University of South Carolina Libraries
f :' ' ^?PH CRUISING ON THE COXGAREE. Jg j u THE STEAMBOAT EXCURSION GIVEN BY j THE COLUMBIA BOARD OF TRADE. 51! The Start *rom Granbv?A R'ver Yovage of _ w Forty-Three Showlog I'nrivaled Facillt3ea fo.- Water Transportation?The Ma- q; lives Undergo a Surprise?A Golden Future M Within Columbia's Grasp? Back to the l* Queen City of the South. ^ Si cr (From the Columbia Daily Record.) p Coxgaree, S. C., Jan. 25.?I venture tht statement, without fear of successful contradiction, that two-thirds of the citi- o - - " * r *t. - _ ? ti zei s or UoiumDja ana mree-iounns 01 use i ^ population of South Carolina Lave no ade- * quate conception of the navigerous possi- I bilities of the Congaree River. Too many 1 have long considered it in no light but that * of a muddy, rock-bottomed stream, inca- t pable of being put to practical use. s The writer has hitherto belonged to the * great army of ignorants, who hare beeD * unaware of the grand opportunities for the* city of Columbia aad the Palmetto State, ' wrapped up and lying dormant in the J uliginous waters that lave the limits of the ' Queen City of the South, and awaiting i only the Titan-sparks of enterprise and , ENERGY to transmute them into vivifying 1 elements of progress. The events ox yes- 1 terday have lifted the scales from my eyes and 1 see that not half of that river's grand forces have ever been known. These preliminary remarks have been i suggested by a trip" down the Congaree, ' given by the Columbia Board of Trade to a number ot guests, 01 tuohi uie wnici had the honor of being one. WHY ASD WHEKEFORE. For some time the Columbia Board of Trade have devoted their attention to the Congaree River as a source of water power and as the most potent adjunct in the future greatness of this city. The}' have regarded it as par excellence the means whereby Columbia is to take her place among the cities of the South. They have done more. They hate acted upon their belief and, as wiil hereafter be shown, have been instrumental in a work that will live after them. On several occasions the South Carolina Steamboat Comoanv have tendered ilie Board of Trade the use of their steamer for I the purpose of seeing and comprehending the possibilities of Congaree River navigation. Here wss the opportunity- to show to Columbia, and through her to the world, her great treasure of hitherto unused waterpower. Accordingly an excursion was arranged for yesterday, and the Board issued inviiations to a number of gentiemen to accompany them and have their eves opened". LEAVING TITE CITY. We left the City Hall at 9.30, comfort? ably ensconced in carriages and 'busses. Just before leaving rain began to fall, inducing several gentiemen to remain behind aud the excursionists to fear that a bad day had been selected. Not so, however, for therain-ged soon wiped his sudatory brow and before Old Granby was reached the elemental flood gates had been closed. THE PERSONNEL OF THE PARTY. The excursionists included the following gentlemen: From the Beard of Trade, C. J. Iredell, President; R. 31. And'. raon, Secretary; F. W. Wing and Jasper Miller, of the Execu iyxjo rtnH t.hft t'ttllnwin? members: Geo. K. Wright, T. E. Branigan, Philip Motz. D. H. Crawford, X. Yv. Trump, George L-. Baker, M. A. Markley, J. II. Mancke. J C. Stanley, T. C. Robertson, D. L. Boozer, W. H. Gibbe?, Jr., P. C. Lorick, R. N. Richbourg, and William Robinson. Guests: Governor J. P. Richardson, ExPresident S. A. Pearce of the Board of Trade who came from his home in Georgia for this special purpose, Col. L. P. Midler of Georgetown; Col. T. J. Lipscomb, Representative B. L. Abney, Frederick Condit, W. J. Keenan, Dr. Bird Miller, E. M. Brayton, Allen Jones, A. A. Yos, Joseph Bates and John S. Bates of Wateree River, C. M. Olsen, A. T. McCants, jS". G. Gonzales of the JSfeirs and Courier, J. Wilson Gibbes of The Evening Record. At 10 o'clock the party reached Granny, three miles fro a. State House, wherj they found the boat awaiting them. On board were Capt. W. II. Bixby, of the United States Engineer Corps, having charge of the river and harbor improvements in South ^ t??: _ ^ xju^iuccj. ncm m u:i* ford, and Capt. W. Gannon. United States Inspector of Hulls for Charleston District, who was there for the purpose of inspecting the steamer and' issuing a permit for the excursion. Preparatory to the start the excursionists enjoyed themselves in viewing the situation and examining the boat. the "john il. cole" is a high pressure, side-wheel steamer, with a length of 125 feet, a width of 45 feet, has about five feet depth of hold, and draws four feet when deep loaded. Her steel hull was made in sections at Wilmington, Delaware, and put together with the upper wood-work in Charleston in lbS6. She has a tonnage capacity of 217, and can carry 600 bftJes of cotton. Yesterday she was loaded with rosin. She is commanded by Capt. E. C. David, Master, and belongs to the South Carolina Steamboat Company. This boat runs in connection with a similar steamer belonging to the same company, the carrying, capacity of which is aoout 1,000 bales of cotton. This latter steamer makes regular weekly trips from # Charleston to the Congaree bridge of South Carolina Railway Company, where she receives freight by transfer from the John >1. Cole, ? .to and from all points on the Congaree ana San tee Rivers to and from Charleston and Columbia. Down the Congaree. At forty minutes past ten the whistle blew, the boat was cast from its moorings, and away the steamer sped down the Congaree, making eight knots an hour. For several miles the course of the river was a straight southeast and revealed a beauty that was undreamed of in the excursionists'.philosophy. The expanse of water in looking down the forest-girded vista, the clear channel devoid of rocks, through which the boat was bowling along, and the occasional shriek of the whistle ; conjured up new feelings in the hearts of the part}- who were EXPERIENCE: ^ A REVELATION. The scene t.* voyage was indeed a surprise, and many were the glad expressions , that fell from the lips of those who were : beginning to realize the power lying unused , at their feet. i The course of the Congarce is slightly sinuous, but the gtneral direction is good, ; not interfering in the slightest degree with ?? navigation. At Granby the river is about ( 600 feet wide, and averages 450 feet along the line. It has also an average depth oi four feet at dead low water. . THE LASDIXGS. . c Mmr" The following are the landings on both t sides of the river, with their respective dis- J tances from Granby to its junction with the 1 Water ee and Santee: t On the Richland side: Childs's plantation, 2 ? 44 miles; Seegers'Big Lake plantation, 40?: q Frank's Landing, 38; Lykes' Landing, 33; fc Weston's Landing 30f; Mitchell's, 7}; h Buck Head Landing (Bates') 3?. J On the Lexington side: Chickasaw, 42 miles; Springer's, 41; Starling's, 20$; High Hill, 19$; Hunt's Creek, 35$; Kaigler's, 35: n Bell Hall, 31; Bull's Hill, S; Peterkin's- } Mill, 5. The South Carolina Railway bridge is 43 miles from Columbia and 44- ? ALUUUd 14UJJU UUC ii?U juutuuu. NAVAL STORES STATIONS. n Between Columbia and the South Caro- ?' lina Railway bridge there are three stations for naval stores: First, Chickasaw Landing, now owned and used by Capt. C. 31 Olsen. It is known also as Olsen's Bluff, \c contains about 350 acres, and carries on a I}1 very large business. Second, Kaigler's Third, Bell Hall. These stations are on w the Lexington side. Considernble guano will hereafter be shipped from Charleston tb to these points, instead of sending it by w rail. " b< Th^re are also the following creeks emp- to tying into the river: Congaree, Gill Creek, to Hunt's Creek, Clay Gut, Hill Creek, Big $3 ?ver Creek (which divides Lexington and rangeburg counties), Old River. Cedar reek, Pocket Hole Creek, Devil's Elbow id Buck Head Creek. THE FIIIST BOAT OX THE COXCAKF.E. In 1822 a boat named the "Charleston" uWtnnfc- ;irin from Charleston to Co ,mbia. On board was a young lady, who as going to school in the former city imd ho was on her way to spend the holidays a the Santee. She is now an old lady, [rs. Atkinson, and is living in George>wn. y< This was the first boat that ever plyed beveen the two cities. In 1S45 river travel was ^ :opped and no boat has Tim on the Con aree since, until navigation was made ossible last year. ' ^ now IT CAME ABOUT. ^ In 1SS6 through the instrumentality of ur Congressmen, and earnestly and eilec-' . ively assisted by the Columbia Board of 11 ?rade, Congress made an appropriation of ;7,500 for "work on tiie Congaree. In t! February, 1SS7, the work was commenced >y Assistant Engineer Whitford, under the i n upervision of Captain Bixby. Mr. Whit- t< ord was very diligent and assiduous and in i ve months succeeded in clearing a channel T eventy feet wide and four feet deep, by c he removal of arliScial obstructions. Obtructions had been accumulating in the iver for forty-two years and the celerity e ind cheapness with which they were re- I noved is remarkable. With the money tppropriated there was also built a first- s ;lass self-propelling steam-hoister which ? ?ras used in the work and which belongs to the government. This was accomplished < :>y the strictest economy and the indefatiga- t We personal attention of .\fer.. Winttora. SOME GRAND POSSIBILITIES. < With tlie improvements already made t the John M. Cole is enabled to make two ; trips a week. The nineteenth of Jnne will be the last day of grace given to the South Carolina Kailway Company to place a dra.w . in their bridge. "When this is done the S^utb Carolina Steamboat Company will place upon the CoDgaree a steamer with a , carrying capacity of 1,500 bales of cotton ' or the same number of barrels of rosin. The boat will make regular trips and every inducement will be offered to shippers for quick and che-ip transportation. The cost per bale will be about one-third of the present railroad rate. Heretofore the people on the Lexington bank have been compelled to haul their produce by wagon, to some railroad station. The territory along the route is exceedingly rich and is productive of magnificent timber. Here we ficd cypress, pine, oak, ash, sweet gnm, map!e and almost ever}* variety of wood known to the Atlantic States. The j opening up of ihe Congaree will furnish i cheap and easy transportation facilities and induce the erection of mills, turpentine dis tilkries aDd stations for the production pf naval stores all along the lice. MOiE AID FKOM CONGRESS. The next step in this work is to secure Government aid for its continuation. Secretary Anderson, of the Board of Trade, is sei ding in weekly petitions to Congress, signed by citizens of every class, to induce further appropriations. Having alreidy shown what benefits have been derived j from a small appropriation and five months' j work, it is easy to see that additional aid, sufficient for the complete development of the river, would be an incalculable blessing to our people. ADVANTAGE TO DRAINAGE. TX' V,i-. l'mnrATTfl. MUW tut Jaxaitiaoiix v ? ments Lave been made Capt. Bixby says the river will not be so liable to overflow. These overflows have already caused considerable damage and last year an immense amount of property was destroyed thereby. It wiil also improve "th^. culture, vaiue and health of the adjacent towns and encourage the settlement of previously unoccupied I territories. In no other way can so small an expenditure of public money produce such valuable results in the development of the" country at la;ge." " SOME OTHER RESULTS. When Congress grants another appropriation and sli the obstructions in the river have been removed, we wfll have open navigation to Georgetown and Charleston, and when the Canal is completed and the two miles below Gervaisstreet, we will< have open navigation from the mountains i to the seaboard for steamers of ordinary ! capacity, and the whistle of steamboats! will be heard on every side. This is an i obj-ict to be attained in the near future, if j Congress grants the .aid asked for. The benefits accruing to Columbia will be communicated to a dozen adjacent counties. RESUMING Tins ROUTE. The part\r amused themselves on the j voyage by taking in the scecery and discussing objects of interest. At 2.30 the guests were called to dinner, and an elegant one it was. Mr. Tom Branigan had a corps of waiters on hand and served one of the finest dinners that I have ever assisted in demolishing. There were turkey, wild duck, chicken salad, tongue, oysters, coffee, cranberry sauce, potato salad, cold slaw, celery, pickles, wines and cigars. The bracing air had put the diners in splendid gastronomic condition, which was heightened by the elegance of the feast, and soon ihe "serried ranks'' of victuals evidenced a j furious onslaught. At 3 15 the boat arrived at the bridge j snrl thp eWMircin.Ticfc efortpr? in nnrti^c i of two and tiir^e on tours of inspection. Dr. T. C. Robertson and Mr. David Crawford were the Ximrodsof the party, but as they failed to find the "little boy" who sells the game to bird shooters they returned empty-handed. RETURNING HOME. After supper had been served, the excurj sionists indulged in a little stump speaking until the arrival of the train which was to take them back to the city. At 9.10 we boarded the train and arrived at 10 o'clock in the City on the Congaree. Two SensationM in Clarendon. MjvxxrxG, Jan. 27.?There were two sensations here today. Charles 'Shorter; and Benjamin Sports quarreled on their way from town last night and a fight ensued, in which Sports gave Shorter a dangerous wound in the abdomen with a knife that will probably prove fatal. The last accounts are that Shorter's life ! is despaired of, his bowels being exposed ; by the gaping wound, anu no doctor hav: ing been found up to this time to sew 'up the cut. Both of the men are said to have been under the influence of whisky. No warrant has been sworn out against "Sports, nor has any effort been made to arrest him. < Mr. Mike Hammell, who has been living in Manning from ?Imost the time of its incorporation, and is highly respected as a :iuiet, unobtrusive, honest citizen, com- ] cnitted suicide today by taking nearly an i >unce of laudanum. He "was conscious , tor some time after drinking the drug, and ! ;very effort was made to save his life, but . :o no avail. He had been drinking for two 1 cveeks, and his mind is believed to have t seen unbalanced when he drank the deadly " >oison. He leaves a wife and three chilIren. x Over lOO Vfam Old. C Our neighboring county of Chesterfield c :an probaby boast of the oldest citizen in e his section of the State. His name is iohn Outlaw, and he was born in 1773. ["hough he served in the war of 1S12, he las never received a pension from the sational Government. >Lr. Outlaw has ^ [uite a number of children, and the num- ^ !er of his grand children is legend. He . ias a son living in this couuty. on Mr. J. . Horton's plantation.?Lancaster Review. The mail train from north of the Con- gj ecticut River railroad, due at Holyake, Cl lass., Thursday at 6 P. M., became stalled i a cut two miles north of that citj-.' A ang of men went to work to dig it out. 'he snow wns blowing about so thick that othing could be seen a few feet distant. aa tne i.60 train irotn wreenneid dashed v ito the gang, killing three men and injur- cc ig another fatally. SI Attorney General Garland contradicts the P1 port tbat he will be a candidate for elec- ac on to the United States Scute to succeed | jnator Berry of Arkansas, whose term Iei ill expire in 1SS9. Governor Luce, of Michigan, says that ,.t ere are many important measures that he St ould like to undertake, but be hasn't time 'w; ;cause, owing to his small- salary, he has ? ' do other things. It is said tbat he has groom his own horse. His salary is .,000. th 'v BRIC-A-BRAC. S^eet monades, my darling, "We love each other now, But in the evolution \> ill you lorget jour vum 0 will you love me, dearest (The monad's pleadings ran), aj "When you've become a woman, And I've become a man? t( He who does not look before lags behind, sj Don't expect too much from those around )u. e He that speaks doth sow, but he that ^ olds his peace doth reap. A helping hand at the right moment P rould save many from ruin. t( Where there is no want of will there will e no want of opportunity. ? More people are drowned in the intox mating cup than in the sea. One talent carefully employ ea is better j ban a hundred merely possessed. Dispense with the check rein, ard get aore work from your horse without j orture. He who does no good gets none. He rho cares not for others will soon find that ? ithers will not care for him. A woman confesses to the marrying of t ;ight husbands. Few women possess her ( >ower to fasten-eight men. Landlady?Jane, pass Mr. Dumley the ] ;alt for his egg. Dumley?Thanks, not ( iny salt. The"2gg is none too fresh as it is. ^ "How odd it is," said Pat, a? he trudged ilong on foot, "that a man niver meets a 1 :eam going the same way he is." . A good, healthy business year, in spite i )f the Presidential election, seems to be the general conviction among conservative judges. Sweet potatoes, like the white, were found growing here when Columbus came, and they were among the presents he carried to Queen Isabella. Xew Orleans women cultivate camelias at such good profit that more than one ic cuirl tn have "jmnfi to EurOt>e On her camelia bush." "Ah, yes," said a cabinet-maker to a crockery dealer, to whom he was introduced,?"ah, yes, you sell tea-sets, and I sell settees." "Dan, what wud yez call a man who stole a gallon av whisky and drank it, and got the"jim-jams?" "Begorra, I think I'd call him a snake thief." Jones?Strange thing. Mirandy: every time you draw a breath somebody dies. Mrs. Jones?"Well, I ain't going to stop breathing on that account. "Did it rain?" he exclaimed, in the course of a thrilling recital of border life. "Say, it raiDed so hard that afternoon that the water stood three feet on a slant roof," Beggar?Plase, sor, can't ye help a poor man with a large family out of work? Schoolmaster?No; why don't you set your family at work? Those who would render their charities useful should judiciously diffuse them. He who would have a good crop must sow with his hand, and not pour out of the sack into one heap. VVCen a Iiocei UHirts. uetumcs an ii ; his wings are proportionately as wide as his earthly smile, he'll topple over the battlements of heaven unless his feet are adequately ballasted. "You needn't order me around, sir," said the washerman. "I'm not the hired girl. It's Bridget's place to.look after the milk. I'm the laundry lady." "That doesn't scare me. said the man. "I'm the P. W. G. R. K. of the U. 0. G. G., and Most Eminent Past G. W. of the Ancient Order of 31. X. Q. Z., and I want somebody to take tbis milk." "Yes, sir," said the washerwoman, meekly, as she went to find a crock. "I see that a post-mortem examination is often made in murder cases. What does a post-mortem examination mean?" asked a young wife of her better-half. "A postmortem examination,-my dear, is intended to allow the victim to state verbally his own testimony against his assailant, and is taken down in writing." "Thanks, darling; and you won't look down on me, will you, because I haven't your education?" He said he wouldn't. C lT) Wkrkf.f "f CI T1/1TT J? ur icjii y cui o ^aot/, cxtin w.u\- AX^TT boarder, "my habits have been regular as clockwork. I rose on ttie stroke of six; half an hour later I sat down to breakfast; at seven I was at work, dined at twelve; ate supper at six. and in bed at nine thirty; ate oniy hearty food, and hadn't a sick day in all that time." '"Dear me," said the deacon, in sympathetic tones; "and what were you in for?" And in the awful silence that followed you could hear the hash grate its tet th. Southern Aews .Vote*. A mine of paint clay has been found near McNair Station, Miss. Pittsburg, Lincoln county, Tenn., has subscribed ?25,000 for a bank. Prohibition will rule in all but about a dozen towns in Arkansas this year. The Jefferson county, Ark., grand jury has found nearly four hundred true bills this term. Clarksville, Ark., will follow the example of Little Rock and forbid the sale of cigarettes to boys. ilrs. Polly Butler, living near Cleburne, Ark . is eighty years old and has eighty-two grand children. Onty ?60,000 has been secured of the "|.% "EM.. $J.UU,WU suuscripuou ju reusucuja, jcis., to secure the Pensaco a and Memphis roadTwo human skulls were recently unearthed at Clarksdale, "Miss., by men digging a ditch. Their presence there is a mystery. A Northern girl now living near Trenton, Tenn., takes her gun and goes afield and kills more game than any of the young men. At a ball near Hot Springs, Ark., recently a young lady, her mother; grandmother and great grand-mother danced in the same set. . Seventeen negro farmers of Attala county, Miss., each year give a prize to the one of their number who raisest the largest hog. The prize for the year was recently taken by Elam Meek. His hog was 23 months old and weighed 615 pounds. A Horror of the Mines. Victoria, British Columbia, January 25.?An explosion occurred yesterday in Wellington colliery while over two hundred miners were at work. It was at first supDosed that no lives were lost, as the-miners cvere rapidly hoisted out, but it is now be ieved that ninety or more were killed or >UtIOCateU. XXIC UUUltS Ui twcmj VVL111C m'ne^ were taken from the mine laat right, and there are about seven!y more : nen still ia the mine, and there is no rea- 1 son for believing that any of them are alive, 1 md no hopes of saving them are entertain- J ;d. Three-fourths of the men still in the ( nine are Chinamen. There is no scarcity ' >f volunteers, and officials and employees >f the Vancouver Coal Company are ren- ] lering every assistance required. How the 1 xplosion took place is a mystery. . ( Endly Scalded. ^ On Thursday last, Otis, the little five- ? - "* r TXT ear-Old SOEl 01 _ur. 1. yy. juuiuuriajr, ? uu | ivesnear Jacksonham, was severely scalded 1 y getting into some water which had been 1 eated for scalding hogs. He was taken ^ ut at once, but both of his legs were so ? adly scalded from the knees down that ie skin all peeled off. The little fellow c iffers greatly, but is doing as well as ll Duld be expected.?Lancaster Ledger. 7 Accidentally fchot. ? C Mr. J. R. Price was accidentally shot, at st raffin's mill, in the lower section of this a >unty, on the 17th instant, by Mr. "VVm. r> aute. The two were talking of trading C! stols when the pistol Mr. Shute had was a< :cidentally discharged, the ball passing rough the fleshy part of Mr. Price's right ".?Lancaster Ledger. * gg <3 Three million women in the United if atps f -rn -working for wages. The man nj Llo cannot marry rich may at least secure te wife whose wages will make his home se ppy. se The one prudence in life is concentration; Jt e one evil is dissipation. de f j ... . GENERAL NEWS XOTES. em* ol [Interest Gathered from Various \ Quarters. A terrible snow storm has been raging ong the west shore of Lake Champlain. The scarcity of coal in San Francisco | d mounts almost to a fuel famine. j si Business failures occurring throughout \ the country during last week number for , the United States 2G8, and for Canada -19; total, 317, against 314 last week. , The Consul-General of Spain in New ] York officially and emphaticatly denies the ; truth of the rumors about the unsatisfac- ' tory condition of affairs in Cuba. ; The United Ireland has opened d fund in aid of news vendors prosecutcd prosecuted under the Crimes Act, heading" the list with a subscription of ?100. Three hundred lumbermen from the Northwest were entertained in Atlanta last night. They were on their way home from New Orleans.In London it is stated that warrants have been fecretly obtained in England for the arrest of six Irish members of Parliament and magistrates who are now in hiding. Leprosy is said to be affecting many Scandinavian immigrants in Northern Min J Tfr KfAii/rKt frArn tVl/i nesoia ana i^hkuu;. jli ia uiuu^m imm iuv, old country. A fire in the picker-room of Langley Factory Tuesday night destroyed about $2,000 worth of cotton, but the machinery was uninjured. Everything insured. The schooner J. Kennedy has arrived at New York, from Calais. The Captain reports fifty vessels in the ice on Nantucket shoals, and he thinks they must have gone ashore yesterday morning. At a meeting of the trustees of Adelbert College, Cleveland, 0., it was decided to refuse admission to women after the close of the present year. A ladies' annex is talked of. The coming orange crop of Southern California is expected to be much greater than last year. One estimate is 2,200 to 2,500 carloads, against 1,600 carloads the past season. A bill has been passed by the Mississippi House providing for pensioning disabled Confederate soldiers who are unable to work, and for colored servants of the same who are similarly situated. The celebrated trotting stailion Happy Medium, valued at $40,000 is dead. He was foaled in 1863. Thirty-nine of his get j have records of 2.30 or lower. He was j owned by Gen. W. T Withers, ' It is proposed in Nebraska to recognize j the heroic conduct of school teachers in ! the recent blizzard, bv making public con tributioDS to them. The movement meets with general favor. Thoebe is already in the field as a candidate against Speaker Carlisle for election to the next Congress. The workingmen will nominate him, and he expects to form an alliance with the Republicans. John Wilson, a wealthy bachelor of Montgomery county, Ala., who died on Wednesday, left his entire fortune of $75,000 to the Orphans' Home and the institution for the deaf, dumb and blind children in the city of Montgomery. The French Government, contrary to its custom, has consented to offer a reward for the discovery of the murderer of Archibald McNeill, the English reporter, whose-body was found on the beach at Boulogne a few weeks ago. It is said that wealthy men in the liquor business in Philadelphia have formed a syndicate, with $1,000,000 backing, to furnish bondsmen to enable the saloonkeepers to comply with the new high license law of Pennsylvania. Tuesday's snow storm was one of the worst known iq Halifax for years. Railway travel is again demoralized. The harbors of North Sydney, Digby, Yarmouth and Annapolis are irozen over soua ionne first time in years. On Monday afternoon two passenger cars o : the Salem branch of the Delaware and Hudson Railroad went over an em: bankment and turned over three times. Sixteen passengers were .injured, four of them fatally. Pinchback has advised the colored members of the Republican Convention -of Louisiana to leave the wholejmatter of the State ticket iit the hands of "the white Republicans and avoid the cry that they were tryiug to Africanize the State. The people of Beardesley. Minn., a small town 150 miles west-of St. Paul, are gettiDg desperate. On Tuesday a number of farmers drove into that place after fuel, and there being none, tore down the railroad commnv's snow fences and hauled away several loads. Mr. Grassie Bulkley, who eloped with Bessie Hillyer in last December, and about whose elopement there was much gossip at the time, has now separated from his wife. Each is now living with their respective parents. Divorce proceedings will probably follow and prove sensational. Ex-Mayor Courtenay, of Charleston, is receiving marked attention from the citizens of Richmond, Va. On Monday he was handsomely entertained al a dinner at the residence of Mr. Mann S. .Valentine. Among those present were Hon. Wm. Wirt and several other prominent citizens. The latest development in the affairs of the defunct Central Bank of Toronto is the departure of D. Mitchel McDonald, one of th? directors, for *he United States, with his family. It is said that he has a : ranch in California which requires his attention. Cashier Allen has also absconded to the United States. < The Grant monument committee has i adopted a draft of a circular to be sent to ] all architects and sculptors who may desire i to compete for the honor of designing tho memorial to Gen. Grant. The estimated i ;ost is placed at $500,000 instead of $300,- i 300, the original figure. The Mexican Presidential campaign may 5 ' J ii T>:?? I ae consiaereu wcu uuua utu. i jeing the leading candidate. The canai-11 key of Gen. Escobedo has apparently re- ( leived no support. The election will take )lace next June. The term is four years, ind begins on December 1. < The Pioneer Aid and Support Associaion has decided to fix weekly payments to ^ he families of the executed Anarchists at s 58 to each of the widows, and $2 for each f hild where there are two children, and $1 ? or the third child as in case of Mrs. Fis- c her. It appears tlftt'the families are bet2r off now, financially, than they ever rere. At a meeting of the Methodist preachcrs y f Baltimore yesterday resolutions offered g t a previous meeting, censuring President I f leveland for sending a copy of the Con- a: .itution of the United States to Pope LeO. I j( ime up after the_regular business had | 0 een disposed of. There was much dis- r, ission, but the resolutions were finally j lopted by a vote of 19 for to 10 agaics't Another blizzard has broken loose norths est of St. Paul. A Keche, Dak., special ijs that the mercury went down to 60 de- ]a rees below, and the wind reached a veloc- aj y of forty miles an hour there Monday ght. It is still blowing and trains are ^ n hours late. A heavy fall of snow has. t in, and the wind is blowing a gale. The 31 iow is drifting badly. The storm has not ^ :t reached St. Paul, but trains are badly :layed. t r WAR IX THE SPRi.\G. Russian Officer on How the Struggle. Will A Begin?Germany, Austria and Italy to oe Array ed Against France and Russia. London, January 20.?Ii "is beyond oubt that the powerful war party in Rus- 3 a has several times in the last two months early auccceded in committing the Czar to , vert acts of hostility. The latter has been ^ ersuaded that Bismarck wishes war, and c ; endeavoring to precipitate it, and the j nti-German manifestations in Lithuania , nd other provinces are an indication that * ie Russian Government is earnest in its . esire to banish the_ language and other re- c lainders of the detested Teuton from Rus- ? ian soil. As a natural consequence many J tieoretical warriors have favored the world j ?fth their views as to the campaign which ^ iiey regard as inevitable between Ger- ^ aany, Austria and Italy on the one hand, nd Russia and France on the other. r^na rvf tlio mrscf rMctinfrmshf>rl Tlnasian Jenerals has enlightened the public ( hrougii the correspondent of the Paris t yAeil with precise details concerning the :orning struggle. He takes it for granted ' hat Bismarck wishes war, for several rea- v ons. The alliance with Italy may not last ong. In a couple of years a change of ninistry at Rome may withdraw her sup- )ort, and he wishes to make use of the \ Italian troops while he can command their lid. Nor can Austria entirely be depended lpon. The Hungarians particularly detest Prince Bismarck and distrus: Germany, , md several speeches in the Diet have lately hown the animus of the inhabitants of hat powerful portion of the Austrian Empire. An article in the treatv of the triple illiance engages each of the contracting powers to mobilize a portion of Its forces yearly. The Austrian Government haying failedlo keep its agreement in this respect, a pressure was brought upon it from Berlin, and as a further incentive the alarming articles in the German and Austrian journals'as to the threatening Russian movements on the Galician frontier appeared, setting all Europe in a turmoil. The conflict will begin, continues the General, in this wise: In the spring Italy will be summoned to mobilize an army corps on the northern frontier. France will respond by an analogous military measure. Germany will order France to disperse her troops, and then war will bedn. Sixteen of the eighteen German army corps will enter France from Lorraine, while a cloud of Italians will debouch by the St. Gothard upon the basin of the Rhone. At the end of the first week France will be victor upon the Rhine or thrown back into the middle of Champagne. She can certainly hold out for a month, and at the end of that time Russian armies will be threatening Berlin or Vienna. This is the programme furnished by the Russian war expert, who concludes by saying-that Russia is a powerful machine, and as such, slow to be put in motion, but once started she will crush e very cbstnclc in her path. HERO AXD MARTYR. A Bank Cashier Killed by IloItl>ern.and Avenged by Lynchers. Limestone, I. T., January 23.?Four masked men, all heavily armed, -who subsequently proved to be citizens and cattle ranchers of the neighborhood, entered the Citizens' Bank Saturday, and, presenting a pistol at the head of the cashier, W. T. Reynolds, demanded that he should turn over the cash on hand. While pretending to comply, Reynolds slammed the door of the safe and turned the lock. He was at once laid out by a bullet from the pistol of one of the desperadoes, which struck him above the heart, 'killing him instantly. The bank was then ransacked; jind all trie money in the cash drawer, some $2,300, was taken. An attempt was, made to open the safe, but in this the robbers were foiled. As the sound of pistol shots was heard several people came running toward the bank to ascertain the cause of the'trouble. They were fired upon by three of the men who were on guard, and retreated to get arms. In a few minutes the town waaroused, and twenty or thirty armed men hurried toward the bank. The robberwere mounting their horses, and a hot fire was started, in which one of the robbers, Thomas Evans, was killed outright, being snot several times in the head and body. He was identified as a ranchman living near town. In the fight four citizens were wounded, but not fatally, two receiviug shots through the arms and two others being slightly wounded in the legs. The three surviving robbers then rode away with the booty Captured.' A posse of pursuers was soon upon the trail, riding rapidly in the direction nf Atoka. A fter about an hour's hard pursuit the robbers "were surrounded, captured and taken back to Limestone, where Judge Lynch was called on to hold court. The leader was found guilty of the murder of Reynolds and was forthwith sprung up. The other two were placed in charge of a strong guard and started for Fort Washita, where they will be turned over to the United States authorities. The stolen money was recovered. I'oIumbiA Fair Association. The Executive Committee of the Columbia Fm'v Association met vesterdav after noon-in the office of Col. Geo. Iv. Wright. | There were present: President "Wright, Vice President Jasper Miller, Secretary and Treasurer E. W. Seibels^Messrs. David Jones, E. J. Brennen and W. D. Stirling. As stated in these columns the meeting was for the purpose of formulating suggestions for the Executive Committee of the State Agricultural and Mechanical Society which will meet in this city on V>~ednesday, in reference to the fair of 18 3S. It was decided to make the following recommendations: That the books of entry he closed the Saturday night previous to the opening of the Fair, and no entries after that time be admitted, so that all entries shall be in place early Monday and that Monday be made the real opening day. That the Agricultural Society arrange to feed and care for all stock exhibited during the week, to encourage even a larger number of entries of stock and relieve exhibitors from the trouble and expense of feeding and looking after the same. It is suggested in case stock exhibited be sold the owner hp rprmirp^ to r>nv flip r>\-nfin.cp nf thfi fec-d ing and care of such as is thus sold. That no exhibits be allowed to be removed from their place until Saturday noon, in order that the Fair may continue full five days and a half and be as complete the forenoon of the last day as at any time. That larger premiums be offered in the machinery department, so that a greater number of entries be secured than hereto fore. The committee will attend the meeting of the Sooiety and present these suggestions. In addition to this the committee bave in mind the furnishing of extensive attractions for the delectation of visitors on Monday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday nights and they will raise a large sum o 1 money for that purpose. The Columbia Fair Association is full of significance and bears within it the determination of our citizens to make each succeeding fair the superior of its predecessor. Columbia DaiIn Record, Jan. 28. Tlie statement has been made that the lamage suits resulting from the Chatsvorth disaster of last August on the Coiedo, Peoria and Western Railroad, ave four minor cases, have been satis- , actorily adjusted. There were 225 cases ' a all; and thej cost the company a little ; iyer $300,000. f H. J. Furber, Jr., is a young man not s et 20, who is preparing to found a 3 reat university in Chicago after that of Eeidelberg. He will devote 31,000,000 ]j s an inducement for other citizens to I )in in the movement. He is a graduate a f tbe late Chicago University, and is ti ow in Berlin studying philosophy tm- " er German masters. One concern at Waterville, Me., made a 3,000,000 square yards of cotton goods ? fit year, and a Maine newspaper figures iat "the cloth would make a tent that ould could cover 370 acres, and hold 1 the people of Maine. New Hampshire / 3d Massachusetts comfortably seated, ith a ring of more than 1G8 acres in the ;ntre. La that ring the 84,000 horses : Maine could be exhibited all together, ai * V%?& '. ' : ;.V ' ' ANOTHER IJL \CR EXODlij. cc l 3IiiI:ca Colored IVopIe to Emigrate to South q America. (From the 2fev.- York Si,-ir.) | Topeka, Sax., Jan. 22.?Three years j .go several well-knowa colored men, ir.ea it?f means, met to consult as to the best 01 aetiiod of relieving tneir peopie iroai u;e eors<: than servitude that prevails in the "w xtreme Southern Slates, especially in ci Louisiana, Ivlississippi and South Carolina. ^ i.fter carefully studying the plan of gov- h rnmerit of the various countries open to hem, they arrived at the conclusion that p Jouth America was the land that would V ;ive them shelter and a home. The pubrc was not called upon for contributions, p jut these men sent out educated agents, h vhose reports are now coming in.w The v. Juianas, Brazil and the Argentine Confed- ti :ration were examined as to climate, lands, aw.- and privileges. a While these agents were out, their prin- t] ;ipals quietly effected a secret organiza- j ion, whose hend is in Topeka, lor the ? purpose of spreading the news by means ?; )f trustwonhy agents throughout the \ Southern States. The men thus organiz- y ng represent nearly $2,000,000, their own ^ noney and property. Before the end of LSSS is reached an exodus from the South~ - J ?rn a jrn states wui nave cousnieiiceu iuui .wu :-arry off more tljjiu a million of laborers from, the cotton, sugar and rice fields, f1 where they are cow at work, while the n tobacco fields wiii yield their fu'l quota. ~ While there will be two colonics or out- '' fitting points established in Honduras and Costa Rica, the main efforts of this new ? organization will be directed to'moviag the t colored people to South America. There will be settlements established in the Guiana Highlands, directly north of tl<e 1 equator, arid in the Brazilian Highlands, ; on the southern tributaries of -he Amazon, ^ to which will be directed those people z coming from Florida and Southern Ala- ? bama, Mississippi and Louisiana. Farther < south immigration depots will be estab- 1 lished in the Argentine Confederation for ? people from Kentucky, Tennessee, South Carolina and ^Northern Alabama, Missis- ? sippi and Louisiana and Texas. ' < Important concessions will be made by ? the Brazilian and Argentine governmer-ts < in the way of lands and immunity from ; taxation, acd aid in transportation, which ' will place the new haven within the reach j of nil who can secure money enough to . carry them through the first season. Their rights and 'privileges as citizens arc guar antced, anc;, owing to the mixed blood a!- ; ready existing in some of those countries, 1 their color will not debar them from politi- ! cal and social preferment. A Ne?v* Specios ol" Dead-BcatA new species of the "dead-beat" has made his appearance in Washington, and having worn out the town and departed to scape the police will probably try to work his" game elsewhere. He is a venerable-looking man of 60 or more, with a fine face, good manners, and well dressed. He speaks with a southern accent, and claims to be from Tennessee, where he savs he has several plantations. When, he arrived in town he took quarters at one of the first-class hotels, and remained there nearly three weeks until, the proprietor asked him to settle his bi 11 or leave. Ke postponed payment until he received some remittances from home which were unaceount- I ably delayed, and even telegraphed for money at the expense of the hotel. He was willing to give a draft on his "factors," but".;he proprietor would not accept it. Nearly every day he received telegrams, which it was suspected he sent to himself from distant parts of the town. From the hotel he went to a fashionable boarding-house, where he made himself popular at once .and his fellow-boarders are unwilling to believe I he is a "beat," although he owes a good j deal of borrowed money and circulated i somA hnon<? *?1i ? - ?-He came to Washington intending to reside here permanently and desired to purchase a line country place* At nearly all the real-estate agencies the oici j gentleman is well known,, and tew of I the dealers1 in suburban property escaped his clutches. Some of them cash ed drafts and checks for him, at least one introduced birn at the club, where he was hospitably entertained, and in return he tried to get up a party to visit him in Tennessee and try the shooting. But his principal "racket" was to takedrives into the country at the expense of the real-estate agents to look at dc sirable country seats. There is not a farm for sale within ten miles of Washington that he did not inspect in company with some one who paid for the carriage, the cigars, and generally a luncheon on their return. It some cases he made offers which were accepted, but he would invariably conjure up a condition that could not be complied with. He had a way of hiring hacks when he went arywhere and forgetting to pay for them. After taking a rutelie would want to be landed at one of the hotels or departments, or some other building that had two entrances, and while the hackman was \vaiting at one he would slip out at the other. Nearly every driver in town has reason to remember him, and some have cards he gave them with bogus addresses, at which they were instructed to call for their pay. If he was cornered he would write the number of sorae house at random on a card, with the name he assumed for the moment, and tell the hackman to be sure and call at 5 o'clock, as he was to dine out at 6. ? Washington Cor. Chica go Mews. The Utility of Hobbies. With a bobby the poo-rest clerk or the wealthiest mill onaire is supplied with a defense against depression and worry which is priceless. Take the*case of a bookkeeper who is conlined to his desk for eight or ten hours a day. If he can cultivate a taste for botany or geology it will give him an opportunity for regular excursions into the country, while he can analyze and arrange bis specimens during his leisure hours in the evening. If he has a talent for mechanics, woodcarving. carpentry, pottery, or any of the hundred pursuits into which enter deftness of hanjJ. and quickness of eye are open to bin: The hours which would hang heavily on his hands were he without any hobby seem all too short for the pleasant work that he comes to with a feeling of relief. He has a resource against business worry that will add ten years to his life and that will stand in good stead should misfortune or loss of loved ones come upon him. It is the same with the rich i ty*ot? oo r*r? frirtf I" ? ' Luauy OiUU i-ticfcu Javi iu?..o lUUlLlCd tU develop his pastimes entirely beyond the reach of the poor oierk. Practically; however, the two must stand on the same ri footing. They must cultivate a taste J for simple and wholesome pleasures which do not depend on money for their r gratification.??arc Francisco Build-in. j: (V The Hon. D. W. Voorhees. of Indiana, o ias accepted an invitation to deliver the p >ration at the joint celebration of the lit- a: :rary societies of the University of Yir- & jinia on the 26th of June. Sour.tor Voorlees delivered the oration before the same n ocietios in ISoS and it was one of the ablest (j .ddresses ever delivered at the University. One of the oddities of American public , ife is the presentation to a retiring official. c. t is the proper thing to put a watch ou a iiiu WiiU wao kJSJLklK^' :mes they put a chain cm him instead. The heart of a man is bigger than the f~ eart of a woman. Xu urc never make.ny mistake. i;he knew that man required ' larger receptacle for the eushrinement of is n umerous 1c vcs. 1 r; CO "I wish I ws.:; a b ir-room,"' said a loving ornau to ht.-r husband. '"Why?'' he in- is uired. v.ith some u.vgree of surprise. ' 0 jy ecause you vouhl come i*; eighteen or eri veiny time a d 13* to sc-e me." Tiie .ercatest misfortune of all is ns-t to be jle to boar misfortune. I 1 v( i , if ii ntjT '^ a aaaBMBaneBaMMMMM?i The Mississippi Senate failed to pass the f Louise ilichel is making every endeavor j n ) obtain the release of her would-be as- i 0 issin. j P The New York Sugar Trust has given ? vidence of its power when it ordered Ioller, Sierck & Co. to close their refinery. Latest advices say that thirty-five miners g erished in Tuesday's disaster at Welling- n an colliery, British Colombia. s: At Susquehanna, Pa., yesterday fire de- tl troyed two hotels, five residences and a v ?usiness block. Loss ?30,000. t The Republican Convention of Louisiana 11 las nominated a full State ticket headed by a 1. C. "Warmouth for Governor. ^ The great John L. Sullivan has formally t :hallenged Smith, the champion of Eng- <. and, to meet him in the prize ring. 'c A milk famine is threatened in New t Fork as milk trains over many of the roads s ire buried in snow drifts. 1 Archbishop Corrigan has resigned as 1 .rustee of the Catholic University to Is es- I ;ablished in Washington. J In the Kentucky State Senate strong ? resolutions protesting against the passage \ 3f the Blair bill by Congress were adopted fw p vnfp of 21 to S. mstitutional amendment bill over the overnor's veto, the vote standing 16 to 19, )t the accessary two-thirds. L It is estimated that in the past ten years 2. orth Carolina has expended $3,000,000 ** >r commercial f< rtilizers, v/hile the value I : the crops has been only ?13,000,000. b C. B. Hir.chcock, an old citizen, and his s1 ife were murdered at Santa Anna, Cal., e a Monday night by two Germans named h. .ushlag and l)yker, and the murders were s< anged by vigilants on Thursday night. e The Prohibitionists of Atlanta are pre- ^ aring for another fight two years hence. & fhile waiting for the next election they b ill devote their resources to educating si ublic sentiment up to the standard of-pro- n ibition. They propose to establish a 1; :eekly newspaper that will be devoted en- j] rely to the cause of prohibition. rue oinciais 01 l'iKe cuuuiy, ixy., nave pplicd to the Governor for troops to defend ae people against the Hatfield gang, 'roops were refused, but the people were iven permission to arm themselves. The Iieriff of Pike county has invaded West 'irginia to capture the outlaws, but the Vest Virginia sheriff is out with a posse to \ rive him back to Kentucky. c Fred Schultz, an old German, who lived a lone about a mile from Alexandria, Va.. 3 ras found dead near his house yesterday t corning by two neighbors, who were at- 2 racted "by the barking of dogs, and upon j ;oing to the spot found the old man lying < n the snow dead, with his dogs by his ^ ide.' It is supposed that he died of heart [ iis.tnco T-To livpH in the house alone, but 1 >ad a -wife and children living in Washingtra. ' , Snow drifted all night and caused west of j Iampton. Pa., a blockade of trains on the slew Jersey Central railroad six miles, long. ? Trains are now moving. Snow drifts are ( mmerous on roads centering at Eaton, Pa., j :nd trains are from one to two hours late. Ill trains on the Bangor and Portland, and jehigh and Lackawanna roads have been Lbandoned owing to the many deep drifts. Dinner parties, balls and receptions are j J9ing out of fashion in Paris, and fashion ible people are, instead, making the theatre tnd the opera the usual meeting place for 1 ;ocwl intercourse. It is said that the fash- j enables now consider one or two soirees a ' ear enough, and on other occasions treat 1 heir guests to tea instead of champagne ind rare viands.. Mrs. Cornelius Yandorbilt gave a cotillion ball'at her new residence in New York 3a Monday night that was the great social 2vcnt of the season. Two hundred guests were invited and the most exclusive of Xew society people were present.. The fyouse was decorated with the most rare flowers and plants. At 1 o'clock a most elegant collation was served on small lound tables, at each of which four guests sat. James Johnson, of Atlanta, recently sued Bradstreet's mercantile agency for defamation of character in publishing him to the trade. 'He lost his case in the lower court-, but on appeal to the Supreme Court he obtained a decision to the effect that Bradstreet's business is not a privileged one. Under this ru!ing?the jury gave him a verdict against the Bradstreet Company for $5,000. Owing to a mistake by a signal stationa fearful collision occurred on Saturday night the road that runs from Havana to the Yuelfci Abajo district, Cuba. A passenger train collided with a freight train seventeen miles east of Laherradura station. The engineers and firemen of both, trims were instantly killed and their bodies terribly mangled. Forty passengers were more or less badly hurt, and both locomotives were completely wrecked. Progress in the State. The Baltimore jlanufaciureri Record of this week contains the following statement of new enterprises in this State for the past week: Beaufort.?Parlies have been prospecting for a site for a varnish factory. Bluffton.?The 'South Carolina Land & Improvement Company, of Columbia, propose to build a town four miles from Bluffion, on the Colleton river. Charleston.?Cohen Bros, will' " art" a publishing and printing establishment. Cheraw.?A stcck "company has purchased a site to buiid a brioK hotel. /-n T J ,1 T ~ 4, me wueriiw JUILUU UULL xuipxuveLucui i Company has been incorporated. The cap-1 ital slock is $3,000, with privilege of being increased. ''Greenville.?The Lanneau Manufacturing Company, previously reported as building a yarn mill of 1,300 spindle3 capacity, contemplate adding about 700 spindles. Darlington.?The Darlington Manufacturing Company, expect to" add to their cotton mill during this year 20 looms and 1,200 spindles. Laurens.?R. H. Hudgins, J. J. Pluss and Gecrge B. Anderson will build an iron foundry and a machine shop. They have let contracts for their buildings. Mapleton:?Searles & Dallas, reported last week as to increase their capital stock, will as soon as possible add 400 spindles to their Mapleton Cotton 21 ills. Piedmont.?The Piedmont Manufacturing Company have decided to build an addifional mill, with a capacity of 10,000 spindles. Will be for manufacturing sheeting. Soutii Carolina.?G. F. Buss, of the Buss Machine Works, Grand Rapids, Mich., will purchase umoer ana mineral ianas *n csoum Carolina. Walterboro.?A saw mill has been crected by TV. P. Du Boise. White Hall.?A flour mill is being erected by Eskew & Watson. Yor? County.?A gold mine on the land of J. S. Bratton is being developed. Machinery will be purchased. IMMMOBWWaBB-WBW II ?II Ml???O ifHs3sf?&8tRf f j /SA LJN'.MENT PERFECTS j f3ARMIES 5-Ah'D SHOULD BE USES A s ?? // MONTHS,BEFORE CONFINEMENT. I "'SEND fop, seek 10 MOTHERS i IBsADFEIIi'RESULArOB Coj ?*, ArLA^^iA.GAi tii PITTS CAEMBIATIYE! for etf axts and PEETIIINGr CHILDREN. * An instant relief for colic of infants, f lures Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Cholera niantum or any diseases of the stomach h r.d bowels. Makes the eritical period h ? Teething safe and easy. Is a safe and leasant tonic. For sale by all druggists, c ad for wholesale by Howasd, Willet i* Co., Augusta, Ga o o; HARLOTTE FEMALE INSTITUTE. % r?( The eurren* session of this Institute ** oses January 21st, ISS8, when the ;)ring Session begins, which endsJrme ;h, l'SSS. The present session is one of the most rosperous in the history of the Insti4-/-v u' r\~n r.nltt r? yv>/\*a ,tv. io xuum iui vrnj ?** ic ?r iuyj.c warding pupils. The health of the hool, the accommodations of its boards' department, and the efficiency of its ~ rps of teachers nre unsurpassed any- ? :ere in the South. The first of January a very convenient time for entering. j ipilsare charged only from date of j trance. * / Bev. K. ATKINSON, s Principal. DE Charlotte, N. C. ^ ? ?- - . i n ' * A TONGUE IK" SNOTS. I contracted malaria in tiie swamps of louisiana while working for the teleraph company, and used every kind of A Ledicine I could hear of without relief, at last succeeded in breaking the fever, ?L.M. i. OIAA AA 1 M Uu ll< UUJSt JLLIC VVCJ. Sjxw.uu, auu UU.UWI X MM /stem was prostrated and saturated witli ralariai poison and I became almost fl elpless. I finally came bare, my mouth X 3 filled with sores that I could "scarcely . J at, and my tongue raw and fi led with tile knots. Various remedies were, re- ij rcteJ' co without effect. I bought ottles of B. B. B. and it has cured and 9 fcrengthened me. All sores of ^y?^9 louth are healed and my tongue entire- jfl y clear of knots and soreness, and I feel ike a new mftn. Jackson, Tenn., April 20, 1886. ^^HBj A. F. BniTTOJt. A STIFF JOINTS. L HOST KEMAEKASLE CAS^ OF SCEOFUIiA MI AND BHEU3IATISM. I have a little boy twelve years old diose knees have been drawn almost louble and his joints are perfectly stiflf nid he has been in this condition thref ^ rears, unable to walk. During that tim,' j he medical board of London county ' trained him and pronounced the diseas scrofula and prescribed, but no benefi * J >ver derived. I then used a much a? rertised preparation without benefil three, weeks ago he became perfect! lelpless and suffered dreadfully, j A friend who had used B. B. B. aj j risc-ditsuse. He has used one bottj md all pain has ceased and he can noj aralk. This has been a most wonderfj *j ictdon, as his complaint had baffle everything. I shall continue to use it <i ' JK aim. Mbs. Emma Griffiths. *f^|g Unitia, Tenn., March 2,1886. *f WEBB CITY, .ARK, j BXiOOD. j Having tested B. B. B. and found it ij ; be all that is claimed for it, I commea , j it to any and every one suffering froi. JM blood poison. It has done me mo? good for less money and in a shortf space of time than any blood purifies ever used. I owe the comfort of a life to its use, for I have been troubS with a severe form of blood poison foi i or 6 years and found no relief equa&.sg*^ that given by the use of B. B. B. I Webb City, Ark., May 3, 1886. All who desire full information abort? cause snd cure of Blood Poisons, Scrofula! - g Scrofulous spellings, Clcers, Sores, Khef ' tism, Kidney Complaints, Catarrh, BH secure by mail, free, a copy our 32-page 3 tra ted* Book of Wonders, filled with the f 3 wonderful and startliDg proof ever bf known. Address, BLOOD BALM CCj from a eorwtnon Blotcli, or Erujoii* to the worst Scrofula. Salt-rliza, " Fever i sores," Scaly or I igfc. i Skin, in-short, all diseases caused baci - . .j| blood ore conquered by this powerli mri- a lying; and invi&oratinpr medicine, eat JH Eating Ulcers rapidly heal undei be- jBm ni?n intlacnce. Especially has it ma stesi M its potency in curing' Tetter, Hose isltn (1 Boils, Carbaiicles, Sore Eyes* rof-- -J ulous Sores and Swelliugs, iip<= joint Disease, W3i?tc .Swe] igs* ^ Goitre, or Thick Xcclc, and En] geo. * Glands. Send ten cents in stamj or a; larg-e treatise, -witji colored elates, < Skin Diseases, or the same amount for a atise> . .j ~ ? c? A 'J Uil C?JJTVA.UlVUO SXU.KJ^l/1V/iU3. '^fli "the bzjood is the re.? ji Thorou ably-cleanse it by using- Br. Pfce'e. VJ Golden Medical 3>iscov?ry, an oocl > ? digestion, a fair skin, buoyan pir< its, and vital strength, vrili beests sheet consumptio: , which is S?ro?uIa of the IjUJig is ar rested and cured by this remedy, if ti n before tbe last stages of the disease are : ched. J From its marvelous power over tb is -ribiy 0S fatal disease, when first -olTerin}r 11 no?? JH celebrated remedy to the pu bliejDr. iMN thought seriously of calling it his- 1 ^OfpO3"^ -i"*? 1 sumption Cure," but abandon 'that name as too limited for a medicine 'hiclv 1 f from its wonderful combinctioa of tfie,or strengthening, alterative, or bIo^:-clfismg; , I anti-bilious, pectoral. :vJA nutritive operties, is unequaicd, not only as a i"C-niy for consumption, but lor all Chroni I>is? Ti cases of the ' / 1 Liver, Bleed,.and Lutes.' I If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitate havs sallow color of skin, or yeUowi6h-broi spots' on face or body, frequent headache Idizzi- S ness, bad taste in mouth, internal at or chills, alternating "with hot flushes, lo ipirita * U and gloomy forebodings, irregular s >etite, * and coated tongue, you are sufferii from> , ? {naigesuojij auu jrpia Ijiver, or '^Biliousness." Ii many JL eases only part of these symptoms aiexpe-. rienced. As a remedy tor all sue cases-. Dr. "Piercers Golden i!Iedica(Bls> covery is unsurpassed. For Weak JLnnfcs, Spitti of Blood, Shortness ot Breath. ron? chilis, Asthma, Severe Cougi, and kindred affections, it is an efiicient riedy. Sold by Druggists, at, $1.00, SIX: ' 1 BOTTLES for ?5-00. M Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. >rce*a ? S hook on Consumption. Address, ?-V World's Dispensary Medical sso* ciation, 663 Main. Street BuFyAX >. Y?. $500 bewiro. j t is offered by the pr ictorst , Jfl C-fl of Dr. Sagc's atarri medy fl| \<l \ -<?0$ for a case of catarwvhich 4H i $3? they cannot cure.* you bzart have a discharge Jk the nose, offensive or otherwise, partiaE^o? XM smell, taste, or hearing, vreakT eyes, or pressure in head, you have Catarq^aM sands of cases terminate in consuiiDM jjr. cage s V/Axaoau vui vo# cases of Catarrli* "Cold in theJH and Catarrhal Headache. 50 |jl Gilder's Li^H pill simgm The justly celebrated SQTlft JBI VEGETABLE PILJj having ba_jH is a household remedy for the u V jenturv, in all the Southern andf 5? States, for the cure of Dyspepj cfl .onsness, Ivlalaria and all diseaseLjfl LIYEE, have, by their Ujfl WOITDEEFUL CUBISM rairiA^ +V>a RTinromaAff /">r-oi? d PILLS oil the market. Aiter ou will join the cry lot "GIL* W PILLS" witlx the ten million pSq he United States who are now np. . |H hem. ^ N If your merchant has not 'got fo. end 25 cents in stamps to &.BABBETT&C(; 1 AUGUSTA, ' ~ Q PKIYATE EOAliDIiSp S OX TEE FIEST OF OCTOBER indersigned opened a * - j > 1RST CLASS BOARDING H0|r 'c 'T| a Charleston, for the accommodation HH oth Transient and Permanent Boar<^ 7 9 The Building, located on the northeast V orner of Wentwoith and Glebe streefe^ > conveniently near the business poz&Q "-jM f King street, yet free from the ooise H f the thoroughfares. It is within tssy Vfl| jach from the Academy of Music ^ a :qm Churches of all die different |fe. ) ominations. Ml The house has been thoroughly^ " 1 iired, and fitted up in good style ^ ew furniture and fixtures. j 9H Terms reasonable. ? B For further information address I Mbs. E. E. HASELL,! or Miss S. S. EDWAtfBf 1SKS, OFFICE FURNITURE AND FIXTURES A?k for IHaatrated Pamphlet. {M 2JS3SY SHOW CASE CO., SaebylUei TqjJJ m \ :' 53L J iL.1 II