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f?- - ? -? Mi.iwwftiWLimwiHii. "CROOKED THIXGST j i THE CROOKED SHALL 5E MADE ! STRAIGHT. i Dr. Talmage's Discourse at lbs A cades):, of Mnsic-A .Series t;f Sermons en the Holy Land to be Delivered. Brooklyn, .Sept. 21.?Pielinilnarv ! to his sermon at the Academv ofMusk 1 in this city, this forenoon. liev. Dr. Tai- j mairc announced that, until the now 3 ; Brooklyn Tabernacle was coinuleted. he ; J would prcach iu the Brooklyn Academy | ot Music, on Sunday mornings. He was ! glad to add that, by an arrangement! made through The Christian Herald, cf j Xew York city, he would be enabled to j prcach in the New York Academy of j Music, on Fourteenth street, on Sunday ! evenings, beginning with the evemng of; September 23th. lie also announced j that on next Sabbath morniug, Septem- j beroSth, he would begin a series ofser mons entitled: Recent Journey j Through the Holy Land and Xeighbor- j WViot I ^r>\vnnd 7 .cfirMod."' ! IJUi; \wUU:iUi^o^ M ... The subject of to-day's sermon was:'! "Crooked Things." Text, Isaiah -!: | ^ "The crooked shall be made straight."' j Geometry, from the time it was uis/ covered on u.e banks ofthc Xlle. which, by its overflow annually obliterated the landmarks, and the restoration of these landmarks made such a science necessary?I say, Geometry, ever since then has been busy with lines, straight lines, curved lines, liues in angles and cones and spheres, but has never been able to i:?- <i._* evolve any oeauty irum ;i uuv merely crooked. The circle and the square were always considered admirable. Isaiah recognizes the circle and says : "The Lord sits upon the circle of the earth." The altar of the ancient tabernacle was ''four square," and the breastplate of the priest "foursquare," and heaven, according to Jolm. Is "four square." But the Bible has no admiration for lines that are merely crooked. Indeed, my text in prophesying the j world's complete recti&cation declares: | "The crooked shall be made straight." j There have been so many moral earthquakes that many things have got into a terrible twist?crooked laws, crooked j governments, crooked fortunes, crooked j "* 4-K /*. AA*A%>fc< t r\ dispositions?ana many ui ;uc mvi straighten things have o nly made them j . more crooked. And some good people sit down in despair and become pessimistic and give up lite and the church and the world as dead failures. With such - lachrymose behavior I have no sympathy. It is a promise ot the Lord Almighty. '*The crooked shall he made straight." I propose, as I may be divinely helped, to mention some of the crooked things that are going to be siraightened. Much of the wealth of the world is in the hands of the t>rolli?rate while many of the best people are subjected to (lis- ( tressing privation; and there :s yoinir to j be a redistribution of property. If it j were possible, it would bo. a bad thing to have things divided equally. Some J men are able" to endure more success than others, and prosperity that might not unbalance you. might destroy me. . The Declaration of American Independence declares that all men are born equal, but the opposite is the truth for they are born unequal. In no respect is this more evident than in their capacity to endure success, financial or social. I have seen men by the acquisition ot rifty thousand dollars made arrogant and overbearing, and I have known others i -i-n I with their minions 01 uonars cui;uui\t; and unassuming and Christian. We would all be affluent hue the Lord cannot trust us. 1 am glad there are those He can trust. Much is said against capitalists, but the world would be a slinkv world without them. Who built railroads which, while they give such facilities ot travel, employ tens o- thousands of laborers supporting them and their families ? Capitalists. Who built great ships that stir the rivers and bridge the ocean? Capitalists. Who reared the thousands of factories all over the land in which hundreds oi' thousands ot employees earn their daily bread? Capitalists. Who endowed your colleges, and opened free libraries, and built asylums for the orphan, the {-rippled the insane? Capitalists I But lor them 1 * - - ^ 1-- -?- * /\f ar mere wouiu uut lh; uu i-i . iwic, or a picture gallon* or a free library or a steamboat, or a railroad in America. Who put the world on seventy-live years beyond what it would have been in enterprise, in comforts, in educational advantage, in good things without number? Capitalists! The more money a man gets the better, if it come honest- ; ly and is employed righteously. Nevertheless we all see that there needs to be a redistribution of property. Communism proposes to make that distribution by torch and dagger and dynamite. Throw the midnight express train off the track and put the factory into conflagration. Disrupt society. .Burglarize. Assassinate. Such people believe neither in God nor man nor woman and they know how to make things worse but never have made and never can make anythim; better. I tell you how there will come a redistribution of" property. Under liie diviue blessing good people will get more alertness and acumen and assiduity. Many good people arc kept in straitened circumstances because they have been ' indolent, or lacked courage to take Hon- j est advantage of circumstance*, and ' vrere too stupid to get on. Vv'itli the very same surroundings others went cn to competency. In the better days to come good men will have their faculties wakened, arid will in consequence ri -e to larger share of property. On the other hand, estates wrongfully accumulated, will dissolve. If not the sons, then the grandsons will make the money 11 v. and it will Gradually scatter in their hands, and become a part of the general wealth. Then, as to vast properties righteously gathered?and there arc thousands of them?such estates, w ill contribute to- i ward helping the unfortunate, not more by charities than by helping struggling people into lucrative business' ami the i man who has amassed enough and a sur-: plus will say: "There is a young merchant without any capital. I will stan him on Fulton Street," and '-there is a young mechanic who has no means of his own, and I will put him on a carcer of prosperity," and "There is a farmer ! witx{ *00 hig a mortgage on his land, and j I will help him lift- the encumbrance." The tact is that if the kindness and gen- j erasity manifested by moneyed men 4o-; word the struggling during the last tifty j years, increases in the same ratio ior the next tifty years, there will be a condition of society paradisacal. We are <;oing to have a multiplication of William E. Dodges, and Peter Coopers, aud James Scnoxes. and George Teabodys. So will : come redistribution, and the crooked will be made atraight. Mind this: (I od never yet undertook a failure. The old book which is worth ' all other books put together, makes: it plain that God has undertaken to regu- 1 late this world by gospel influences, and : if He has the power lie v.-III do what lie j says He will, and no one who amounts 1 to anything will deny His power. God i : has said a hundred times "I \vi'...'J but j never once has scud "1 cannot."' V,"o may |: with our tack-hammers pound away.:.y-: ing to mend and improve and strahrhtcn i the financial condition of the world, and ; Stov r* "A-.*.,! u be <ijSiti-]?oiiitc? Hi the result. because [ our aim is too weak an<I the; ;.an:rnc-r *.v;; v.-f : .: : >iri.-l: hi:J '!:( (IcfiuiU iISS ficulty will flatten and disappear when ; Gcd with a hammer made of summer i thunderbolts strikes it, saving. "The ! crooked sh:u! h; made straight." In your business concerns there are: perplexing. Your affairs may j s< em nit right to outsider?. fhr basinet ' firms not advertise their private: trouol-s. hut whore one ;irm has ever.. -: thing just :i> they want It there area! hundred nrms at their wit's end what to { do wi-h thai partner who draws mere i than his share of the profit?, or with that! ... . st<.vKi.oXi.'r wno ponies m just c.;cn i enuugh to upset things, or with that dU- j appearance of funds which von cannot j account :",Ar. ai though you have suspicion* | you cannot mention, or with ihat invest-! meat which was made contrary to your j judgment because there was a deiermi- j nation to juish it through, or because | you are going behind month by month J without any prospect of extrication, j TIio trouble is putting a wrinkle on your j forehead that ought not to appear there i for ten years yet. and you will be forty j years old when you ought to be only j thirty, cr sixty when you ought to bo j !i;ty or seventy waen you ou^ni to jc only sixty, Stop worrying. Either l>y*the (lis:-Glut:on of that firm. or by re-adjusting matters you will be brought safely through if you j?ut yoar trust in Goth When comraerci.il houses fail the suspension is advertised, but of the tens of thousands of men. who arc every day c? tricated no public mention is made. Yesterday was Saturday and I warrant that at the windows of brinks, and in counting-rooms of stores and on every street o? < very city. God appeared lor the deliverance of good men. ;is certainly ?.s when with His right foot he trod Lake (iiiiiiif into phcidity and made Daniel as safe nniotiir the lions as though they had been house dogs asleep on a rug before a winter's Grc. Throw yourself on the promise cf the text, or a hundred oilier texts meaning about the samething. 1 nover yet asked God to do anything I hut lie did it, if it were best, aud in all the cases where my prayer lias net been ; answered, I have found out afterward t that 3t was best not to have been an swered in my way. Uut none of us have ! tested the full power of prayer. It is a. force very like sonic of the forces of nature, that were in existence but not employed. For ages electricity was thought good for nothing but to burn barns, and kill people with fell strokes. The lightning rod on the ton of houses was the spear with which the world charged on the thunderstorm, as much i as to say, "If you dare to come this way 11 will hurl you mto the ground/' J>ut ; now electricity lightens homes, and churches, and cities, and Christendom, and moves rail cars, and lie is a rash man who mentions anything as impossible to this natural enenrv. So the nower of prayer was to the world rather a frightul power, ifit was any power at all. But that has been changed, and men begin (o use it in some things, and the jnv* will come when it will be used in ail things, and there will be a Bible in every counting room, and supplication will ascend Irom every commercial establishment, and when business firms are format! the question will not only be asked as to how much this one and that one put in of capital, the question will be asked: "Do you know how to pray?" Mightier auer.t than any natural force v.-.f u-ili tills trscUy. "lashing heavenward lor help, ilashiug earthward with Divine response, uoit In business hie. God in agricultural life, (ioi; in mechanical life. God in artl.c tic iife. Got: in every kind of life. Your religion for the mo?t past is hung up so high you cannot reach it. It is hung up en the cloud;* rafters of the sky where you expect to snatch it up as you finally go through for heavenly residence. Oh. have your religion within easy reach now! Religion is notforheaven. but for this world. frorr> m T\-f> will nppd rm rr.nrpv. I for we- shall have every tiling we want. | We will need no repentance, for we shall i have forever got rid of our sins. We shall have no need of comfort, for there will be no trouble. The Chasstian religion Is not for heaven where everything is all ridit. but for this world where so in air; things are ail wrong. Washington Allston, whose name you recognize as that of a great American rainier, was reduced to extreme poverty. and one day ^or 0:1 his knees and asked for a loaf of bread for himself an;! his ht:;rv"::-rr family. While he >vp.s l.o\vc<.!!n ihat prayer there was a knock at tho j iior-r unci a inau cair.e in r.in! said: ''How j ob'>ut your paintiug. the 'Angel that received the prize at the royal aead- j ensyr Has it been sold?" said 1 Alistca. "How much do you want for ! il?" Allston replied: "L am done fixing ! u price for I cannot tell." "Will four j hundred pounds be enongh'r" asked the j stranger. "Why that- is more than I i asked," -aid Alston. The 400 pounds, j (. li.oUU) were paid and the purchaser m- j ircduced himself as Marquis of Stafl'ord. j who thereafter was one of the most lib- j eral patrons of the rescued artist. "Oh. j that all just happened so:" Did it? Tell that to some ignorant man. some benighted woman, who has never read the the promise: "Call upon me in the day of trouble, I will deliver thee." or that oilier promise: The crooked shall be made straight." Yv ell." says one. "you don't apply this in every direction." Yes. J. do. TaTce the most uncertain thing on earth ?the weather. The Uible distinctly say$ that prayer controls the weather. James 5th. and I>'th: "Elijah was a man subject to like passions as we are and ho j prayed earnestly mat it mignt not nun,; and it rained not oil the earth for the space of three years and sb: months; and lie prayed again and the heavens gave rain." Do you say that was the weather of olden time':" There have been instances in modern times just as marvelous. There is not a Christian ship captain but couid give you instances of divine interference with the weather in answer to prayer. It has been my good fortune to know many ship captains. TLev are in ail our services. Thev leave ' their vessels on Sunday mornings and join us in worship. I warrant there are enough el'them present this morning to take a whole licet m safety across the Atlantic. Whenever 1 have heard them testify, it has mightily confirmed me in what I knew before, that God answers ".caver concerning the weather. And j there have been cyclones that started1 yp fro in the Caribbean sea, sweeping down every >:ul and every smokestack j and every mast in their course. which in answer to speciiie petition. have been diVvr-i ! an;I made to > urve aroun I some particular ship. leavinij thnt i'i cairn waters, ::vi then resuming their original path o i destruction. The weather I robn i'uie:; again have announced a tempest anil wc were all ready for it, but to the surprise of most people, the next day we saw the announcement that the atmospheric iury had changed its course. The probability it struck a prayer and i glanced off. if luijah's prayer ell'ected | the weather oi' i'alcstiue for forty-uvo j [nomas. I should think somebody now iii^ht have a prayer that would etl'cc! it for a couple of days. John Easier was many years ago anbvacgeiist in Virginia. A large out-door meeting was being held in that stale. Many thousands had assembled in the cncu air and heavy storm-clouds began lo gather. There was no shelter to ivhU-hi!multitudes could retreat. The rain had already reacht d the adjoining ' Je ? ..... iav.:: uvi.ii JliMbVi vliuu uut. j "^reinrou. ;o still while I call upon >;oti j to Slav til-? storm lil) the (rosixi is J aw:g ? w?awwi ym pww w hjw yw m?i prcached to this multitude." Then he i knelt and prayed thai the audience mi^ht | l>c snarc-d from the ruin, and that after they had gone to their homes there might\ come refreshing showers. Behold the clouds parted as they came near an:: passed to cither side of the crowd and then closed again, leaving the place dry | where the audience had assembled, and ; the next day the postponed showers came upon the ground that had been ti e ; day before omitted. Do you say it only j happened so? 1 cannot see what you j keep your bibles tor. and the (Jod you j worship is not my (iod. Your wod is; ..ti -.in? IF.- ?. fir r-.'r ftmi sr? ? far IV) that the world cannot touch HI in, j and his throne is an eternal iceberg. My j God is a father, here and now. and a father ! will give his child what ho asks i'or. if it is best for him to have it. iJrav about everything that concerns you. secularises as well as spiritualities. Take ; to God all your annoyances and y.erplex! itfes. The crooked* shall be made straight- Some people talk as though God controlled tilings in general hut not in particular; that He started everything under certain laws and let it take care of itself, as an engineer might start Iiis locomotive on an iron railroad track and then jump oil'. What would happen to such, a locomotive :<? what would long ! ago have I:arpene? to our world u uou i j had started it and afterwards allowed it to look out for itself, There is no such thin;: as a genera! providence. It is a particular providence. God has no general care lor a forest, it is a care of every ceil, 01* every leaf a ad root in that iorcst. God has no general care of the ocean. It is a care o: every drop of water in the liquid magnitude. God has no general care for the human race, ii is a care of every individual oi that race, and of every item of individual history. I preach Ilim, a God in Infinitesimals, an every-{lay God, a God responsive, and one breath of earnest prayer, though that breath should not be strong enough to make a candlc tiicker, will absorb more of the divine attention than if the archangel standing at the foot of the throne should llap both wings. It is remarkable how many crooked things are in the providence of God being made straight. About thirty years ago our national affairs were as crooked as depraved American polices and bau men, and satan could make them. From the top of .Maine to the foot of Florida, the nation was red with wrath. It was wrangle and fight all the way throng, ana one of the mildest things that the North and .South promised each other was assasination. JDurin? this summer I have traveled through Xcw York, and Ohio, and Illinois, and Indiana, and Minnesota, and Kansas and Nebraska, and Missouri, and Texas, -and Louisi ana, and Georgia, and 2sortii and South Carolina, and Virginia, and Pennsylvania. and I have shaken hands with tens of thousands of people, and talked with men of all sections and degrees, and I have to tell you it is all peace, and in j all the suites of the Union you could not now marshal a military company ot 100 J soldiers to tight against the. United States government, unless you got your men cut of the penitentiary. Did the corrupt and gangrened political parties do this work of rectification and pacification? Xo! It was oy divine iuierposition that the crooked has been made straight. On December 2,1 So 1. Louis Napoleon j j Donaparte rode down the Champs Llysee j I 1>A1*8M ' I VI jL iiuu uuuu ui;-o iiuuic ui 1.10 nvwv I a Republic was trampled as the rider j went to take a throne. It. was the out- J rage of the century. For nineteen 10115; years the wrong triumphed. The willot' one man who wanted to remain emperor kept down a nation who wanted :i Re| public. ]>ul September. 1870. arrived, | and Set'an unrolled its crimson scroll.! j The emperor surrenders with S3.000 I ; troops, 410 Held guns, 0.000 horses and j i GO.000 muskets. From that day the bal-1 lot-box was r.i> and the throne was down. Free institutions have been substituted for an infamous monarchy. Thank God! j The crooked has been made straight. But why go so far to find fulfilment oi' | rmy text. In all our lives there are I crooked things that need to be made j j straight, and each, hearer or reader will enumerate for himself or herself. With one it is delapidatcd physical health, and you are saying. "Why cannot I be in good health when I have such opportunities and such responsibilities?" Alas tor the sick headaches and the rheumatic joints, and the neuralgic thrusts, and the lame foot! ikit you v/ill be well soon. Life at the loudest is an abbreviated durante. There is a black doctor U:at \vi31 cure you. Some people call him Death. Xo disease was ever able to stand before his touch. Use all li:e means aiibrded or physical recuperation, but if they fail the hour of release is not iar away. There need be no incurables. There is no sorrow that heaven cannot cure. Those who in this world have always been well will not get the best part of heaven. They will not have the advantage of contrast. Tliev were well before i they left this world and why should Lhey be so gratulated at being weil in the next world. But to those who ou earth were hindered or broken down in health what a contrast as they step into that domain where there lias never been an aching brow or lame loot or inflamed muscle or disordered nerve! For Ibrt-y years there may have been a stooping in the back, or a twisted muscle, or a curved spine or a crooked limb, but the promise has been fulfilled. "The crooked shall be made straight." In many a domestic liic-are diilicuiues to be removed. There arc thousands of matches that arc not made in heaven. Some of the loveliest women, have been united to some of the meanest men, and some of the grandest men to the most worthless woman. There may be no sufficient causc of divorcement, but there has never been any accord. For ihcm the wedding march ought never .to haye been played. The twain divergent in sentiment, the north pole and the south pole might just as well have been married. A twist of nettles would have been more appropriate than a garland of orange blossoms. The unutterable mistake was made to please parents, or for the acquisition of estate, or for heighten ing of social position or thorough thoughtlessness. 1 call the attention of such to the rapid dissolution of families. * This thought, wiiich is a sadness to a happy marital state, might be consolatory to those unequally yoked. A very short j path is the path of life. The rolling years i will give quick emancipation. Every- j body, for discipline, must have some j kind of trouble, and that is your trouble. Put in a scr.g now and then to cheer your spirit. Make the best of things. Find in God that peace which no one else can bestow. The days and months and years are crowding past, and the last of the procession, so lar as you are concerned, will soon have gone by. Remember that sr.me of the best men and v.-omen who ever lived have had the same lifetime misfortune. They bore up under it and so can you. The expiration of the j life of one of you, will, after a while, re- \ move the aHliction. Let the oue. that remains make no hypocritical mourning at the obsequies of the one that goes or imitate those whom we have all noticed who fought- like cats and doers all their married state and then could not get organs to sound dirges doleful enough. or furnishing stores to prepare weeds black enough, or tombstone cutters to chisel epitaphs eulogistic enough. Il is a matter of congratulation that the unhappiest conjugal relations will terminate. The crooked ?iiali be made straight, in the ages of the world, when the people lived live: or six or eight or nine hundred years, such consolation for any kind of trouble would have been in ? wi->jniirimw u xwgrwi'yw^c apt. It would have brought no relief to ! some of those ohl patriarchs 1o say. i Vrvi* trill Kova rmlr Tflfi vf.^rc irtAro ??f ? this." J'ut life has been abbreviated by \ the cut-tin? off of century after century I until we can console people, whether I their trouble be financial or domestic, by j savin? it will not be lon? before the j crocked shall be made straight. HALE AND HEARTY AT 104X iic;siav3-;al>l<: V.'cman Liiviuj; at Parjsorsliurjj, Vt". Va. I'AKXEItSBUntf, W. VA.. Sent. 24.? (5:seof tlie attractions sit the i'ourteuntU onmi-i! -Minim, \ V,! uiti. -KU i ui;.?yu *ji ci.v, m \ k.'L >>? Ov Virginia, in this city "lust week was- the oldest person in West Virginia, Mrs. Jane Crungardner. She will be 104 yeais oid on December 20 next. She was born in (Georgia in 17S0. Early in her youth she came to Virginia and settled in what is now called "Ve.-.t Virginia, near the Ohio River. .she is a most remarkable woman in many respects.-- She docs not use glasses, even when doing the tines'; sewing. She would be taken at a casual glass as a woman o; t;0 years of age. She uses tobacco, having been accustomed to it from her youth, her constant companion being a primitive cob pipe. She says she prefers a cob pipe to "'any of the new fanglecl notions." iler hearing is :iti;i good. She had eight children, lour of whom still iive. She has lorty grandchildren, thirty-live greai-grandehiidren, and three great-great-grandchildren. This chronological tabie is taken from her recollection of ten years ago. A fair estimate of her descendant:; at this v;c::.u not, uu iei-s <.1 an two hun-l drccl and lii'ty people. The Old lady has a report; re of stories of Seminole raids in Florida and of the aborigines of this part of the conntry almost a century ago. She was over 20 years of acre when Aaron Burr and Bler.nerhassett figured prominently in the history the country. She says she saw Burr and his victim, Herman Blennerhassett, frequently in their travels from the historical island to .Marietta and reiurn, and frequently conversed wu:i jjoui or uiem. _urs. iJlennerhass^tt was, and still is, her ideal 01 a beautiful woman, in speaking of ihirr she says she always had a natural dislike for the man. When she settled permanently at J3riseoe, six rniies from Marietta. Ohio, (the oldest town on the Ohio iiiver,) that place was nothing more than a collection of a lew log huts. The fort at Hammer, Ohio, opposite Marietta, was the only place lor many miles up and down the Ohio Iiiver where the isolated settler of that day could secure protection during the numerous Indian raids which were common then. Mrs. Jirungardner's physical Icondition is.indeed. wonderful at her ?reat ;!ge. She comes to this city unattended oncc e\ tfvy three months to sign vouchers for her pension as the widow of u soldier of the war of 1812. SAD FATE OF OS MAN PASHA. Five 2?ao<ii'c<T Turkish Seuma;: Drowned V.'iiii Iliin. L'>Xi;:)X, oept. 10.?Advices from Ilic?go state that the Turkish man-of-war Krtzogroul has foundered at sea. and fU*o t\i% I i/*r wtic f\ . _ | ed. The Ertzogroul was a wooden, lrigate-built crusierof 2,341 tons displatvment. She mounted forty-one .guns of small calibre and was built in 18t53. Osman rasiia and Ali Pasha, envoys of the .Sultan to the Fmperor of Japan, were passengers on the Ertzogroul and were drowned. Osnian Pasha, whose victory over the Russians at Plevna gave him a high rank as a lighting general, was on board and was lost. He had been on an ollicial visit to Japan, having been intrusted with a special mission "from the Sultan to the .Mikado. The progress of the steamer since she left Constantinople for the East many months ago has been a most undignified anil nuucrous one. Nie leu j uncey short of money, it being understood that supplies were*to be sent for her use to tiie ports at which she was to call. The result was that her sojourn in those countries was indefinitely prolonged, in consequence of theoflicials at home not being able to keep their promises. In this way she lost some of her crew rud lie.* oULers were many times on the verge of rebellion, induced bv starvation. The (iovernors of the cities visited refused to remit h'trbor (Lies ard grant other privrlhi^esthat w? re of rigid due lier as a Turkish man-of-war. oil the ground that she was not sailing in that diameter, tlic-vc- not being 2>o\vcler enough 011 hoard to enable her crew to sire the regulation snlntr -. After m.'ny adventures. o.ily worthy oiau opera b:>niie navy, the Ertzogroul finally arrived i:i Japanese waters, and it was on her return voyage that the disaster occurred. MURDERED BY HER HUSBAND. II?j Crushed the Skull una Sent a lUsllct Through the Head. Mk.m I'll; Tenn., Sept. 1H.?The funer al of Mrs. Mary J. Persons, wife of William II. Persons, one of the wealthiest men in this city, who. was supposed to have committed suicide yesterday, took place to-day. The body was en route to the cemetery, followed by a procession a mile long, when a sheriffs posse arrived and took charge of the remains. A post mortem examination was held and revealed one of the most autrocious murders ever committed. The woman's skull was crushed in three places and contained an ugly bullet wound. (Jreat excitement followed these disclosn res. The physicians who made the examination reported the case to the proper rtfi-ncrc 'i:v! !< kfiVlft/'lr .Tsulm* T^nhoso of the criminal court issued a bcncli warrant for the arrest of William II. Persons. the husband of the murdered woman. The warrant was served and the man placed in jail. Persons was seen in his cell and appeared to be a man past middie age. I/e takes iiis arrest coolly and protests his innocence, lie declares that lie will be able to prove that his wife died by her own hand. Dr. Raymond, one of the surgeons appointed to make the post mortem examination, had no hesitancy in pronouncing the woman's death one of ihe most foul murders ever perpetrated. IIer skull was crushed in three places with a blunt instrument, probably a hammer, aw! there wasa bullet hole clear through the head. lie declared that the suicide theory was bosh. The Coroner's inquest disclosed the fact that Persons and his wife have had frequent family jars. His son. a lad sixteen years old. testified that a few weeks ago his mother had discovered his father in posession of a number of letters which he* had received from another woman, and that a ft or that the two had frequent quarrels, itiul his father would often j leave horiie and remain away without j giving any reason for his absence. The Coroner's jury adjourned at a late hour until to-morrow morning. The letters referred to by the boy were placed in evidence. The Coroner proposes not to allow them to become public property for the present, but it is said that ihey disclose Person's guilt and a plot 1 set ween himself and others to remove Mrs. Persons, so that the guilty pair could enjoy themselves without her espionage. It is said thai several persons are implicated and that more arrests '. -ill follow. Tin-: 1Joston Advertiser asserts that the removal of the duty from binding twine, in the interest of the Western farmers, "will ruin the cordage industry in Massachusetts." By way "of consoling the Advertiser Die Xews and Courier remarks that it is not so bad as that, however. The cordage manufacturers can employ their plants in making cotton bagging, with the full assurance that iw '.Republican Congress will ever try to reduce their profits in ti^it Held. i > FOO it AYS ON A RAFT, j Trnrjim f CI irrroif.!^ T*U!C ropw 1 j c.r\mourrirniig v-/i ? ? ?- vmu.?. 0^ THE ABBIE CLIFFORD. Four Days Without a i)ro>> ot \.aler? j The Captain's Wile Swept from His .Sitlc ! ]>3* ;:n Immense Wave?Thirty Kaisiiis a j Day's Rations. Xnw YoitK. Sept. 2}.?Six more* victims of the gr-.-at three days' hurricane that swept up tin- Atlanticcarrying death and destruction before it. arrived op. tlx.* Q-:*bec steams!:;:) Orinoco from Bermuda Sunday. They were Capt. D. W. Stoier and ii\e of the. ere v. of the American briganline Abbie Clifford, including Mate Ira A. Small and sailors John Denver, CharJes 3)olkarnp, Henry liichardbon and Charles Strom. Traces of the suffering eiuiured by the men were still visible. The countenance oi white-haired Captain Storei bore evidences of a suffering that even time might not assuage, for he saw his wife swept into the seething ocean which was pounding his little craft to pieces and lie powerless to make cvc-n an effort to save ht*r. it was a sunny morning ami a cheerful breeze lanm-d the sails of the Abbie Clifford whe-n she left Fern arid in a, F 1;;., on August '6 for Fort an Spain Trinidad. Lumber was stored between decks and piled up above, leaving bareroom for the yards to swing free. Mrs. storer. who much younger than her husband, was is ever sixty years old. accompanied him as she had on many previous voyages. Everything went well until the moraine of August 3U. She; was then in latitude 30 decrees, 20 seconds, and Ionitude <57 degrees, or about i'our hundred and fifty miles East of the coast of Florida and some three hundred miles West-Southwest of IJernmda. Then, without tlie slightest warning, the hurricane pounced upon the vessel, whirling her like a top upon the seas, which arose to a tremendous height. The wind came i'rom the South-Southeast. The crew managed to get the vessel before it and lor live hours she rati before the storm. She suddenly broached to at 4 p. m. and filled with water. She was almost on her beam ends, and to make matters worse the deck load of lumber broke loose and battered out the bulwarks, opening the vesel'a side planking so that the water came into the space between decks in streams. it was just before 3 o'clock when the most pathetic incident of the wreck oc curred. Ail lianas were at tne pumps working vigorously to keep the rapidly sinking craft iuloat. The rnigh'y waves washed over the vessel. Mrs. Storer stood beside her husband, who ' was trying to guide his storm-battered ship. .She was doing her best to encourage him, when a wave mightier than any that had gone before swept the deck from stem to stem. When it had passed over it was found that Mrs. Storer had been swept away with it. It also carried away the bulwarks, the forward and after houses, part of the maindeck and everything movable within its track, including the life boats. Captain storer saw his wife disappear over the side of the vessel but he was powerless to help her. There was no sign of the storm abating by the morning of Sunday, August 31. One by one the crew ventured Oiw! .ir? tuai ciuioc cum tiupease their cravings 1'or food. The poor fellows did not dream that it was the last time for four days and nights that their lips would* touch fresh water. They sought refuge on the poop and the remaining portion of the main deck and silently waited. Just before noon their worst fears were realized, for almost without warning the overtaxed vesst-1 broke into three parts, and the top of the poop deck, j which was made out oi' matched lum- j ber, lloated away with the men cling- j ing to it. J ust before the final crash came one of j the crew had secured part ofaboxofj raisins, amounting to about two quarts, and this was the ouly food on tfie raft. There was not a drop of fresh water ;?ml not. :i s:iil fonlrt ho spon on The? >. storm tossed ocean. Some oi' tlie rigging and spars of tiie j wrecked vessel lloated near the rait, and this was eagerly grasped and made j to do duty in strengthening the frail structure, which was their only hope. Captain Storer had taken charge of the raisins mhI in the morning he dealt out a l'cw to each nun for breakfast. At noon another small ration was given to each and again at six in the evening. The day's rations for each man did not amount to more than thirty raisins. Their thirst had now become almost intolerable. For four days the little company on the raft waited and watched for a sail. When their thirst became unbearable, they stripped themselves, and, as the sea had gone down, they jumped in j and swam around the little raft. The j waterfctnus ausoroeu inrouga iae pores, they said, partially relieved their terrible thirst. It was not until the morning of the fifth day that a sail was seen. It proved to be the Uritish bark Beatrice, Captain Hesse, bound from Xew York for Port au Prince, Havti, with a general cargo. She, too, had met with the storm. Her foremast was gone at the j deck and her jibboom and all attached 1 rigging carried away. She. met the I hurricane on August :>U. It30 miles | Southwest of Bermuda, and the ves.-el! _.i........ i t r..i> ! W ill) I illUtt U UU JiCI Ufa Hi IUU3. liCl mainmast :md ringing were cut awa\i and she righted. The second mate was struck by a falling spar and so hurt internally that he died the next day. lie was buried at sea, and the Beatrice was trying to make the Bermudas when she sighted the rait. A boat was manned and the exhausted crew of the Abbie Clifford were i taken on board the Beatrice and eared j for. It was not until Septembor 13 that j the Beatrice made St. George, Bermuda, and she would not have reached port j then had not the steamer Britannia j towed her iu. Enforcing the Anti-Lottery Law. MoXTGO.MOiiY. Ala.. .Sept. 2-;.?{"nder instructions from Chief Inspector Sharp, Insnector Booth to-dav seized nil the is sue of the JJirmingham Age-Herald of this date and the issue of the Weekly Atlanta Constitution of this week and j all other papers coming here for this j place, and for distribution in this see- j tion, which. upon examination, were found to contain lottery advertisements. The officers oi' the Advertiser company of this city were also required to give bonds for their appearence at the November term of the I "nited states < 'ourt for publishing last Sunday lottery advertisements, although they announced in the next issue, that having learned that j the law became operative at once, lot-! tery advertisements would net again be inserted in their columns. IJroke His XecJ?. NoKC'ROss.Ga.. Sept. 24.?George Wil- j lis. a negro well digger, met with an un-1 usual death. He had just finished clean ing a well, and was standing on the edge when, from some cause, his feet slipped. and lit' fell to the bottom of the well, breaking his neck. A Iviot ins Colorado Town. Denver, Col., Sept. 25.?Xews of a serious riot of some sort is reported from. J'ent County in this State. It is reported that two men have been killed, and that the Court House lias been burned to the ground. .UL??i*cynipp ",.iu juw mjjqcffUl.1 ii ^iinmn t'J CRUSHED TO DEATH IN CHICAGO. I One <>1 llij? Horrors SliKt Ooonr on | Tin H roads. Chicago, Sept. 21.?At 8 o'clock to, night. thesw itch engine on the CMeagoBurlhigtoh and Quincy llailroad ran into the rear of an excursion train on the Illinois Central lioad, near 18th street. The collision resulted in a f right!ul tragedy. For a time the con-: fusion was so great that even an ap-' proximate idea of the loss of life was I impossible fo obtain. The first reports ! from the police had it that forty people | pfobabiy had met death, while the ri.il- i road otVicia's said only two t?r three j persons were cerr;;irslv known to have i been killed. Wit!;in half an hour, however, four mangled corpses had been dragged out of Tht- heap of broken timbers and twisted iron that marked the spot where the collision had taken place. By this time it had aiso been ascertained that at least three people were seriously injured and .six others slightly. The collision took place near Doug-! iass Park and the victims were Sunday | excursionists just reaching the city on their way home from an afternoon's outing, The freight train crew, when questioned, asserted that they had passed Millard avenue under a clear track signal. Millard avenue is only a short distance from where the smasho.wl f l.n U]/ UL^Ul JLCU, liiiU UlU K^lCiLLLl that when the crash came tae red Ji^rhts on the rear of the Illinois Central train were burning with extreme dimness. To this the fairful result i'ollov.iiig was attributed without hesitation. The lour dead were two sisters named Gimiouand two young men. identity unknown. "Jlie injured one, who gave the name of iliss Pilgrim, was in a dying condition when taken from the wreck. Conductor Henry Carrington, of the passenger train, and one of the brakemen have been arrested. They refused to talk. Surprising Testimony. Many physicians who have examined into the merits of B. B. 1). (Botanic Blood Balm), have been confronted vcitii fptstimnr.v which Lhf-v (\p,p.rr,p.(l snr prising, and thus being "convinced of its wonderful efficacy, have not failed to prescribe it in their practice as occasion required. II. L. Cassidv, Kennesaw, Ga., writes; "For two years my wife was a great sufferer. Skillful physicians did her no good. Her mouth was one solid ul^er, her body was broken out in sores, and she lost a beautiful head of hair. Three bottles of 13. B. li. cured her completely, incredible as it may sound, and she is now the mother of a healthy three months old baby clear from any j scrofulous taint." A. II. Morris, Pine Jiliiff, Ark., writes: 'Hnt Snn'nrrq nn.l several dofitr.rs failed ! to cure'me of several running ulcers on i my log, 13. JJ. 15. effected a wonderfully uuick cure after everything else had failed." An Unusual Disease. Xew iiedfokd, Sept. IT.?After five years in the Antartic seas, the whaling bark Petrel, Captain Edwin J. Reed, is once more in port. Captain Reed says that while off Patagonia several months ago a gale came up from off the shore, during which large quantities of tine white powder came on the ship, choking those who inhaled it. Zsext day one of the crew was taken sick and "his feet began to swell. The swelling continued until his whole body was effected. One after another of the crew was similarly taken, until thirty-four had the disease. Each swelled to almost twice his usual size and the flesh assumed a yellowish hue. With nine men mortification set in and they died. Two others of the crew were washed overboard in the gale and drowned. Physicians here report the epidemic as beri beri. It is the first case on record of. its having come on ?^v/a,n.;. it ouijj iii *i Pianos and Organs. X W. Thump, 131 Main Street, Columbia, S. C., soils Pianos and Organs, direct from factory. No agents' commissions. The celebrated Chickering Piano. Mathus'iek Piano, celebrated for its clearness of tone, lightness of touch and lasting qualities. Mason & Hamlin Upright Piano. Sterling Upright Pianos, from 822 up. Arioo. Pianos, from S200 up. Mason & Hamlin Organs, surpassed by none. Sterling Organs, 650 up. Every Instrument guaranteed for six years. Fifteen days' trial, expenses both" ways, if not satisfactory. Sold on Instalments. Ca?>t. J. I). Johnnon. To all whom it may concern: I take I great pleasure in testifying to the j oi'.Ic-imVnc musljtof rh? nonillflr I remedy for eruptions of the skin, known as P. I\ I'.* I suffered for sever;:! years with on unsightly and disagreeable eruption on my' face, and tried various remedies to remove it, none of which accomplished the object until this valuable preparation was resorted to. After taking three bottles in accordance with directions I am new entirely cured. J. D. Johnson. Of the firm of Johnson & Douglas, Savannah Ga. A ' "isiit to the Finish. Kkmimond, Sept. 25.?A special from Lexington to-night says that two cadets at the Virginia Millita-y Institute", ^ i. \ r _/ 1 : ? -.j? rpt.. ...wl ir r runii. n . _uuv uiuncu, j <uiu ?>. T. Taliai'erro.'of Gloucester County. Va.. engaged to-day in a personal encounter, in which fifteen rounds were fought. Two hours afterwards Taliaferro died, it is presumed from the punishment received at rhe hands of McCoiurico. The affair iias cast a gloom over the entire community. A Fearful Accident. Chicago. Sent. 21.?One of the most j??ci? ii,? irigiuiui iiniiuciu >v itijc j.iiinuio i Central lias experienced, for some time j occurred about 7 o'clock to-night at j "Western avenue, in which at least ten persons were killed and a number seriously hurt. The l'atcd train was an excursion. and had left this city early in the morning with several hundred persons on board who went to Fernwood, a small station on that line, to spend the day. Elephant on a i:?:ni>ajce. Mrc.vTiXE, Iowa. .Sept. 24.?One of Barman's big elephants became enraged at some little boys Sat unlay during the grand parade and charged them. The huge crowd of spectators was terror stricken and lied in all directions, before the animal could be subdued lie crushed the life out of two line horses and roughiv handled several keepers. ? i 1 ExjKctin^ the Indian Chi-Jst. Pieuhe, S. J).. Sept. 24,?The Indians j nn ihp Si.us v innervation are exnectinff i the coming' of the Christ daily. He is,! they suppose, to coyer the earth with a stratum of soil thirty i'eet deep, covering up everybody but the good- Indians, who will Hud a veritable "happy 1 hunting ground'' ou earth. Tiio Fate ui'Fiyf Tramps. CaKiIOI.t.tox', Mo.. Sept. !!>.?-As a freight train on the Santa I'e Kail road was pulling in yesterday the draw-head pulled out. throwing thee cars oil the track and demolishing them. In one of the cars were live tramps stealing a ride j to Kansas * rcy. t wo Htre mucu, m u others were badly hurt, and one escaped uninjured. Killed l>v a Copper Cent;Gatf.s. S. C., Sept. 16.?An infant son of J. M. Thompson died last Saturday night from the ellects of swallowing a copper cent a few weeks ago. As Mr. Thompson is a native of Greenville County, his relatives will read this with sorrow. J-'aial Uoiler Explosion. Chaiilotte, X. Sept. 17.?The boiler at the finite use of Iluprh i Joyce, a few miles from. here, exploded to-day. killing Will Uoyce. soil of the owner of the gkihoase. and severely injuring several other people. a?g???n?iam n ?Hi 11km nm ??mmmm 1\ r. P. Saves Lifo. 3 Says will live forever. A prominent | Savannahian, formerly superintendent of a railromi. says: "I was crippled in J my feet and arms so that I could not waik witr.out cruicnes, uureat wiidoui.; having a servant to feed me. I tried i physicians everywhere, but to no pur-; " pose, a lid finally went to New York, | where my doctors, at one time, decided to amputate my arm, but found that 1 course impracticable, on account of a wound I had received during the war. I returned to Savannah a complete | wreck, and rny eass seemingly hopeless.: As a forlorn hope I began to take P. P. { " " ? t. ' At ?. ^ r*. I i'., a.ri? aiii rejoicea to .say una itinri ; lining three bottles, my limbs began to i I straighten out. my appetite and health soon returned, and I now feel like a new mar.; really, as if I had been made over again, and as if I could live forever?so long as I can get P. P. P." This gentleman will not give his came for publication, but authorizes I r.s to refer anybody to him for a vert-: iieatlon of the facts, who will apply i to us. Yours truly. , LIPPMAX BROS., Wholesale Druggists. Proprietors of "P. J'. P. ; Savannah, Ga. j Down on the Conner 2,ard Bill. Washington'. Sept. 20.?Senator Blair to-day presented the following telegram, which was signed by about fifty names: The undersigned delegates to the State Republican Convention of South Carolina respectfully re quest you to protect the interests of the colored farmers and laborers of the South by using your influence to defeat the Conger iard bill. Tin-: reappearance of Ex-Governor Robinson, of Kansas, the leader of the Free .State light, an Abolitionist and Republican, as the Democratic and Resubmissionist candidate for Governor is a notable event in the political history of the times. Everybody laughs except Padgett's competitors. Padgett pays freight on all Furniture, Stoves, Carpets and kindred goods. Send for Catalogue. Address L. F. Padgett, Augusta, Ga. Last year the cotton seed oil mills paid.out for seed alone 613.762,450. This large sum vras almost a clear gain to the farmers of the South. But the Conger bill may kill all that. 11 Patipit Pays tie Freight, j 11 A.Great Oefer that mat xot A gains a EE XlEPE.ATEU, SO DO iU'l 1>?,L,AX, H g "Strike "While the Iron is Hot." p j? Write for Catalogue now, and say whats . | panar you saw this advertisement in. jjj | Remember that I sell everything thata I'-joes to furnishing a home?manufactur-| sing some things and buying others in the| glargest possible lots, which enables me to| Swipe out all competition. IliERE ABE A FEW OF MY START-a | LING- BARGAINS. | b A No. 7 Flat top Cooking Stove, full! gsize, 15x17 inch oven, fitted with 21 jiiecesa Sof ware, delivered at your own depot,| * Sail freight charges paid by me, forg |on!y Twelve Dollars. g 5 A train 1 will spll von ft r. PnriViTi<r* ? Range 13x13 inch oven, 18x26 inch top, fit-* ited with 21 pieces of ware, for THIR-J iTEEN DOLLARS, and pay the freight tot |your depot. g JtoO NOT PAY TWO PRICES FOR*| YOUR GOODS. ? S I will send you a nice plush Parlor suit,5 fwalnut'franic, either in combination org gbanded, the most stylish colors for 33.50,3 |to your .xailroad station, freight paid. [ 2 1 will also sell you a nice Bedroom suit| ^consisting of Bureau with glass, l highfi fchead Bedstead, 1 VTashstand, 1 Centre? i^rabie, i cane seat chairs, l cane seat and! gback rocker all for 16.50, and pay freight* Si?f A VAl 1 r n ATvnt | Or I will send you an elegant Bedroomsj ssuit with large glass, full marble top, foia ??30, and pay freight. gXice window shade on spring roller 3 40| Elegant large walnut 8 day clock. 4.00g fWalnut lounge, / 7.00a SLace curtains per window, l.OOg I 1 cannot describe everything in a smalla ^advertisement, but have an immense storc-S containing 22,600 feet of floor room, witba gware houses and factory buildings in otheig ?parts of Augusta, making in airtne-^tg fcgest business of this kind under one man^g gagcment in the Southern States. These | gstoresand warehouses are crowded withS Ithe choicest productions of the best facto-B gries. My catalogue containing illustrations! |of goods will be mailed if you will kindly! |say where you saw this advertisement, "jj gpav freight. ' Address, | L. r. PABOETT, J Proprietor Padgett's Furniture, Stove! P. and Carpet Store, 11110-1112 Broad Street, AUGUSTA. GA.g i>ars"r?? CAbcmiivaxkvin: T?OR CORRECTING X A USE A X' Dvsenterv, Diarrhoea and Cholera In-1 fan turn. A pleasant medicine cf incalculable merit in the home circle for child or adult. It is popular, pleasant and efficient. Truly a mother's friend. It soothes aud heals the mucous membranes; and checks the mucous discharge from head, stomach and bowels. The mucous discharge from 1 the head and lungs are as promptly re- ' lieved by it as the mucous discharge from > the bowles. It is made to relieve the mucous system and cure nausea, and it does it. it makes the Critical period of teething children sr,fe and easy, xt invigorates and builds up the system while it is relieving and curing the wasted tissue. It is recommended and used largely by physicians. For sale bv Wannamaker & Murray | Co, Columbia, S. C., and wholesale by Howard & Wil'ett, Augusta, Ga., WRITE TO 1 H0LLER*& ANDERSON BUGGY CO., ROCK HILL, 5. C., pOR TIIEIR CATALOGUE GIVX? in? Prices. Terms and References of Buggies, Carriages, "Wagons, Road and T-?l J.. _ /1 - -i-- %Tr* 4 11 jrnaeioil vans, ere. ,a.u class work made by hand and warranted. Trices lower tban any other of same gradt1. Our Vehicles are running in every county in South Carolina, and in manj counties of Nflrth Carolina, Georgia and Florida. All inquiries promptly answered. In writing piease mention this paper and don't forgot to give your Postoffice address and sign t vour name plainly. HOLLER, ANDERSON BUGGY CO., Manufacturers, Rock Hill, S. C\, oo^fTete ginneries, TTnrtv nnrr rr TfOCT UDf/flVrn Lru^i i iiij an ' plans, with Suction Fan or Spiked Belt Seed Cotton Elevator furnished at competitive prices. COTTON GINS and PRESSES of best . makers. Thomas Hay Rakes, Deerinjj Mowers, Corbin Harrows and Planet, Jr., Cultivators. A large stock of Portable and Stationary Ginning and Saw Mill Engines on hand. State Agents for i C. <s G. COOPER & CO'S Corliss En- ! lines Lane Saw Mills and Lidde!! Com- j rnmy's complete line. W. H. GIBBES, Jr., & CO.. j r.ear Lnion jjopot, ! Columbia, S. C. j PARENTS ' j Wno have Daughters to educate bhoald ! send for circular of the SOUTH CAROLINA COLLEGE FOR j C O L U M B I A. 5. C. Three Departments, Preparatory-, Acade mic and Collegiate. Art and Music Departments unsurpassed. Boarding Department unsurpassed in its appointments. For circulars or any information address, REV. T7. R. ATKINSON, Aug 30-4 President. I IALBOTT SON'S I ENGINES BOILERS. SAW MILLS AND ^ GRIST MILLS A.re acknowledged to be the best ever sold in this State. iVhen you buy one o* them you aro satisfied rnn "nana miiio nnmktsiVA. i 2 W rite for our prices. Cotton Gins and Cotton Presses AT BOTTOM FIGURES. 1 I can save vou monev. 9 V". G, Badhain, Sen, Agt, ^ COLOMBIA, ?. C. J 3T"Home office and Factory, J K2 52^IO^S>, VA. J IA taring Peioine f i 1 MS km WOMAN. 1 .1 r P. P. P. ".Till purify ar.d vitalize your 1 'J b!rto:!,cr!.-*teagoodapr?t'i5andgiveyoiir B ? T.rhob system tone an? scsngth. B j -5 A prominent railroad ?:t>orintendent at I ? * Savannah, suffering with Mjjaria, Dyspsp- B 1 Q nj."*. and Rheumatism sa; ;: "'xr6?r taring I 4 P. P. P. ho never felt so well in his life, and B 3 i'efcLs as If ho could live forever, if he could I % always get P. P. P." B 4 k If you are tired out and Eg jj dose cooflaesaent, take B .r IP-p" I 4 f If you are feeling: bac2y in tie Spring a end out of sorts, take g| ^ 3d 5 p ' ^ " a j? If your digcgtive organs aeed tonrng up, (fl l H take ct J IP- P- P- I 1 If ^ou suffer with headache, Indltfcstioc, gt ^ & debility and TTeakness, take || IP P p I ; 5 3 1 B y P If you suffer with rervous prostration, ? |p nerves unstrung and a general let down h g? of the system, take | P. P.P. j. ji For Blood Poison. Rheumatism, 8cro& Sgl gS ula, Old Sores, Malaria, Chronic Female a 51 Complaints, take I p. p.p. f | Prickly Ash, Poke Root I | and Potassium. I y ; ? The best blood purser la the worid. 3 % LIFP3IAN EROS., ^Vholasala Druggists, $ ? Sole Proprietors, Lippsi^'s Blocs, Savannah, Ga. ^ Tie to Inline Works, < (Successor to Dial Boiler Works.) JOHN A. WILLIS? PROPR. 1 117 WEST GEEVAIS STREET, 1 9 s 2EB fBBS Ss5 LUlli 1 UUlUi JJKJlLiViPt STFouudrv work in Iron and Brass Re? tB pairing promptly executed. DEPOSIT YOUR SURPLUS MONEY ^ in THE COMMERCIAL BANK, o? COLUMBIA, 3. C. J One dollar and upwards received. Interest at the rate of -i per cent, per annum, % paid quarterly, on the first days of Februa~ r-i- "MaTT A nrrnct o-rtri \"nv(>mhpr Married women and minors can keep account in t their ovrn name. Higher rates of interest 1 allowed by special arrangement. - 2 ' C. J. IREDELL, President. M Jxo- ?. Leaphaxt, James Ikedell. Vice-President. Cashier. ^ ^^JHA0fl?L0S V If?^3 5SS ZT* 7i .4 rfl !* ^JlflAIOR ^#jP i /A^^ST^MtiON 1 cr v, <^y:yv. cv. rf& v'/s5 v 6y-.tixbK^iyfillfjas^i^^* J -d^/T to'^o : hT/'Jz&mt^ *4 Bmnsts ,7r*r/--r?M Anjim&L y"%. # -?>*/ ^ Druggets, ^ S&'e Proprietors, Lippnan's Block. SiTtnniL, 6^ -a &5~As)z for catalogue. TER3X-MIELG h villc. Ten*