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? imWsQOMfT Ncr.niUia. TNt^s, lioatlnr; \\ Oian l'.oili, Sopmk^;;, IijiKioiios.1, 1>U!VI3, S;)ral!iM, j Toali;n?i)0, I'fvii.U, Woniu'i, ' JUOiV ' I. lCOi'4, | 5 UrnJo fcAlHruj 3 .m',: * I'r.rri.tor *, Ponn'a Agrictiliural Works, I ?*A Ji\rVA Voik. ?Vn?'n. f < ' AM; jj?/ yvjl Mtuiu/ir !urfro/l">i i/.'-MmMrii rjFVv\ j > ? coail'KTrriow. ITcliJs' Cctton r^:3. A i *rr* :?tu T"U|?"?~' - -U..-Y\ I ; { ' ? t i? r*' ' 1 < ^ r *?r*i h-f'-'-rrhi'T ^, 1 ?'i I i T\., ? * l?. * l . ? rlrvn I a trI ?. A i > i:>l ftt I'm ^4 ?' i r I % . . < I ? r>tf . i. i i' tin ^ ' ! "4v \i ?r r In Uia mnrkr \\?t?. j I j, y ira-'o 1.1 n.nrkci y?rl?ri. < r*V r? ft'"l < ' bi'O/inlr : 11 , . If i Viv'ltflt. !. .4 ,- : ? ^ A.NELUS& CO., Pittsburgh pa. & 4jH ?T A1?a, ui'frt. As;". nn ! Iron* cf rll I* '' w * \ r'll !..? ?. ;? um C'vlt*'I IV.v^jn, |; r**vri, |?u'.l ^ >1 *4 m** i * ? ?\ ' . let Yin* (** :? . k* Ac. y * 7j* Ju i l?i >.*. .** ioocji lo tttit n>l kiud<of noil. ^ ^ ;_7" J It biio II- il> ill ?tO (>>> ! t? I n-M.-ri v/}r y? I'rntruiif" <?1 lJ?nu!r?'> t'?r!.,;i A/.O/l - v ('uliipwi' \Viilt r. nml !f ?b? To'lcf Ol' ?0.1 Y) *-Q{} "Vr. t n-ry I.mly or <Jpii. . '*i| I'ruiiia. liy Ki iij'ilnl"^ ^ r I l><-ilrm In I'l.liM IE11 O TJT rT7 ? ij I;3~Gti AND CATTLP. POWDERS, fH# iv-yV' ? ./"/ -.vft.-- n i jij-.k-/ I ?j -Vh- *fki- *.' > will oi.ro ov prevent HI - ^ *rrtI'rify ^jf cX.sxr^aJ^( *C(&r<dJL is ~ / '*> tOfw fl'ff AV'Vri WiT A* our lulvoriUor has not iniulo his advertlso. mrnt altogether distinct, wo will Interpret and olttlyy cato It ivh follows ; 10. It. POOTK, M.D., Author of Plain llonio Talk, Medical Common Sense, Science in Story, etc., 120 Lexington Avenue (cor. l!a.t 28th Street), Now York, on Inpki'KNDFnt Physician, treats all forma of f.lnytrlny or C'hroulo liiMoaKus, nod recoivea letters from all parts of the Ctvu.i/.Kn Wnm.D. fly l?s original leny of conducting a Medical PraoUm. ho i< successfully treating numerous | ntionts in Kurepn, fcho Went Iui'I' k, Diiiiiinion of C'uuaUu, aiwl in every j*rt of the United State*. JXO Mir.ItCTJIilWI., Or deleterious drugs used, lie has, during the past twenty three years, treated successfully nearly or quiie 40,000 oases. All fact* connected with each case ere carefully reimrdod, whether they he communicated hy letter or in person, or ohssrvud l?y the Jtoclor or hia aaMolatc physician*. The latter aro alt aclentitlo tuodlcal men. KOW INVALIDS AT A DISTANCE Are tinted. AM invalids at a distance are required *? answer a Uat of plain question*, which elicits every symptom under wliich the- invalid suffnrs. All coin*\Nn<CiitioiiM ircits,I xtrlctly vonJliUnUtil, A complete ystoin of registering prevents mlstakcaor confusion. List of questions sent free, on application, to any part of the world. Sixty-page pamphlet of KvrnrNoiw o* Bpcckas, also sent free. All those testimonials nrn from those who have been treated hy mail and express. , Abvicis ih oi'rioE, oh nv mail, rnxK oy cit auou Call on or address DR. E. Bi TOOTE, No. 120 Lexington Ave., N. Y. Jft/rutrdlo scTi JFJfbofa Tiain JfoLelnlJc endMedical Conunoit Sense*Also ? J)t /botes Science- in Story. JvrArrticntcirs address ITtrmyJ GUMVishi Company 129TAs}2Sn^l: __________ NBW YORK. Dr. Borgor's Tonic Bowel aaiil Pilo Pil!?. Those pills arc an tnfaUlhto remedy for constipation *n4 piles, cuiis'vl by weakness or suppression of the perUtiltlo motion of the bowels. Tlu-y very poiib'y Increase tho activity of the intestinal canal, produce soft itool* ami relieve pilOR at one. Thousand* liava boon cnro.l by thom. Prioo 50 cents, sent by ineil on eeolpt of price. Prepared only by K. AI.KIU'D UtilOMAIlDT, Pharmacist, -lUi 1'ounra Avanck, Nkvt York Citt. Or. Berger'o Compound Flui 1 Extract cf Rhubarb and Dandelion. Tho best combination of purely vegetable medicines fo entirely roplaeo Calomel or flluo Pill. It stunut.-itra tho livsr, Increases the flow of bile, and thus ronievea at once torpidity of the liver, biliousness and but '.Imil ?(ovitipallon. Mini the diseases nrisini; from niteh o? dy*pepsi<v side headache, flntulrne.*, etc. The pfrctivenoss of tlris Extract will be proved, visibly, hi onco to the patient, as one or two IrottliM tire f.ulllolrnt to dear tho complexion beautifully, an l remove pimple* mud stain* caused by lixr-r.'r'.'nb'as.. V.-d*ft_3l per Imttlo. fi bottles, ; will lie sent on receipt of tho piloe to anv address, free of chnr?;e. Prepared only by Y. ALFRED HEIOHARDT, Pharmacist, R>2 Fourth i - ...... u.? Vnn u Cit< 9 If you wish to grow Vegetable* for aaloi 9 I Gardening for Profit! : jjjj ir you wish to become ^Commercial Florist, I Practical Floriculture! I If you w if)i to Garden for Amusement orB j for Ilomo Ub? only, read i ] j Gardening for Pleasure!! ALL BT j'' j Rotor Hendor6on. i Prico $1.CO each, post-paUl, by mail.fl 9 Our Combined Catalogue for 1876, of I EVERYTHING | M FOB TUB M ] GARDEN!! i Csr.t tVoo to all Applicants* I Onr large IUuMratcd Catalogues of-Stsdt I tnd /wflw, nnihbcrlnB 175 ptgoi and i on 9| 8 tabling i colored plates, went without chnrgeH ? to purenafters of Buy of the ubovo tlm-efl booKt. bent to all others on receipt of 601 I | 35 Cortlandt Street, C NEW TOItK. a THE 7lO.rn.lY NEWS. T. W. 15KATY. Kiutou. SATURDAY, AUii. 10, 1870. Democratic TicketI'oit I'urhidhnt: SAMUEL J. TILE EN, OK NICW Y01IK. kok vici5 rnusiiucNT: TIIOMAS A. IIENDRICKS, OK INDIANA. ST'AT 13 TIOlvKT. | , FO11 COV1SKNKIC OK SOITII 0AI50I.INA: j W A Dili UAMFTUN, or KICtll.AN 1). roil I.I ICUTICX ANT Coy KUNOII1 WILLIAM ?. SIMPSON, or LA U I! RXP. I'OIl SlCCItUTAItY OK STA I Iil T> r? OTV<1 lu u. OK YOltii, KOI! ATTOltNUY CMS l'.UALl JAMES COOTEK, OK CIlAllUKSTON. rou comPTiioi.i.icii oknkual: JOHNSON IIAGOOD, OK IJAllNWlll.l.. Foil TltKARURKllt L. S. LEAPIIAUT, OK 111 CI 11. A N I). KOR ADJUTANT AND INST. C. KM UK A 1.1 E, W. M0X5E, or 8UMTUI1. ron sriT. or education: II. S. THOMPSON, ok uu'll i.a n i). STUAlbllT-OUT. The latest news by last night's mail is the nomination by the i?lato Deinocralic Convention ol the straight-out Statu ticket which wo give above. ! For this news we are indebted to Mr. 1>. L. Ueaty, one ol 1 lorry's delegates : to the Convention. Mr. IJeaty reports that great enthusiasm and confidence , ot success pievails in the middle and j up counties. The Radicals have become alarmed and have called their State nominating j Convention to meet on the l'2th ol September. The Union.llerald is dissatis lied and charges its party with pusilanimity in letting the Democrats take the lead. Wo have only time now to say to every democrat shake hands with your neighbor and go to work and we will succeed. The Charleston News and Courier promptly hoists the Hampton Hag ami goes into the light with a spirit worthy the noble can mo. SORELY DISAPOINTER. The Columbia Union-Herald is terribly biltcred in lolling because the citizens of Edgefield county charged with complicity in the Hamburg alfair quietly submitted to the process of the law instead ol resisting with artned force, as it seems was tho earliest wish and hope ol that paper they should do. Tho Union-Herald says: "Physical force is necessary to the proper execution ol all laws," and that had it been "colored or even white, republicans under any thing like similar circumstances, they would have prohub ly boon hunted by tho tamous Butler dogs of Edgefield county, and shot on sight, ot, if granted the grace of cap f 111*41 t lu?w nr/\nlil \\ r% %? V V? . V ) vnvjr u uuui IIUU1 I/IXII M I I veil bound to the jail yaid." Well iho Editor of tho Union- Herald knows tho shabbincss oi his own party beat, and as ho knows that is tho only way tho law can be enforced against them no one will dispute him. Hut his great indignation boils I over at Judge Maher because ho did I not fix tho bail so high that tho men could not give it and would necessarily have to bo incarcerated in jail. Hero is tho judge's portion: "The judge, on yesterday, obligingly leaves his homo and comes to Aiken to admit these to bail. Does any | one suppose that ho would havo been .it ' ' V;: i '.illV' ' n * ".': > ? \ s"? v 4 ; >. o*> I j.c i iioiun weekly : thus complacent if Loo, Schiller, ! Spuri.tek, Siinkins, Cain, Tennant and Adams had been the accused ? ' Perhaps it wan obliging in I lie ; judge to hoar tlie* ease and to lix a 1 reasonable bail rather than over sixty | citizens should bo kept in prison as a j punishment before conviction, and at ! a heayy loss to themselves and families, and a heavy expense to an im- ; poverished county, but it this act was an obliging one on the part of judge i Maher it was hardly more so th in that of judge Maekey to leave his home in Chester and go down to Columbia to release Parker from jail, and that too without the shadow ol warrant I of lltw lor it as has beam decided by the Supreme Court, but simply to oblige a friend who was not in jail; and il tho bail is low in this ease it was less in Parker's ease. The truth of the whole matter is the peaceable and quiet behaviour of those men, and their ready obedience to law is a great disappointment to the !*< -' publican parly. It proves that their loud and oil repealed assertions of the lawlessness ol the people of this Slate, and the necessity for troops to enloivo the laws are false, that is what galls theni. Again the lOdilor forgets himself and strikes backwards, lie s;:ys: "\u j republican government has over exis- | ted in the south which could have stood a day in the fare ol a determin ed, forcible protest on the pnrt ol the j opposit ion." Thank yon. Is'o better testimony of the I ict that the citizens <>1 this State are peaceable and law abiding is wanted. The Radical newspapers in this Slate do not think that Tint N kws and ('ol.'itiku helps them or their parly by its opposition to a Straight-out nominal:oi. lor Governor.?A'cvs uml i Courier. It would be giving Republican pa- ' pers very little eridiL lor astuteness, or even common sense, to exnect. I hem to openly proclaim the Areios (t)til Courier lluii ally in its artful efforts to distract and divide the Gem ocratic parly until it n loo late to 1111 ito it 011 a s' raightoui ticket, ami i tlio party thereby forced to tin; alter. I native of coalescing in Mr. Chamber- J I ain't) election under the delusive j hope of thereby gaming some ndvan- j tugo in tie! County elections. Tin* plan mapped out hy the JVctcs and , Courier Irom iho beginning. On the j contrary wo give Iho Oi angeburg JYeics and Times credit for its astuteness in dcelairing the course pursued by the News ami Courier injurious to t ho Radical part y. [For the lloiry News.] Mil. Kditoii: 1 Measu givo room in the County organ, lor the following briefly thrown together items; 'There was the largest collection ol i the citizens ol Soecastee township on < last Saturday that it as been on such an : occasion for years past (JO voters). The delegation was duly elected to meet in both County Conventions, It was first recommended to instruct the delegation from this township, but sifter deliberation, it was postponed, with one exception, knowing that the delegation this side ol the river can do nothing without the co-operation ol the opposite side. I believe that ail the delegates should be instructed to use their best judgment in sclenting men for otlice that will work for the general good of all concerned. I have observed that in many eases strong efforts have been made in nominating men for oflice, in which sell interest was iho promptings instead of general interest. fSomu people object to everybody except j j then- favorite#, regardless ot principle I or qualification. Some people think | that book knowledge qualities a man lor everything pertaining to ollioe. I difVer in opinion; there arc many men with but little book knowledge that are better qualified to represent the people in ollioe?men of good intellect, and practical understanding ol tilings generally are the men of my choice. I admit, that book knowledge is good, and very good, but how many oflices are men qualified to fill, that know nothing outside ot books. (Mr. Editor, you have your views and I have mine. 1 have no doubt that wo differ in much.) Judging by the work done by soino of our public nun, they are only concerned in the salery they draw from the treasury. These I consider inellicient in office. Public men should be nromnted to honor ihn i j r - * ?"? office, instead <>t the office honoring them. Now lot's boh ofV the tail and stop, as the fodder needs gelling and the rain has hold up. N. J. J). August 7th, 1870. Wo do not differ with our friend at all in the belief that practical knowledge and common sense is a necessary qualification to a proper dischargo of official duly, but wo hold that education is practical knowledgo and there NF/VVH: AUO (1ST is in) such tiling as ?*<!u<;:iiiv>t? without, practical knowledge, Sotne have more ami others less, owiflg to their natural sense ami advantages ami cireutnstances. \\ hat our frieml means hy bookknowledge we are at a loss to define. It he means n man who can parrot like repeat the contents of a book in pari or in whole, and yet cannot apply it to practical purposes; then that is not book-knowledge. For a book is not properly a book unless it ins theory, system, plan and purpose, and a man who reads it and dees not comprehend the theory and purpose aimed at in I'm hook, so as to in ike it a part of his store of knowledge and he able when needed to apply it t<> practical use, has in fact no knowledge of the book. The minister ol the gospel, the lawyer and the doctor would all be in a poor way it they could not apply their knowledge ob I .I,,,.,! I.maLj ! r\ . VMIIIWI I I VIII vw/1\ .1 1?? V 4 vil V;U.HO n III. II required. We agree with our friend that wo need in ollice men who arc capable, who have tho jiraotioai knowledge necessary to a fuithlul and proper discharge o! the duties of that ollice, so that the administration of tho allairs of oflico will prove a blessing to the people whose it is, and thus will the oilier-holder honor the oflico. lint our liiend in iv take it for granted that an oflico tho duties ol" which can he faithfully diseharged without, at least a respectahie business education, that ollice is not the peoples, but .vas created for the holdor. 1 'rfortunately the idea has prevailed in loo many counties that there were ollices the duties of which could be properly discharged by persons wholly ignorant of "book knowledge," and whole Hoards of County Commissioners have been elected not one of whom could write his name. The r> sii 11 has invariably been that almost ill" entire county tax of those roun.ii s has been wasted and plundered by designing men ol the party that elected iheui to ollice, and now those counties are hopelessly bankrupt, ami it has bankrupted and ruined the Still" Til" l<viil..ru 111"" III.! II.I IKIII l>h' in hoodwinking the ignorat in.ijorilv in tlu? Legislature 11> co-operate xvitli ihem in currying through every measure lh:it conhl enable I hum ! > pi mult* r tin? Stal*', and litis is exactly what, we have imiiiplained <?t all the time and arc now lighting to overthrow. We should elect to ollieo men tor their capability to the proper ?1 ischarge ot the duties ol that ollieo, and a eonlidencu in them that they will honestly and iaithlully discharge the duties ol the olhce. This will only be done when our County Conventions nominate persons to olhce because ol their ability to discharge the duties of ollice and not because they are popular and can get the most votes and il wo don't nominate hint the othersidc will, or lie will run independent and thereby defeat our man. JSpocial correspondence of the Horry News.J Washington, 1). G., Aug. 14, 1870. Thu weather just now is so delight* lul ihut people think it would he an excellent time lor Congress to adjourn as they appear to have finished their labor and there is no use of their remaining hero speechifying, like a hen proclaiming the accomplishment of her daily duty, and that line weather will a fiord them pleasant traveling to their distant homes where it would he decidedly advanlagous to the country if some ol them would remain. The amiahlc Morton however wants to have more duller of that * * * * * * garment unseemingly to view The Alabama election is very significant in its response to the agitation of the race question hy Republicans. Tlio majority was overwhelmingly democratic which could not have boon the case il a considerable number ol negroes had not joined hands at the ..,.11.. i. . . i jfiio v?mi iiiv ii<i11vu wmii? population. There was an entire absence c?t ' disorder, ami this proves that in a i Souihern Statu where the carpel-bagger is nut on the crest ot the wave tiolouu proceedings are not the usual accompaniments ot an election. From several different sources the information comes that President Riant in a conversation with Secore Robeson and a negro politician from Louisiana said that lie had given up all hopes of carrying any ol the Southern States lor the Republican ticket except Louisiana and Carolina?; and that troops and abundance ot money would bo supplied to execute the plans formed to carry the first named States. It hns been reported that the army would he used in Louisiana for political purposes in the pending as in previous campaigns, whilo the investigations instituted by Congresithnvcshown how the money has been raised to carry Louisiana for tho Republican ticket since Grant has been in power. , 1676. i i i i ! i , It has boon done by robbing tlio National Treasury ami by contributions ' from ring* I hat have been permitted to deli and the government oi its roveJ nnes. In the New Orleans Custom II<?u>e, <>| which the Hivsidcui's brother in law is the head, money has been stolen for this purpose from the g<>v?Turnout, or rather from the taxpayers of tin1 1'niicd States, by placing hetilions nanietK upon the Custom House rolls and by other means involving fogery. Doubtless the sum? means will ho resorted to in the corning contest only to a greater extent than ever before, as it will require more to accomplish the same ends, and since > (iraul's opportunities lor making money and w idening power in the future depend entirely upon tho success of Hayes and Wheeler in November next. In the whole history of tho government business and trade of all kinds was never so dull and completely depressed as it is now. Mills are idlo, factories have suspended, and failures are of daily 'occurrence; no one is making money, and hundreds upon hundreds of men stand idle upon the streets in all of our cities or roam around the country in search of work j and food. \\ ho is to hlamc? The country has not been dovasted by fire, flood or pestilence. Tho crops have j been good; men are ready to work if I they could find woik to do. We have had three years ol commercial prostration ami the outlook to-day is its gloomy as when it began. There is only one explanation ot this sad State ol all a its and thai is had legislation. It we had had honest men in our I.esislative halls during the last eleven years j we should have reeov? red long ago ! from the shock imparled by the war 1 and tite country would he to-day pros{ prnrous and happy, lint the party j controlling the government has been j engaged in enriching itself and in plundering the people instead of proj Meting their interests and bringing them by wise laws out of their ditlie.uhies. One third ol the whole liepublic?the South ?its tairest and best portion has been given over to the thicvoB and plunderers who have robbed it right and loll?destroyed its 1 industries; ruined its trade and annihi!<at*'d its eonnneree. It is idle to expert a change for the better, North r South, until there is a change of. the party in power. Hepublicatitsm lias i proven itsell incapable of restoring prosperity to the country. It has been powerful in pulling dove, it is powerless to rebuild. It has been no policy looking to the good of the whole people. li is sectional, narrow and bigoted, and bases all its hopes upon a retention ol power, in the perpetuation ol the bitterness and minimosity ol a strugglw that ended a third ol a generation ago. It is a party of monopolies, lings, and corruption. Its continuance in power means haid times, lor every one except the rascals it pampers and protects. v . i - - t i>n ih'hs iroiu liiu iiMiian war; at last, advices a light was hourly expected. N KMO. Kcpaillation. Tlic cry of Repudiation went up Irom the Republican etimp on the introduction into ilie present Congress of* a bill for the icpcal ol that hypocritical clause ot the falsely called resumption act which fixes January 1, 1870, as the day the Government will pay its debts in coin. The civ was r< iterated wlu-n the St. Lousis platform declared that this deceptive clause ol a disingenuous law was au obstacle in the way of resumption, and therefore ought to Vie repealed, The cry has hoen vigorously renewed on the appearance, of Gov. Tilden's ljtter, wherein he proves that this clause will be wholly inoperative, both both because ol radical detects in the low, and because the Republicans, by prolligato expenditures, have wasted the revenues necessary to the redemption ol llu* legal lenders on the day named. And the cry swells to some. i.: ill ? * * ? 1 i unng owe a nowi when a large share { ot tlie Democrats in the House, by the aid ot some Republicans, carry through a bill to repeal this swindling clause ol an indigested anil ineffectual law. The Republicans created and set afloat all our paper money. They now have in circulation nearly four hundred millions of dollars of legaltender notes, commonly called greenbacks. They are of various amounts, and bear date at sundry times within the last fourteen years. Kach of these notes contains on its faeo the promise that the United States will pay the amount to tlie bearer on demand. The number of these notes constantly in circulation must be about one hundred millions; and each note probably passes through three or four hands every week. Of course the United States has not yet paid one <il t l\i>!n ?ii .-/liii tlinii?U # U,... i ... ? v..., MM'Uj^u Ult'jf 1154VU , been long overdue, audits promise to pay has stood all the time in glaring toilers on the lace ot each note. In a word, from the first hour the Government issued litem down to the present , moment, it has repudiated its promise to pay them; and lor the past dozen or fourteen years, during which the greenbacks have been in existence . and the Administration all the while . under tho control ot the Republican party, the Government has repeated i this act of repudiation to about three , millions of people in each weefc. , Hard pressed by tho emergency of an approaching Presidential campaign, the Republicans passed the worthless law in question. Giving ii all the lorce they claim for it, it is only adding one more promise to the millions of promises which the Government has been repudiating every day Iroin the first moment it sent lorth a" greenback. Leave this inoperative act as it is, and all that the Government has got to do, and all that it will do if the lii publicans continue in power, is to not pay its greenbacks in coin when January 1, 1870, arrives; andVBht will bo the jff'i ot it. The obligrcuoii to pay then will be no stronger than it is to pay now. The holders of the greenbacks will have no means of enforcing the promise, and tho repudiation ot the promise on January I, 1879, will only bo a repetition of what the Government, while in the hands of tho Republicans, has been doing in millions of eases throughout the past dozen years. The act in question was passed by a profligate party to tide over a political exigency. Taken as it stands it is a patchwork of impotent hypocrisy. This was asserted by Mr. Tliurman, Carl Sohurz, and others, when tho measure was peiut:ng in the Senate; and its uuthj^s were unable xp .disprove the allegation. Mr. Tilden explains the defects in this law and shows how they can be remedied; and be points out the way to a safe and speedy return to specie payment. And a large body of the Republicans call ibis repudiation ! rforno who make this charge know better, and some do not. The former aie knaves; tho latter are lools.?Ar. 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WARNER, 1UIODES & CO., Wholesale Fancy Grocers, General Agents, may 27 Philadelphia, Pa. AGENTS, make no cnyayancnts till yvn ace our N E W ]> 0 O lv, Which in thrilling interest, sterling merit, ele. gancc and cheapness, has absolutely no c(|iial. It Is "Tub Tjiixo*' lor the Centennial period ?takes on sight. The North American Review says it is "deserving of unqualified praise; we anticiIVltA far if r?v I <? .?.? 1 ' ' ' ,...w .vr. v.-viuiisi>c jjujjiuuriLj ; me uubii(|UO Times says ?'Jnst such si work sis thousands of American people will be glsid to possess": The Detroit Advertiser calls it "prefersible to any yet published." Any active Man or Woman of good address insured largo profits und steady work for si year. For lull particulars, address J. 11. FORD & CO., 27 Park Hace, NewYork. may 20 GIVEN AWAY. In order to intioducc our large, ciglit-page, literary and family paper. 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Sample copies of paper sent on receipt of 10 cents. Agents wanted, Address >V. M. ISUKKOW, P. O, llox r>8 Bristol, Tenn. The Christian Index V A LA lifi E EIGHT PAGE^EEKL Y. ORGAN OF THE BAPTIST DENOMIN J AT ION. SHOULD BE IN EVER Y BAPTIST FA MIL Y IS THE LAND. IT IS THE PAPER OUR CHILDREN OUGHT TO READ. IT IS Til E PA PER FO It A /. T. lVim WOULD KNOW THE TRUTH AS iris IN JESUS. SUBSCRIBE FOR IT AT ONCE?INDUCE YOUR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS TO DO LIKEWISE. IF YO UA VN T HIE MONK Y, S UB SCRIBE FOR THE PAVER ANY110 Wy- YO UR PAS1J2JI WILL ma K $ fjjE A NO EMENT FOR YOU. SEND FOR ST EC IS1 EN COPIES. THE PRICE OF THE INDEX IS $3 A NEAR. Addrets all orders to? J AS. P. HARRISON A CO., jan 20-3m. Box 24, Atlanlat (la. Nj. i