 50,000 j 1 GRAND PRIZE OF 20,000.. 20,000 2 LARGE PRIZES OF 10,000.. 20,000 4 LARGE PRIZES OF 5,000.. 20,000 20 PRIZES (>F 1,000.. 20,000 50 do 500.. 2.5,000 100 do 300.. 20,000 200 do 200.. 40,000 500 CO 100.. 50,000 APPROXIMATION PRIZES. 100 Approxi't'n Prizes of ?300.. 800,000 j 100 do do 200.. 20,000 iuu uo (io iuo.. iu,uuo 1,000 Terminal do .30.. 50,000 2,179 Prizes, amounting to $.130,000 Application for rates to clubs should be made only to the oi'ilce of the Company in New Orleans. For further information write clearly, jrivin? full address. POSTAL NOTES* Express Money Orcers. or New York Exchange in ordinary letter. Currency by Express (at cur expense) addressed K. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, La., or 31. A. DAUPHIN. Washington, D. C. Address Registered Letters to NEW OELKAXS V ATTfWAT. RAVIfc Neiv Orleans, La. I "RFMFVRFR TIiat tlw?w5c(! or i Generals Ijeauregard I and Early, who are In charge ct the drawings, Is a guarantee ot absolute r.i me.-;; an.J integrity. that tai' chances are all equal, a a J that no one can posttbly divine what, numbers will draw a Prize. K?.UE3!3?;ri that the payment of all Prizes is <?i'AKA?c'TS;.:i> tlY FOLK XATIOXAL BAXKS or New Orleans, and the Tickets are sig:?td by the President CI an Institution, whose cfortcrcu rights are recognized Id me highest C tins, therefore, beware or any imitations or ano3tenous schemes. ^?m Ml KsmtuxavBtmr Bag mw TirTITOlP ITT' Tlia Mill ail CARLOAD TO ARRI PRICES LOWEK A FULL LINE OF SAI HARS BREECH AND MUZZLE-I REVOLVERS A CAEL AND SEE THEM. ULY88E NEW FUI -an: IIBIII1B I o ARRIVED AND ,-a.jli.* A " R ^ JL r. c 3E5 JRQE JfeiLs 3 rHAT WE WILL OCCUPY STORE-ROOMS IN TH. AFTER FIRST OF SE WHICH ARE BEING FITTJ EST STYLE. OUR B NORTH TO i FALL AND WD (J-gfDONT FORGET Til Respectfully, Q, * . ? * z Fresn and Pretty. - s I . 3 j | WE DESIRE TO CALL ATTENTION TO OXJE i STPTITKUZ. QTAPTT 4 j KJJL XI-JLH U-L WlVj | Wliicli is now open and ready for % 1 INSPECTION! | I __ ' 1 i i Our assortment in all lines", will I be found full and complete, and jour Stock is : FRESH AND PRETTT. | Prices guaranteed to be as low j as any market in tlic South. Call and see our stock 01 | SHOES AND SLIPPERS. | .'J [pif3 Lot of Juno Corsets : just in. ^ I ' ! M'MASTEE, BKICE & KETCHIN. J $25,000.00 ] IN GOLD! { TYILL BE PilD FOB I AEBUCKLES' COFFEE WEAFPEES. J 1 Premium, - $1,000.00 ? . 1 2 Premiums, 6 Premiums, szau.uu #c m 25 Premiums, * $100.00 ' 100 Premiums, * S50.00 200 Premiums, $20.00 " J 1,000 Premiums, - $10.00 " 1 For full particulars and directions see Circular in every pound of Aebttckles' Corns, f'TflBV TIT A QHM 1 JMil I CT iiuUii. YE IN TEN DAWS. 1 : THAN EYER. j )DLES, BRIDLES ANlJi. iJ&bb. . / .0 APING SHOT GUNS, lND KNIVES. : G. DESPORTES. vje INIIUKE ] d- ; h iffifip I ?Yi W5 1 TO ARRIVE. I I A Sll YOU TO CALL AND J compare my prices with other J dealer?. I give a value in qual liy aiiu liiiisn wuicn niuKes v m priccs low. MACHINES |8|: YOU CAN SAVE FKOM t|a?ften to twenty-five per cent, by Igjif buying of me instead of caaqggvassiug agents. ffl tt t ti"ir? h w. rn. iijLiirs. TWO OF THE LARGE V 1 E BANK BUILDING THE J PTEMBER, SD UP IN THE GRANDUYER HAS GONE fd 'UKUHAS.b , 1 - ' 41 sTTER STOCK. P, *t * 3 E PLACE. fi D. WILLIFORD & CO.