The Fairfield news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1881-1900, October 19, 1887, Image 4

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/ Ail - i t:r;?o-e ISCCoJiie ihe ?. * ea<l 1 o " *:.? Lati? Nation-'. Hsu j. .: , ,liis wiioie i though , r that Signer Crisp:. o:> siuru irona Frieuaricfcsrahe, >*i r - v-itde declaration more i.-:vr- thai. mutilated echo I of the message- i -orrre from Berlin by i Beacon.s.'loK';. *'1 " rincc peace with iioiior." ?'% .: ueiiionably a :Srm league between . r.-.ree central rowers should tend tc;;an^e oi z . ace in Europe. and might even 1 e~ deemed to guarau:-. ; r - .uil y. . . policy oi France " t. ; not 31 -.eiy to be shaped j UJ : v.ly .1 u Ui J. J were C- .:. .'.v.! by ti-..- iceiin'gs of an a-iix>..ic ' l;y anything tuat; even postponed the outbreak of an iZu- j ropean- ;;:' SiaL-.i of the Continent cannot- b;;t :c -.acl aoiorsg theci Italy. But, cesi-Je.-.sL.-reoi luv general blcs^ngs ilc-.ii.p; iioxn pcu.ce, the Italian Prime I>Iiristvr i? believed to contemplate certain spccia: ~ .1 vantages to accrue to bis eouatry from partnership with G-.:;nany arid Asostria. It was not, in other words, peace only that Signer Cris .1 brought back from Friederichsrahe, b:t the conviction that Italy, whether peace or war awaits ber, has at last a pror vet c." recovering the headship o: the Latin n.- dons and the pre AiU.wiviLIVJ'J <s'J U?V\.l IV Genoa and "c::::; in the Mediterranean. In f'iO : : j*. try i- itribifc Italian since t-. - c. !:e peninsula, the lx-iit: i.: u that lie, ana not the Frenchman, is the rightful representative and distjned upholder of sine Latin e'vn'.z.^ion ra.i the Hoinan fame. He contends that his "cuntry, if ^he principle o:: c^li'.^s were faithfully carried ou:., ivovnu even now contain as manyinlraVirants as France. while its population vii: expand mach faster through in? operation of certain physio, logical ic. . :\M'r.'-tclieuly poor as are the ma :scs c: tl;o Iralian peasantry % and ince:::cn'7 uci 'eted as they are by emigration, they yet increase so rapidly that Ita:y> i: lias been computed, must, even v. i. ::rriU>iial secessions, over J ? ...uvv,; iJ-L iiuo v4**~*\s gi a si:' ::e g\ - ra ion. i here are, more/ . over, many millions of Italian-speaking human bc-in that are' still out side of y _ King Humbert's domiuions. They beft ' Jgagrfo^that Italia irridenta, the longing e' .? fur vvlrleh. although of late for politic arsons ! <? loudly uttered, remains in."eitinguishuble. Could Italy incorporate ail that pertains to her by race, language and L:.::or:cal associations, she - wold i take :--on: . ? .French Kepublic Nice, : Savoy and Corsica, ai1. ! frora Austrianot only the i'r ;. ; no ana Trieste, but the ^vhole lii .an, Solavoni&rt and Dalmatian coast of the Adriatic, rvhich once was JLJu.-ILL U' -C. V'Jtl- O ? i iV*a , Turkey, also, she wor.Ul claim Albania, - " tans acquiring the whole Illyrian and ' Epicoi sea coa*t down io die Strait of Osrantchami making the Adriatic what fe used -j V horo the advent of the Ohtcmaa. an Italian lake. That is hat all Italians believe they ought to nave, bat, having recovered their hereditary possessions, they would not stop there. Conceding to theirAustrian copartners Saionica, die'wholenorthern jseacoa. 'a oi the JEgean and'the probable re'rtavdon to Constantinople, they would claim Csr-.dia and all those islands of t . Amhh. h;^/-, now Turkish, but w-h Venice on the partition of the Gr-.-.i: em,/:. They would claim Tripoli;me. ;ha: v track of Sarca which was so pop.,' -as 2nd froitfu: under the nai 1 . c/L' 1 at -ipolis. Nor would, they, in the event oi; a successful war with Trance forget that in Tunis the resident Italians out number the Frenchmen ten zo one. At Alexandria, also, acd throughout the Delta, they constitute, next to the Greek, the strongest element m a;c .Larovcan population, ana throng-. the goad "will of England and support oi Ci' .nany, they may look forn * 'ward to sciiniring tlie influence formerly - ^possessed . Era-ace in the Nile Valley. Throagboct t'ae Levant, :j fact, Italy, v if she act h: concert England, may tGTSm or J-rrv-r.. -jrirncn-larly if the Euphrates Hallway is built v^th Eng. Ish capita!. 3Ieauwniie at the western gate of the 2-iedifcerran can, Italian, German and English ironclads are preparing to co-operate for -he de* feat oi ifreneh d .-signs upon ^lorocco, on the theory that no European po~er bat Spain can safely be allowed to occupy the Strait of Gibraltar. From Spain Italy has nothing to iear and much to gain. Such arc the psrnaps unacknowledged but really cherished visions of every Italian " ho Iovjs his country and believes her r.i rv.-nve bv her achievements that .-he is an example, not of national decrepitude. but of unexhausted youth. he Story of i: Policy. The Valley ilutuoi Life Association, of Virginia, began business September 3d, 1878. Guarantee fund, invested in bonds and mortgages (firs: lien on real estate), >10 3, COO. The Vail y Hatnal Life Association of Virginia is the largest and the leading Life Association in the South. Over .one million o:l'dollars has been paid in :cash to the families of deceased members. The cheapness of its plan is demcn strated by the experience of those who are insured. In iiiustration of this fact, we take Policy No. 3, held by Air. TV. P. Toms. Cashier of the Ancusta National ; Bank, Staunton, Va.,?Policy issued | September i;!, 157s,?$1,000?conse- i qaentiy it has shared every cost that has j come against the Company. The entire cost , to-Mr. Tarns in eight years and six : rnqnths, Membership Tee, Annuals, and Mortality payments, has been bat $70.ii, j or an average annual cost oi' SS.2S. At j the date oi this insurance Mr. Tarns was 27 years of age. A policy -ji even amount and dace in one of the most popular Old Line com- ; panies on the ordinary life plan, payable at death only, would have cost" j " $192.75, or $21.50 per year?a saving of ! $122.31 in iavor of the Yidley Mutual. Theories a:c easily advanced "and jeal ous rivals abound in them, but facts can | not be refuted. First-class agents can get liberal c^n- ' tracts by applying to LEE ixAOOOD. .uaaagor bo. La. uepartment, Columbia. i"roj:rv-> ::: >:atp.. Tfce . Baltimore Mawf'icixirc;-s' Jieeord. of this witA. ^iv : k sinter".- n* of new enter pr is- - in Souili Carolina: Aiken.?Tm.; !k- : yj- luq: vc Porcelain 3Ianufactv.rin? C mpany. oapit.;! stock $30,0<\>, 1j"> i>eeu utwI ' ciiae, cK and man;;'ic:kaolin. y P. A. Emanuel and J. A. Murray. Bath (P. 0. LungU-v.. ?The Hi! 1 - Joh usoi: 3Ianufactiir! Company wiii shortly increase the capaeky of their p p-.r mill to." tons per (.lay. Later on they contemplate : putting in m;chk;v;y to mar.-^'uetprc o-:- k paper. Biackv::. : !i... kvide & Xewocriy Eai'iroad Compmy wkl _ -n develop kaolin mis j. Charleston.?TLe M-'mc Street <! : C: - :; tov>-n ihv;.y ,. ' ; ' r:$acl/e and tfejii:1 work 0:1 k- sk'vt i'~c F. L. Melius" : : Chester.?I V l?iVvioni>.> :;-cId mhe. " ' Florence.?K<<iges cc Is .;: . ; dely -Started lx : . '.} /. T. " : . ' :u this issue us i . T Killian's.?7>I. i:. Kiillaii is rebuilding ]: his turjv-atiac diitiliv.-y reported ih this j * iv?ue bv.rn J.uOcs.?V. ;:r-. ^ rebuild '.heir saw mill reported in tlds issue a< iracil. : ^ \ I.-xiu.a; .' nMa-'ufu'-:u r \ TfagCoxr.p,iuy'.? t U-vc-orUered tnaclun- j I try \\ r Dev.- built: I a IT. jt 1 I iESTKKAL >EV?ei Iterr- o! inierrni Gathrrrd from \ arlou* Quartrrx. The cheapest thins i:i hats this season is the head <-f a dude. The Atlanta Exposition opened yesterday : under auspices altogether encouraging. Vou can do a man no good unless you are making him better. Charity may cover a multitude of sins, | but that is not its regular business. Judge Manning. Minister to Mexico, died in Xew York yesterday. Jenny Lind'siife is now despaired of and sh*.: lies in a dying stale. Mi?s Dinah Maria Craik, letter known Miss Mulrck, the author of "John Halifax." is dead. The Scotch fuller Thistle sailed forhonv y<-i.tcnL:y morning. Captain Darr hopes' make tbc ri:u :-.ero-s in six'ecn days. The yellow fever at Tampa, Fla.. is on | the increase;. TJjc people and the aulborij tics seem demoralized. Of all the evil soirits abroad al this hour i:i tbe world, insincerity is the most dan gerous. To abolish wealth is not. the way to abolish poverty, though tneu sometimes talk as if it were. Shake the molhs ou- our winter liannels, and doirwha is k-: of them. Pneui mocia is in town. f Afauy a man succ; Lout b.ir.t successful. Tjie m;in v. i > . uls Lr oeiuga failure an example A woman sometitt: . k?-ep I"_r temper when is mo-. I _ r.: L j't ox peeled to. Less time spent in i?I:o u>- ."ng and devoted to the duties oi iiie would give wealth and contentment. Opinion is the main thing which does i good or harm in the world. It is our false | opinions of things which ruin us. J The United States Supreme Court opened jits fall session yesterday?all the Justices being present. The first degree of folly is to thiuk one's self wise; the next to tell others so; the third, to despise all counsel. It i= safer to affront some people than to oblige them; for the better a man deserves I the worst they speak of him. The .number of women who really care to vote is about equal to the number of men who like to put the baby to sleep. The Illinois River Improvement C'onven; tion met in Peoria yesterday with 400 dele| gates. i All attempts to bring to an end the New I York brass-workers'strike have so far been ! fruitless. Twenty-five thousand persons attended the International En camp merit in Chicago and "witnessed the sham battles. Lemon juice, the white of an egg iin(J ; sugar is useful to relieve hoarseness, coughs and sore throats. It must be acid as well i as sweet. ^ The Toronto Mail announces that.Sir ! Charles Tupper has been appointed to , represent Canada on the tlie Fishery Com 1 mission. A summer hotel at Brj*n Mawr, twelve miles west of Philadelphia, was burned 1 vesterdav. Loss $230,000: insurance $130,; ooo. A man has no more right to say an uncivil thing than to act o'-e: no more right to say a rude thing to another than to-knock him down. A riot occurred at Plevna on Surday during the elections for rnc-mners of the Sobranje. Twenty four persons were killed and thirty wounded. j A colored woman from Sumter, on her way to Florence for medical treatment, died on the outgoing Coast Line train Suuj day night, ; Several negro Masons in Greenwood, . nss.. nave wen arrested on uic cnarge oi having murdered Kerry Taylor and his wife. The evidence against them is strong. The Lauudrymen's National Association is in session in Washington. The enemy against whom the laundrymcn combine is the Chinaman. The banking house of Martin E. Post S: '"o.. Cheyenne. Wyoming, has suspended : Nominal assets ?903,000: liabilities : 'iGD. Those who always speak well of women i do not know them enough; those who alI ways speak ill of them do not know them ; at all. Wc do not wish to commit ourselves, ' but wc realiy believe thai the engine of an j ocean steamship is tiie best screw driver we ever saw. The man who sits down ,.:,d waits to be appreciated will find Ivmself among uncalled-for baggage aftt-.j the limited express has rone by. A man will nol su > being called either a puppy, a hoi: cur. but if he is pronounced a sa" e accepts the stigma us if it were a c ,-ut. The Northern printer^ n.**c /ithdrawn their demand for ri ? - a day < uaiii a conxerecce c?n oc ana ".'an n com: mittec of employers at Chicago. At Pittsburg, Pa., yesterday Louis; ; Soerocco, ac Italian, was instantly killed i i by the explosion of a soda fountain which j he was charging with gas. The large knitting mills operated by J. . Eliis at Port Dover, Oat. were burned yes-: terd:iy. Loss ?.">0.000; insurance $24,400. 1 About ninety hands are thrown out of en- ! ployment. A monster saw mill boiler exploded at Centreville, W. Ya., Thursda}' night, tear-j in;; everything loose in the neighborhood, j killing three men and wrecking the engine j and mill completely. A email in CI ''/mnrri C ( < t J.A. .iUUii W*ViVU WJ 1!-1 U1W) k^. J j had his throat cut yesterday by another"; colored boy naratd Henry. The wound is ; serious but not necessarily fatal. Henry j was arrested. The large Sprague five-story stone mil!, ; 1.000 by 090 feet, at Baltic, Conn., was i totally wrecked by 5 re yesterday. Cause ' uoknown. Loss ?1,500,000 Nine hundred hands arc thrown out of cxployment. The Merchants' and Miners' Bank of Iron ' Mountain, Michigan, closed on Saturday. j It is understood that the cashier has gone ] to Can?da with ?10,000. The Knights of Labor C mventioD at j Minneapolis appropriated $0,000 fur the prosecution of the State ?I syndicate of Texas for introducing foreign contract labor in violation of the aatioaal law. A statement of the postal biisiuess done at thirty of the larger post offices for the quarter ended September 30, 18*57, shows an increase of Gj per cent, over the corns ponding quarter of last year. Af \ "\T.wo .?#? ? , cui; L-aiiirti.c uulilU factory of Locke & Jewell arid several stir rounding buildings were burned yesterday. Loss .VlS.") 000, of which L?cke an ! Jewell: lose $70,000, insured for ?43,000. A wrl'er says: ' The boys must help ' : iiisc!vcs." boys do. until the old man admonishes them by a thump on the i.ead that somebody else likes cake as well as they. | A Philadelphia barber displays a sign |; v hicli announces that he is "proprietor"of ;./:iai decorating salmon, tonsorial artist, i : iiysio^noEiical hairdresser and facial o'p.' .Xr. cranium manipulator and capillary ; jri-Tccr." A few shares of Baltimore and Ohio ; i iiailroad-stocii sold on 'Change in Balti- i more yesterday at 120, a decline from ] "Jo 1 : the close of last week. Kobert Garrett, < :p io I o'clock in the afternoon, had not ; i pprurcd at the central office. J -i ;>ld Kcmm days upon the dtstruc: ; life by the caving i:\ of a pit drift i -uud pillory the const ructiag j : v, as punished by death, as having i set himself up as the professor of an art hi eh he did not understand.'' Deputy Factory Inspector McKay of! ' New i urn. uumv n warrant to ue lisueu i * r the arrest of Theodore Meyer, of the jl-ni'-rican Manufacturing Company, for a r.oluiioa of the factor}7 lav,* in employing , '.dldren under the statutory age. * " 1 John B. Owens, the ex* '< :* messenger . r.entioned as probably < . nod in the rent robbery of the P Express on he Iron Mountain Rail: .s been ar: >tcd. lie clainis to have ta drunk or ti :azy when he.took the money. I< ' f" * The clerk who bus iI<-x(:\icc* of an afternoon because be is too ill; to sit at his desk at work, will be; found .-sittiqg for ! three hours in the broiling sun on the bar;] ' side of an unplancd Uiurd seat, shouting 'like a madman when his favorite ball team ; is getting whipped. Ou S:;turd-:y night the court house of | Charieroix count}', situated at Boyne City, i iocethcr with all the titles, records. Arc., j was burned. Fire supposed to be incen- : diary. as the location of the county seat I ha-; been the occasion of a Lot fight between ! riva? communities. Tin* ojanirc industry of Florida Jias in-j t?:,:oid in five years. In ]*$0 only : 100. boxes were shipped out of the' >tfl' , vhiie in 1S84 and lt^o the exports j were : . ' ('O.uvO boxes, and their value | $l,5O0,u00. The United States eats.it is .-.-tii- .tied. 000,01)0,000 of oranges yearly, j ugh to give to each man, woman and , > .liki tea orange?. .Judge Field, of the Valparaiso, ir.d.. Circuit court, has issued a summons to the ' grand jury to convene at once and chargcd j mem with a thorough investigation of the j > K' l:; - disaster. The prosecuting attorney j j stated that no pains would be spared to ; 1 bring the ga:I*y parties to justice. I Fire broke out yesterday afternoon in the after compartment of the steamship Iiathel. at Charleston, loading with cotton for Bremen. There were about 2.SOO bales aboard the ship, but the fire was confined j to the after hold eompnitment. which was | ' 1 1 1 f!-r. rt-AtiAvi /-nrlrAl ! ilUUU'JU liiiu liit: niv; <.4*.?>4w v?w**vav,4. j The extent of the damage will not be j kuowu untila survey has been held. Latham, Alexander ?fc Co's cotton movement and fluctuations for the past ye ir. which has just been published, estimates that, the crop of the United States for 18i>7 88 v. ili amount to 0 ooO.OOO bales, as i,agni: st 0,505,000 bales for 188G-S7. A telegram from Dr. Wall, president of | the beard of health of Tampa, says: "The ! fever is still spreading. Six new cases and j one death today. Several patients in a crit| cal condition." The non-professional opinion that the.diseaic is not \ellow fever is noi accepted by health officers anywhere. Every precaution is being taken, but there is no fear ot infection elsewhere. Ttios. C. Manning. Minister to Mexico, lies in a dying condition at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, 2sew York city. lie was taken worse yesterday evening and at a late hour last night was delirious. His death is ; probably a matter of but a few hours. He ? 4 " *1*" "? "'"^r rr/% f/-v u * rnn ?1 t j CUU1C IV till; i;iiy iv <?.ctv.iiv.4 | meeting of Peabody fund trustees, of i which number he is one. The Knights Arc \ol Anarchist*. Everybody knows that American workingmen, whether of native or foreign birth, are neither Anarchists nor in sympathy with anarchy ":-i the remotest degree. J:i a land of schools and newspapers, where it. ' is possible for the poorest to be intelligent, it i? not possible that any large proportion , of the men who really earn their bread by | the sweat of their brows can be iu favor of : tl.c overthrow <>f a system of government | that makes every man the equal of every . other man before the law. While the Anarchist have loudly professed to be the champions of the workingmen. it, has not appeared that the workingmen hive asked j tie Anarchists to speak for them or that i they are either fluttered or gratified by the i pretended championship. J Jf there-has been anywhere any doubt on | this subject it must have been dispelled by ! the action of the convention of the Knights i of Ltbor at Minneapolis on Monday in d f eating. by a vote of 1G1 to 5~. a resolu.tion recommending the commutation o? the il.suh sentences against the Chicago Anar- J . chis* The resolution was carefully drawn : ; :ind did v.ot indorse the crime of the con- j demned men even by implication, but sim-1 ! ply recommended commutati -n on the j | genera] ground of a strong public sentiment! against capital punishment. The cocven-j lion by a three-fourths vote declined to take ; : any action in the matter, rightly holding j , th t if ttesc men had violated the law they j I sin nM suil'- r its penal!}'. | L is ^ obable that the overwhelming ! I de:< = : I he resolution was due in some i s-i- ' i'-e impassioned appeal of Master j W?..i'owderiy io the members to put thi ;'.ic s?al of their condemnation upf .ything ?hat savored of anarch}'. .u! :.s his appeal, however, i! to willing C':us. ?aivtLoriy w.-i iy expressing what his auditors a: ii!y believed This e; isode furnishes gratifying evidence of the fact that the greui- body of organized vrorkingmca in lias ( ountry are following the conservative leadership "of Powuerly ?nd men of his : clays, rather than that of (Juinn and Assemj bly 10. As long as they continue to follow I such leadership they will continue to improve their condition and command tbe : sympathy and good will of all.?Fluladcl\ j/hi't Times. / The Sacoesslti! !?outh." T!;3 Xew York World of a recent date | ] a glowing and grand tribute to "The I ; Successful South." In one of its great | : issues it give five full pages to the description una illustration of the Youth's mineral i region, particularly in Alabama am.l Teni nesste. and after a general outline of t lie i progress and mineral wealth of this scc> lion, gave graphic pen pictures of Knoxvillr,"Decatur, Montgomery, Tuscaloosa. New Orleans and other cities. Birmingham was not particularized in this issue because so much has already been said of the "Magic City." The most particular attention was paid to the younger towns of Decatur and Tuscaloosa, and the stories there related are certain to have a wonderful effect in wining" tbe e points. The plans of perfect cities have been laid not only in the minds of ti3. companies owning the -i, but also on the ground. and we will s'.-e the realization of the brightest dreams concerning these manufacturing centres and mineral 'depots. The growth and development of the new South, in fact, now surpassing the story of Aladdin and Jiis iuuip, :uju wise uieu aiu gening riUJ rapidly by putting their money in the mineral region. The story of Knoxville is not only as wonderful but more solid than the rest, for its record is already made in part and its progress is now in full swing. Since 1S-SO i befit}' has grown from a population of i),to :>T.0:iG in 18ST! Think of such an increase in less than seven y<ars. And :his is only the beginning of the story. This increase came from its rich agricu turai environment, an-, now its immense mineral and underground resources are to be developed. Think of the growth of Knoxville in the next seven years! The spirit of enterprise is fully developed, as : was shown recently in the* enthusiastic J subscription of a half million dollars for the extension of t'ue Marietta and North Georgia and the Powell's Valley railroads to Knoxville, and beyond this subscription the city owes nothing. The public buildings and private enterprisers of the city mark it for a great metropolis, and a rep.e- ( scntative Southern city. Knoxville, in I fact, is fairly representative of the progress < now taking possession of the new South, ' and is on the road to material and deserved ( greatness. f Whof Kk or?rl i!l T ir> /\t )>r?v C cities in the South can and should be. Sue- * cess is within them, and the word '"Sue- r C'j>'-fu! S>uth" is well timed. Augusta is j older than uJl the cities in the mineral belt, and is :i ce tton manufacturing city, but its "( growlii is as phenomenal as any of the ; others, though not so swift. And Augusta 1 will s't-.:: i.'n'c connection with Ivnoxviile, r us well ?> "he' many points reached by her *L radii: j; iiroads. The long-wished-for s time ; . ' than any of us imagine, and v he I ' !* both cities arc manifest. A little ..id patience will give the 8 xmiK - . in a solid, even though an un- lj ;\-;v. way. T:-h: Miss- Jones is a nice looking girl, 15 sn't^fche?" "Ye^'ra^I.she'd be the belle of the lo>vn j ' f it wasn't fur one thing."'' . i What's that?."'- , ^ j }f "She has catarrh so -bad it is unpleasant f. o be near her. She has tried a* dozen hings and nothing.helps her. 1 am sorry, t or I like her, b&vthatdoesn't make it any ? 2ss disasxeeable'for'on'e to be around her.-' HoVt she had-used Dr. Sage's Catarrh i^ veniedy, there 'would have been nothing of j he kind said, for it will cure catarrh ever/ *u ime.: * Family ties?Nine children. c, The remedy for squeaking boots is put- fc ing powdered soapstone "between the ;atber? of the sole. . h< HOW ANTS LiVi:. j Their Love of Cleanliness and Their Modes ' of I>ar;a!. In spite of the multifarious drties and ! tasks that are imposed on these riny j burglars, they stiil line time to clean ; and. adorn their worthy hale persons, i says a writer in the Co>mopvitia:i. Xo ! spot. no atom of dust or anything el^e uncleanly wiil they -tolerato on their | bodies. They get rid of the dirt with I tiie brushy tafts on their feet or with ' their tongue. Tney act. for ail the j '< tvhf?n tilflV ! clean and lick themselves; and they r\ssist one another at the toilet precisely like monkeys. Their >onse ot cleanliness goes so far that the naturalist often inds. to his unpleasant surprise. the coioivd jnarks that iie h:ni applied with so much care 011 his "trial ants" re- j moved by their dirt-huting friends ! They keep their dwelling justas cleanly. ' liut the conveying away of their decc. sod brethren, whose dead bodies they a:.:-,-ar to regard with the greatest antipathy. gives them more trouble than anything else. When some members of an ant community, which Mr. Cook kept imprisoned, died and could not be removed, those remaining seemed affected with the greatest horror. For days the insects ran about seeking a way out. ami ceased only wiicn completely exhausted. Tiic ants belonging to the componolus species seizeu me dead ai!(I threw then: into a water-pail, which they converted into a sepalcher. Ordinarily, though tit*- ants arc said Lo treat their dead with more reverence. The}' even possess their own graveyards, which lie in the vicinity of their nests. They convey their deceased companions thither, where they lay them down in orderly little heaps or in rows. It is only the corpses of their fellows, however, that they treat in this manner. Dead strangers they throw out like something unclean, or tear the body in pieces. Even between tiie master and slaves of the same community Miss Treat says she has observed a dissimiliar mode of burial. While the masters find their last repose in a special graveyard, side by side, the slaves lie like iieaped-up refuse near the nest, despised equally in death us in life. The ant cemeteries are often thickly populated, for their life is short. Tiie male lives only through one summer; the females live somewhat longer, and the workers die of old age in the Slu or 10th year. Singular Discovery of Gas. When the artesian well at Amsdeli's Kr,.u-?vv wu thnrr? \vi< ttP.r- I ceivcd about the water slight indications of natural gas. Nothing, however. was thought of the circumstance, as the element was apparently not present in any considerable quantity. About two weeks ago the llame of a lamp chanced to be brought in close proximity with a stream of water direct from the reservoir, when the attendant was astonished to perceive the sudden igniting of a considerable quantity of gas, which burued clearly, and strongly for a few seconds, and could be relighted j every time the stream was turned on | from the faucet It was found that all i the water from the well, amounting to I about eighty barrels per hour, is impregnated with pure, odorless hydrogen gas', which burns readily and gives a brigh' blue flame. It is only necessary j to tnr i on a stream of water in any i part of the building and bring flame in conjunction with it, when the volume of gas liberated is sufficient to kindle instantly into a quick envelop", of flame. This is aii the more remarkable, ?iuce the water is pumped into a lofty reservoir before being distributed, and the greater portion of the gas thus has at. ' opportunity and no doubt is permitted I to free itself. That so much remains i.. the supply of water distributed throughout the structure is certainly evidence of the presence of^gas in very consideras the presence of gas had not been no- I ticed uutii after the earthquake, he was I led to associate the two facts, and thought that perhaps a pressure hail been opened by the convulsion connecting the shaft of the well with a natural gas reservoir. The question of utilizing the fluid for fuel purposes has not yet been considered, as no tests have been made lo ascertain the exact or approximated volume of the gas, which it was stated seems to be intermittent If the supply is sufficiently large, it could be used for fuel and" illumination, and would result in a large saving to the drm. The discovery of this vein in connection with the one at Knowersvillc, although both should prove too inconsiderable to be of much value, is certainly indubitable pioof that underlying the strata of this section there are large deposits of valuable natural gas, which only need to be properly tapped to revolutionize the .illuminating and fuel in dustnes or Aioany ana its vicinage.? Albany Argus. A Question of Speeci. Jabe Mathis, of the Thirtsec.k Georgia, was a good soldier, but ono i day, when the Confederates were re- | treating from the gory field of Gettysburg. Jabe threw his musket on the ground, seated himself by the roadside, and exclaimed with much vehemence: "I'll be dashed if I walk another step! I'm broke down! I can't do it!" And Jabe was the picture of despair. "Git up, man!" exclaimed his captain, "don't you know the Yankees are following us? They'll git you, sure!" "Can't help it," said Jabe, 'Tin done for; I'll not walk another step!" The Confederates passed along over the crest of a hill and lost sight of poor, dejccted Jabe. In a moment there was a fresh rattle of musketry and a renewed crash of shells. Suddenly Jabe appeared on the crest of the hill moving like a hurricane and followed by a cloud of dust. As he dashed past his captain that cilicer vel led: "Hello, Jabe; thought you wasn't going to walk any more:" "Thunder," replied Jabe, as be hit the dust with renewed vigor; "you don:t call this walking, do you?"?Savannah News. A Plan's Yearly Pood. From the army and navy diet scales . >{ France and England, based upon the ecognized necessities of larire numbers >f men in active life, it is inferred that ibout two and one-fourth pounds avoiriupois of dry food per day arc required or each individual; of this about three- : ourths are vegetable and the rest aninal. At the close of an entire vear the ' i - - J - c , ! uuucuu is upwarus 01 ow pounds. Enumerating under the title of water [ ill the various drinks, its estimated : [uantity is about 1,500 pounds per ahnun. The air received by breathing [ nay bo taken at 800 pounds. With r' hese figures before as we are able to how how the ..ease stands. The food, c rciter. and air-.which-a man receives s mount, in the aggregate, to" more than c >000 pounds.a year?abQU^ a.ton and a t ia!f,(or twtuityl times his weight y n tonltli'* .m&tue of .'.'Liberty Enlightening the * World" Will be ;; reminder of -personal.liberty j a: )i iu uuuic. just us aure ii iuuu- ? ?alien has Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical.-1 g iscoTery" been placed, and it will stand- e1 trough the cycles of time as a monument: > the physical emancipation of thousands, '} ho by its use have been relieved from ti msumption, consumptive night-sweats, it" pouchitis, cough?, spitting of blood, weak r< mgs,' and other throat and lung allections. b The eggs of a single sturgeon, by actual cl mnl, numbered 921,600, and weighed w srty-five pounds. sc The sparkle of repentant tears reaches tl: ,'aven. tc ?.iOdi:rn old maids. T!i<*3* aro .Jolly and Good-Xatured, and I Dress in Exquisite Taste. According to the idea of things which ! prevailed not so very long ago, the wo- j man who did not marry was a blighted j bi-inir. It diet not matter whether she ! remained single from choice or neces- I ahy: for since it was considered a wo- i mail's only manifest and unalterable I destiny to marry, she must of course, be i regarded as a failure in life if she did ; not do this. And though she may have ! re ."used forty offers of marriage, or bave : hsd the most imperative duties of any i so.-t, or developed the most decided tal- | cut for some ocation in life other than marriage yet neither one nor all of these ! viiiild havfi been accented as a valid i rc ison why she should not follow what society had decided was the only proper course in life for her. From tiiis condition of things there arose iu literature and minds of the peoplo in general the typical "old maid." S:jc was always pictured as gaunt, angular, and forbidding in appearance: morose and ill-tempered in disposition, as became a blighted and disappointed be ng; haling youth and pleasure of all sorts, with a special grudge against iovemaking and lovers, since they remimied her of her own vanished youth :t:i i the opportunities which she never had, or, having, had neglected. But we have changed all that in these later days. With the education of wom--n and the broadening of thoir opportunities in every way their destinies have broadened also. A woman is still, perhaps, expected first to marry, and it is best for her that she should, provided i;cr marriage can be a happy and suitable one- But if from her own choice, or a necessity arising from a lack of appreciation on the part of the other and more stupid sex, she remains at the end of iier days what someone calls an "unclaimed blessing," she is no longer considered, from this circumstance alone, a failure and an unhappy creature. She is no longer doomed to a life of depen tie nee in the house of another, for a score of vocations are open to her, in any one of which* she may win a livelihood or even competence. Consequently she commands respect, and, far from being a subject of contempt or pity, she is more likely the object of open or secret envy oil the part of st of her mTirried acquaintances. And so it has come about that the typical oid maid of former times has passed away, and in the literature of today we lind new types conforming to the new facts of the case and quite different from the old. The modern old maid is not angular and forbidding in appearance, but plump and pleasing. She is not morose and ill-tempered, but jolly and good-natured to an extent that makes her the best of comp .ay. As she has neyer had the absorbing cares that come with marriage, and has no family of sons and daughters growing up about her to remind her of the flight of years, she has naturally forgotten to grow old, and young people regard her a?. one ot themselves when <rood times I are being planned; while in the matter | of lovers and love making she has had | that experience which makes her simply | invaluable as contidante and adviser, ; and she is the repository of all the seerets of this sort which exist within the range of her acquaitance. She dresses in exquisite taste, she pets a pug dog or a white cat, a golden beetle, or whatever animal fashion may dictate; is idolized by her family; especially her ; young nephews; has hosts of admirers, bat is discretion and propriety person itied: is the guiding spirit in orphan asylums, hospital fairs associated charity matters, and other good works, and, in short, lives out to the end of her days a happy, useful, well-rounded existence.?Milwaukee Telegraph. Tobacco-Growing in England. In reply to an inquiry as to the result of his experiment i:i tobacco-growing. Eoixl"Harris, writing fromHtmtingfield, Faversham, says: "My experiment has been so far less elaborate than Mr. De Laune's that an account of it would lack the interest raised, and justly so, in his attempt to prove the feasibility of growing and drying tobacco in England. I planted about ten rods in a garden at Belmont with two sorts (the broad leaf and long leaf), but the intervals'? two feet by three feet?were not suiUcie^t; to allow of passage between the plants when in full growth, and consequently many suckers which should have been nipped out on appearance. shot up and robbed the leaves that formed the crop. They aiso knocked each otber about a good deal in ttiLLUd. -Lliv; luUU Wild ilUl; ililiuured, but it is good land, and the plantation grew so vigorously as to resemble a tropical jungle. l"cut very late in September, after there had been two or three slight frosts, but the plants seemed in no way affected. In harvesting I strictly followed printed instructions and split the stems from the top to within a few iuches of the base. The crop cut was made an inch or two lower, and the plants straddled over laths, which were removed by the wagon-load to a green-house and rested on a temporary structure. We found the stem of the long-leaved variety far more woody than that of the broadleaved. My intention had been to prodace the yellow or golden-colored tobacco, but I found I could not get the house above 110 degrees in the middle of the day, so I had io- be contented with gradual drying, resulting only in a brown tobacco. I have had no one in the trade down as yet to see my crop, so it is impossible for me to say whether my experiment has been so successful as Mr. he Laune's, but- to my inexperi- j euced eye there is little difference as to i Uj.jyu;UiLUW aillJ ICALlUtJ U?iCV\ tHili. LilU LWU crops, i should imagine that it is im possible as jet to draw any comparison j between our samples and any imported, I say American tobacco, because it is ! evident that the latter, whatever the I process of packing may be, must-under- j go some pressure, whereby fermenta- j tion is set up, and I am inclined to think that it has been the omission of this last process which has induced poople who have surreptitiously smoked j English-grown tobacco to declare that it was flavorless." Lord Harris adds ! that no difficulties whatever have been i thrown in the way by the excise officers. I London Times. -o- i Fiifcn years ago a woman near Ban- i jor. 31'.;.. borrow^;! $55 from ;t friend in i;:;i city, giving her note. When it ::inie duo she could not pay it, and she ?vnmisii?d ,rt do so v.'i'.mi shf> rvmld. Tiif> lotc had outlawed ana the holder had | orgct'en it, when the other day the j redi{or received back pension money j voiii tho government, and at once paid lie old debt. Four generations live in the house ?f J. U. Turcot te.?of Lowell, Mr.ssachuetts?his daughter, aged six; her moth- I r. aged .thirty; his mother, ajred fifty- j lireo, and her mother, aged eighty-one : J; cars. ~ ' _ _ | ' On the introduction ot a resolution in | . !o Knights of Labor Convention provid- 1 ig that n?> charters should be granted to ssembiies of "rat"' printers, Mr.Powderly nd the General Secretary stated, amid rcat applause, that no such charters had t rer been issued and none ever would be. j v A sensation has been developed by the ' nnnimftemmt that thfi mnmcinal nntlinri- ! es of Louisville, ky., are about to secure j j] idictmeats against the President and Di-; ;clors of the Louisville Gas Company for j >, Living the election of ccrtain State legisla- J >rs with the. idea in view of-^securing-a 1 11 larter lioai-tlie _ Legislature gfving^'this ' impanjnhe exclusive right to'.make and ' 11 ill gasinJJouisviiie. It'is charged;that at: le iast electron-the company spent ?1-"3,000 > elect-legislators. v d THE WEEK OF SEVEN DAYS. As has been remarked by the com- j mentators, and as is apparent to careful ; readers, it would seem that some notion of the week of seven days was current among the people whose history is re- i cordeu in very early times, that is to j say, at a date long preceding Moses or any of the books written by hi:n. The proof of this is to be found in such passages as the following: Genesis, xxix., 27, where Jacob is desired by Laban to "fulfill her week." that is Leah's week, in order that he might also receive Rachel. The week appears ; to express the time given up to nuptial festivities. So afterward in Judges, xiv., where Samson speaks of "tie seven days of the feast.'' So also on the occasion of the death of Jacob, Joseph "made a mourning for his father seven days." (Genesis, L, 10.) But i "neither "of these instance*', any more ! than Noah's procedure in the ark. go ' further than showing the custom of oh- ! serving a term of seven days for any j observance of importance." They do j ; not provij that the whole year or tue whole month was thus divided at all ! times and without regard to remark| able events. They do not indeed prove j j this, but they suggest the division as j common and familiar and in some early ! period recognized as an institution. ; When, therefore, the children of Israel i went down to Egvpt for what proved to . be a very long sojourn in that country they possibly were familiar .with the practice of dividiug time by weeks, and at all eveuts the notion of seven days as a convenient portion of time for the I affairs of life would not seem altogether ! strange to them. It is exceedingly J probable that on arriving in Egypt they ! found the week established by the practice of the country. It will be observed that it was in Egypt that Joseph mourned seven days for Jacob; and it is possible, though there seems to be no necessity to assume the fact, that in so doing [ he was conforming to the custom of the i country, as he did with regard to the ! embalming and chesting of his father's i remains. But independently of any j such consideration, it would seem high; Iv probable that the Israelties fouud j themselves in Egypt among a people j who divided the time by weeks of seven ' days. We know that they am so at a i later period; why might they not have commenced as early as before the so! journ of the Israelites? The Egyptians I were, in fact, a people Very likeiy to be ! advanced in such a. matter as this; order and government, both ecclesiastical and civil, were undoubtedly in a remarkable state of perfection at the time to which reference is now made, and it would seem much more probable than I otherwise that so convenient an institu! tion as the subdivision of the month | into short periods had already been ; established. It may be noted with reference to the number seven and its recognition in some form or another as a special number among the Egyptians, that we have incidental evidence in the dream of Pharaoh; the special form of ! the dream, as presenting seven fat and i seven lean kine, may be supposed to have been connected witii some familiarity in Pharaoh's mind with the num ber seven during his waking hours. And as regards the Israelites, it may be | observed that the period of seven days' | is introduced into the most solemn' event of their Egyptian sojourn, namej ly, the ordinance of the Passover. J "Seven days shall ye eat unleavened ! bread; even the first day ye shall put ! away leaven out of your houses; for i whosoever eateth leaven bread from the I first until the seventh day, that soul : shall be cut off from Israel."?The. ' Bishop of Carlisle in the Contemporary ! Review. . i Parlors That Cr sh Out Home Life. ????? % Did you ever hear of tyrannical parlors? The costly carpets and curtains, the expensive ornaments, give a subdued tone to the room destructive to real nospltalTty and good times. A neighborhood social met from house to house. One of the members was a bright" boy; his mother had one of those tyrannical parlors, given up to formality and short: calls. The briglif boy said at one of\ the meetings: "I would like to invite. you to my house, but we never have good times in our stuck-up drawing!' room." The little fellow felt the- differ : ence uetween ms own nome surrounaI ings and that of some others of the so-1 cial club. At one house the wise par- j ents made the parlor so attractive that j the boys and girls of the family said j ! they "would rather be at homo than i j anywhere else." The carpet was not i too nice to dance on or even to play I blind man's buff. The chairs and tabies ! were not heavy and cumbersome, but j were light enough to be tucked away,, i leaving a clear space. The children | were encouraged to get up charades and ! tableaux. A magic lantern exhibition added variety, and now and then a card party. "But that was very wrong," says one stern parent No! Father and mother took a hand in the game and there was not so much danger the children would seek questionable pleasures in unprofitable place3. A New "Way to Get an Appetite. This morning a dyspeptic-looking man entered a blacksmith shop atRondout. He waited until the blacksmith put a hot shoe to the foot of the horse that was being shod, when he bent down and drew in with his nostrils several draughts of smoke that rose from AU- T : 1 x' A ?*. _ ? 1 _ fx me uurmug nooi. -ajxer me man jeii the shop a reporter of the Freeman asked the blacksmith if the man who had just taken his departure was crazy. "0, no," responded the blacksmith, "ho is only working up an appetite. Strange as it may appear to you, yet the fact is true that inhalation into the lungs of smoke from a Horse's hoof when it is being shod is the best appetizer in the i world. That man you saw here will now go home and cat a good square ineal. He came into the shop for a.i appetite and went away hungry. I have on an average live patients a day who visit my shop for an appetizer.?Kingston (N. Y.) Freeman. Passengers leaving Philadelphia bv Ihe Reading Railroad at 4 o'clock in the afternoon, and by the Pennsylvania j at 4 JO are furnished a pleasant" diversion from the monotony* of travel during the latter part of* the trip by the race that frequently takes place between the trains. The Reading train is due at Franklin street at 5:55, ant! the Pen a- { srlv.inirt is tin:* Pi?nn tl... ! same rime. Ti:c P. S. V. train usually makes up the ten minutes start of its rival in the neighborhood of Pottstov.ii. nid then it is nip and tuck from there, eighteen miles to Reading. Both trains make but one stop?at Birdsboro?and ; iaeh is in full view of the other most of he way. Sometimes one is^ahead and sometimes the other, and the passengers ill crowd to one side of the car aud sagcrij watch the living wheels, and ixuit if their train torgo-s ahead, and eel like applying the lash ii it lags beA man who is in the habit of getting f ::] s ap' to find money tight, too. Although the hen is proud of h>.-r little >nes, yet she loves to sit on them. Even a doctor v.-ho spooks only one Inn- r ;uage may vet understand a gref t many | ongues. t "Lower-your muzzle," was the remark _ nade by a girLto a young man wlio kissed ier on the nose." ( Nature would make a good editor. Nothing in tlie universe gels crowded out or want of space. The man who doesn't know "what's-in a ame" had better 20 and forge one?then e'll find out mighty quick. . - . The Mayor sent down John Simmons, g runkenness and conduct,-for-tea days. HORKICL& UA.iLBOAD ArC!DE.\T. Roasted to Death?Karrowins: Scene* a: th<' Wreck? Women aii<5 Children IVrhh. Chicago. October 11.? Piissentrer tr.un No. 12, wMcb lift here at 7.45 P. 31., stopped just this side ef K' Ui's station at: 'A'i to make some repairs. The freight train Xo. 4!>. which should follow on inst. ructions, received a clear bill at BooceGrove, six miles west of Kout's. and got tip a good speed when it crashed into the rear of the halted passenger trr-in, which was unprotected with lights cr fog torpe- J does r.u the track. The night was dark, ; and the scene during ?he next half hour was dreadful. The rear coaches of%the j pas? engtr train were smashed and telescoped so that three ( ecupied less space th?o ore. The live coai i'.Y-m the freight engine ignited the deb: is under winch the wounded and dead were lying. Before snbstauti-d assist&Dce could be rendered thirty.* peo^b had died. Some were mercifully Iv.iou by? the first shoe!;, but urany were ^lovely masted to death. Iv> one in tae Pullman sleeper wa? hurt, "i lie conduc-io? telegraph d to his company here thai all escaped before the nre reac.ac$ fbe car, and none were injured in the -collision. No means existed f.=r checking t!;e lire, and only after it h.'.d burned itself oulwa^it possible to do anything for the few still alive i.15prisoned in the debris. Forty peo-; pie v,\re wounded; or burned or both. All I were 0.1 the trjtia when it left Chicago, but: no names were. kr&jyn up to 2.30 o'clock. ! One tstia.yte pisces-thc cumber killed at I IS '-r 20, !?;U h.te.-;' stat ment puis it at i io. *v:. ii-two- rs fa&lly injured. " * ' Y/I.cii to Sc.*' Oats. j Th order to escape danger of winter ; killing, oats should be sown early in .the ! fall. Thro ugh cut the northern part of | the cotton belt September is the be st ; month. South of the middl^'Iine, Octo bc-r and November sowings will answer. The idea is to get a strong root develop.- < ment before coid weather sets in, giving ! - * "s * , ./ *vr r . I tiie punts a urm noia on me son. -Act--; ; withstanding somewhat discouraging \ failures of late years, we think - it good ; policy to sow-a large area in the tali. ,If I killed by cold the seed sown "will be the ; principal loss, as the land may be i*e| seeded in January or February, or can be planted in other crops in the spring. > The* old winter oat should be brought again into cultivation. It has of ton proven a good practice to sow oats ;in the present cotton fields. This may be done without serious injury to the cotton, plowing in with a cultivator, har-; ; row or sweep, just as if cultivating the | cotton, the operation to be preceded by j the cotton pickers if there is any cotton, i i On our own farm we have had fins .re.-; I enHo tln'c r.lori 'Tila cf.>r><Kntt r-r,4 , OIIX lO 4i.VibU WAXM/ vvv ton stalks can be easily "knocked down" cold mornings in January cr February, and prove small obstacles in the way of j harvesting. ; ; ; One Lived, the GtSier Died. j A woman formerly our shive is now our cook. A'oout eighteen months ago she became sickly and had a cough and was confined to bee, and it was thought tjat she had consumption- The^ treat-: ment by physicians failed to give 'relief. i In December, 1881, a node or knot the; size of a goose egg formed just above; the pit of the stomach, which, whenj lanced, discharged matter for eight or j nine months. One of these also formed! under her arm. and rhree on her back, which discharged matter for a considerable time. For six months of this time she conlincd to the house, and most of the time in bed. The stomach often refused food, by rejecting what she had eaten. She used, a great deal of medicine. but Jailed to be erred. I bought one bottle of jour ?, B. B. (made in Atlanta", Ga.) ahjt gave it to her and she commeneee. to improve. I then bought and gave- her r-hroe bottles more, and she COUtlliUCU wU. iUlj^IUYC, fiUU .111 months' time hex cough hud ceased, lier. constitution strengthened, appetite and digestion good, all discharges ceased, j nodes or knots Sasnp^ared and she went < to. wor? apparenny'healthy.and fattened i -up greatly. - ' Tiiis woman Lad -a- married sister of near-the same age who was affected in precisely the same way and'about the; same time.. Tho had node* or knots on . -pit of her stomach, baqk, etc- She did ! not take acy B. B. B. and the node on her stomach-ate through to the cavity. 1 -S::e continued on the decline and wasted aw:-j. and'linaijy died. Th-. se were two terrible'cases of blood poison?one used B. I>. - ii. and was speedily, eared?the other did not use it; and died. It, is mo/si-assuredly a most wonderful blood puriffer. I "refer to' ,'aiircbasts of t.iL- town. Yonrs tralv. ! w. "3?. robixbox. Tickabeo, Ala., luay 1, ISSti. ^ A SHERIFF RELEASED. For a period of sixteen years I have ' : "been ;.Siicted with catarrh of the head ' which bw filed the use of ail medicines j used. Seeing the advertisement of b. j 13. 33. j I purchased and us'sd six or seven j bottles, and although usefd irregularly | have received great relief, and recom- i mend it as a good blood purifier. [Signed] ,t. K. Holcoube, Jb., Sheriff oi Haralson county, g-a. All who desire full information about the cause slid euro of i'lood-FoL^ous. scrofula and scrofulous swellings, 'ftecrs; sores, iiheuma j tisnj, Kidney i.oaiplaliiTS. i.atr.rrii, etc , can j secure by mail, free, jtcoja* our ;>2 putre Ulus- ' tr.-.tf.'l Hook of wonders, ilded with "the mo->l! 'won dentil and startling proof ever bslore j known. Addasss, 1sl0od balm <x>., j. ? Atlanta, G&. I: m a i C in ? I kms ipf! Wokmdmm -i $rPXfeHESULARITIES PECULLm-TO-HER-SEX. i APEEFECT Bsctolaxur j; and Powerful TcnjuJ . | e &!F-TAKEN-DURING-THE ' iCHAHOE'-'ar-IIFE \t GREAT S UFFERIHGAUD. j, I DANGER WILL SE AVOIDED. ~ ?SEND FOR?BOOK.? lERADFIELOREGULflrORCG ! Atlanta,Ca. a CHARLOTTE P :T; ' W 3 ? V 5W! ? I ^ K n Sr <"* id'iC ?i I?? tSi. ^T' wc1:^ SESSION BEGINS SEPT. 7, 18S7. r \tq institute ftr toijjfe sabiSss i L* Iii tho Sontii^vi^ ^vss&sges stipe ia :yrto C,/<>: < ;' -:v.; : -r: wry depart 0 ifeut?CoUsjjisLtc; A^' zad'&sic. Oclj ? experienced - 1 .* .< < , snpiisfod tcjtciiers " ot Ah.J 'V:i^ -.V:\U-: Zl^C $?St?ClftSl 5 - s'f&rdias :Seii km :*. i? Ka'tzc* ion two ?.; \iv. i; \ mfly- orn<4gliborhco3: PaJ>H?;fcIi"rjjo?I only j i I'Oas?:?J-:.:n<x. :sfUt tilt rh'.<; iSPJiti- i ? if the *6o3ion. For l&za'ttgoe, v?:l? fail parJeuiii-v acrcio Yy ,-i. iC. AT ' > L ' Charlotte; C. . [x ievelsM s T2RRACSM St ^ == for Engineers, Architect Ff ^ ? ?> and bridjtemen; for you f O ffr '2; s ?ri?eerix2j;? mechanics, nil ? . >-g\\ ft ?r*. Farmers and Mechanics. i a * T\ a Telescopic eights, iron head t y W 5-.-J % ? degrees. doable extension cra-ii I :jSST f \t\ I'- *= graduated circle, and pointer, C w /=~f ? ? instrument. Circular freo if 1 - "..TERRY,*, [ j ' t Invalids' Hci:i ?a S&sisal Institute 1 ? EtalT of vTi^Ii'ccu Sxpcricand snd Skill* Sal ftrsiclaas r.r.ci SKrjjeons. ALL CHROMIC D'GEASES '. SPECIALTY.- M :;t their kc:nc& Many "in staqa& for our 'U v.-;:ic'i ffiv?K"u!l partic- \ ? Mi ul-.ui. ". Iiv^-: V>V?::T.i;'s DkpeksakyMEDI- ' C. :. o;j Main Su'IiuiSalo. X.Y. U For " vrorn-on.'"" " rim-dovm," cebiBteteu;^ ./ school tcachers, milliners, seamstresses, house1 g keepers, and overworked women generally^A Br. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is the beet^^h^-.* of nil restorative tonics. Itisnota ^ " ,oa> ncKninuwy uium* ;i siugi^aaa v. ?,i n,/v^ /, *-'o a most ix>tcnt SpccIBc fr'i ^ Chronic Wo-iknesses arid Disease03 P^cu^:ar vc.:n-,-Ti. The treatment of?\7*?-v, thousands ^ ci r.uoh ens ?. at t':e Invalid1-" "0l-e'L ^d burg> iftu Institute has afforded- a tu"S? experience in ac.i:::iu~ remedies? f--r tLlcir cure- ^ Er, Plsrcs's Fs^Mrlts Pressripiion is the result of /this vast experience. For internal inflammation and ^J.ceratfiou, it i# a Specific. It is a pc .\ erfui'-enc-rul, as well as uterine, tonic and nervw? and imparts vigor and strength A to the w'ii)ie system. It cures weakness of *JBM stomacfr, indigestion, bloating; weak bacj^H nervous proscnitioa. exhaustion, debility asHR^ ' sleeplessness, in cither sex. Favo rite tio?i is sold by dmjrgists under onr^dRPfte fffuarcuzicc. See wrapper around bodPr^ jsffiSl 8133, S5s1B3So? Send 10 cents in stamps 'or Dr. Piera's largt Treatise on Diseases of 'Women (lvO pages, paner-covcred). Address, World's Dispex- s P/Jiv Hedzcax. Association, CCSilain Street id Bizgalo, X. Y. < jfE^Vfevce's ^oasawt m pellet:1?5& T>TTTQ ? ? e\\ ?x s PItLSANTS-BStlOtS and CATHARTIC* SICK H'&OACHEj |ggk Bilions Meadaclicj dizziness, Constipa- J v ? tion, Indigestion, c and JSiiicasAjtacks, /73g^ promptly cured by X?s* I5a\ \>yy es&ms Pierce's Pleasant JJ* pursrative Pellets. / gtk . * tents a -vial, by Druggists. ' '.?& ' ?/ E5?lliw|?|||0r Cotton Sc-cl CI?. ZZltlz. Cottonseed ^[ I.iaters, Cto-i* "Jills, Saw * SJj.if::::^, 2T s'ileys. H.- orjsT, * Wia<I SSills and Castings, Pu^jps and Tanlcs. E. VAN WINKLE & CO., A*:&nta. Ca? i ~~ ~. ~ 4 ^ GOLD: 2DAT. awarded at Cotton Esnosi- ' - - ?: lion, A a* ta. Ga\ Dallas. Texas, andChariest * Cf ion, S. C. Y>-rite f. r prices' and terms to E. Van Winkle & Go., ^ 1 BOX S3, ATLANTA, GA. PRIVATE BOARDING.?^ _ i gOX THE FIRST, OF "OCTOBER, the undersigned opened a 3 FIRST CLAoS'BOARDING HOUSE in Charleston, for the accommodation of both Transient and Permanent Boarders. The Building, located on the northeast comer o? Wentwoita ar>d Glebe streets, is conveniently near the bn^dness portion ^ of King street, jet free from the noise of the thoroughfares. It is within easy reach from the Academy of 3Iusic and from Churches of all the different deDominatioris. / The hov.se has been thoroughly repaired, ard fitted up in good sule with new furniture and fixture?. Tc rra s reasonable. For further infoirect'on sddrews Mrs. E E EASELL, or Miss S. >S. EDWARDS, j.tf ChsrJeftcn, S. C. PEACE 4 . ^ The .! s.i". S. s-:o:i tomuicnces on the first i s ;>tember (<5th day}, and ends be first V\ xhiesduy in June. !?SS. .-w-?' Every department of instraction filled by / :xpe."ienceo and accomplished teachers ' Building the largest and most thoroughly i ^ - m I..C .-ic.it;. nca:e(i u>" steam anu tudy ii .il iijihtea by. elcc-triolry. Special rates fci- r.vo o.- more fro a same amily. For < irculars an: (.'.tlaiogue, Aduress, Bev. S. BUB.WELL & jul>-2CL2as RALEIGH, X. 0. v PITTS CARMINATIVE L j FOR ISfAXTS A\0 1 PEETHING- CIIIL T) R EN, An instant relief for colic oi infante. ;ures Dysentery, Diarrbcea, Cholera .< nfantum or any diseases of tlie stomach nd bowels. M-irs the critical period f Teething; stio acd easy, is a safe and leasant tonic. For sale by f;I! druggists, ad for wholesale by Hov/Anr-. Willkx Co.. '"msta. (ya, i HQ^? cases. ^iCQjUSES* :SXS, A?U for Uluatratcd Pamphlet. CSSY saow cjuse CO., XasfcTille, Tenn. tBITGHING,TiLEDRAiHIPiO, - / G AND GARDENING / s. Carpenters ?S? Builders, Mill-wrSjihtsr, / nz men developing: their taste for en- / id correct farming:. Endorsed bp all Eugin*/ (guaranteed to do their izork perfectly. S ripod, graduated circle and pointer for rea^jjv Bated rwdand tarcet, by express, $10.w; wXTith , $7.W.. Cash villi order. Insiructk^ cvf AUTOMATIC LEVEL CQ^T-E^to 2?c.th Cherry Street, naswvi/^