University of South Carolina Libraries
d RE? PTW hM alwayi been i this Mection o now made the greatest offoi ^HHg^L if possible. And if Goods sacrificed HpPHPc can convince thorn that tho Goods I ARE SAC] Seal Plash Modjeskas advertised at - WF houses at $16 ?$ to $20, I will sell at { ^ Misses Newmarkets, fine Goods, at $ | v .Ladies " " nice " at I I | Those Goods are worth double what fcv;:. I hare the fashionable Tricot from 1 A> Those Goods aro 64 inches wide, i Cashmeres, double width, from 14?c I I hare all dress trimmings, including I.:.. 65c. worth 85c. Worsted drees Goods 1 fL Jeans, Flannels, Ticking, Towels, W W BOOTS AN I HATS AND 1 MY STOCKX 0 ^ J i J i r k\ ^??fe ever seen above Charleston. ' I have thousands of other articles tl tion; but if you want as many Goods r for $16, P| ,, DO NOT PAIL , . D. 0. F L LEADER AND CIIA P May 27 2 J.D.JO MEN. i NEW CAS1 ' , OPPOSITE T ?CO., Wo would be pleased to seo our fr stock, consisting of Dry Goods, Notion Trunks, Valises, &c. We would call especial attention to our all wool 25 cents Jeans, ("'tis ago BBp^wd-beu&d Shoes.. Wjf ME. J. D. fskill represents the old and* reliable 8TACY, and will always be]found at th Respectfully, H ..Sept 14 }'r ' . 1 Hats! fiats 1! Hatu!! | l ML. A ^ Pr,0CII> 11,1 ft" qualities. Also I H A Pattern Hale end Bonnet*. Also the I ^r--- eheapeet end newest style* in Trimmings, ^ Tip*, Wlnfe, Birds, and KibboDS, ino'uding e |jfi| Jerseys, Corsets and Bustles g i.^At the Lowest Prices. ? CMtfn mat toy old at in J, opposite the 5 ' y/pMrt Hone*, Your* truly, m MRS. JAS GRANT. S M an. , kjj i-'<. & : 0m, Selling it ;EFOLLY = i IEMBER, he Y<ender of Low Prices In a vuuHirj'. T( * / P o t of my life to clcau out Iho wholo _ in prico will oonviuoe tho closest buyeiipiced. j & Evrick's Ridleys and other largo 8] ?12 50 and 815. 12 50, $2 75, 83, up to 85 50. &3 25, 83 75, 85. we ask for them. * I L9c. to the finest trades at 67?c. to 80c. . e waterod silk, which I will sell for from 4c a yard up. p rhite Counterpaines, very cheap. D SHOES, > TRUNKS. , * f ?F CLOTHING i i ? tanzasc -apa ucar sciapw "J" lat space will not admit mc to men5 for $10 as can be had elsewhere , TO CALL AT LYNN'S, 5 MPION OF LOW PRICES. 1 tf ; i W. T. BEATYt 1 STORE, i HE BANK. ' O :) . . . . . . lcnus ana liavo them inspect our is, Boots and Shoes, Hats, Caps, our lino of Jeans. Come and see od un.") Also our $1 50 lined JONES Cotton Houso of CARROL & e top of the market. JONES & BEATY. 3m i, M|^^^FRFF " ??aa?-~ . *r net , 1?WWfcv ^He>k'?aor. WtntaMMtT HflnQW _f O.U luUi| Ohm HHNUL^JIVu ll<*ml a?4 toiltnt. HRSW^ViM VI uotkMWrKmVitiH RBflHCn^W *?I(K work* u< cun at KBMjfeaar mtiniwowntMOM lOMOh tocslltr Ma M**r* m ||g|flB\ rlKk. Howl*Mispo*?IM?T WitanNt-w *iM Ml * aaa la **eh locality, la km la M* W*ll M M* W*t*a.w* Mrf IkwjMl *A*r fM r*k*p* Mm la roar horn* for ? atalklaaaokowo th*ai HL?il?l*ll dfaltflllIX ?? l? ML? M*M fONTT MiVlMfM, > UMlkowtwaf i Mp1<? tm Amt looftlt?r> alW?r* M>Ka ta * Urt* tr*4f Ibr ftar oa* MWpUi MnbHI ?* tor a Bntkttm ilWIII|Hlttwiii?M?Wl?tM In MiIMiIIm TlWllH MMII. TkM, ?k? met* wonMrfal oflhr m? rwmJa?4t hiSroar that oar MmpUaroar b? ?>a8??a<oWM reilwyeee fc?WB,alle?w*mwk?. Wrtle * <*ee,?M || ^Atrirtmrtiwii. ?muKtM will Mbartflyaay traafcta MMtkwrikMMMlutottMivtwwTwnMyNrkaM ImriMin wfltfc mm< aatMbatmr. IjiafilwNw SAla miMDMUM I >?Ma4 alWrawkBawan.tr row rSwmSci J fcpt 2b , . . . C. H. PEAKE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. WiU be found in office of D. A. Townsou uion, 8. C. * >l. John C Haskkli,, Macbeth Youkq Columbia, 8. C. Union. 8. C. IA8KELL & YOUNG, ATTORNIES AND COUNS ELLORS, UNION, 8. C. Officoisccoud floor.j|No. 3A Law Range. Feb 10 G If SAM'L S. STOKES, ATTORNEY AT LAW, AND NOTARY PUBLIC. ALL business entrusted to bis care wil iceire prompt nttenticn. The execution of all papers as a Notary ublio a specialty. Office in rear of the ourt House. ? Deo. 10 49 tf Stamping ! Stamping I! 'AM now prepared to do all kinds ot L statu ping, having purchased a complete tamping Outfit of Patterns from Yarington Richards. Ladies are invited to call and examine lecimens at BUCHHEIT'S . Bakery & Confectionery. Sept 28 39 tf kN END TO THE HORROB ? OF ? iXTR AC TING TEETH I am prepared to extract Teeth withoul ain or dangp, by the use of Gas. 1 guarantee all of my work to give satis< action. L. E. MEADOR. May 4 18 tf DELAY IS DANGEROUS, DON'T PUT OFF. dy Agent, Mr. J. Leon Butler, is on tin oad to seo you, with a happy look on hi ace. He has several hundred new dosign >f the most MODERN STYLES of MONUMENTS AND t o Mirmrrs which we will furnish at J* lower price Ilia: over. A LARGE SELECTION ?n hand ready for lettering and delivery n >nee. GEORGE GEDEES* UNION MARBLE WORKS April 1. lb tf NEW JE WELR1 ?AT Til*? OLD RELIABLE ST011E* 1 W. TIN8LEY respectfully announces t he publio that he has just received a fin lot ?f FASHIONABLE] JBWBhRV o suit the pookels and tastes of all olasee consisting or WATCHES, CLOCKS, WATCH CHAINS. CUFF and uuLLAR BUTTON! !AR RINGS and BOBS. FINGER RINGS and BREAST PINS. My assortment of SPECTACLES una EVE-GLASSES i (he largest in the up-coaotry, end I ?an it all ages and conditioos of ejes. illver and 'Silver-Plated Ware, Just the thing for holiday presents, o*n b? eliod upon as being fully u represented. JEWELRY REPAIRED %4 ' 1 \ ^ " ~ V- . i tb^Kesi and moat snbt'nirtLt mauner I' furj^i the "OLD RELIABLE EREM'Y STORE, ??l?en you wish to buy : B. W. TIN8LEY v ' . fig rf - ?: Lurg, sleeping on tlio moss. between two TJ decayed logs, with balsam boughs thrust wtyg| into the ground and meeting gnd form- ?ora? ing a canopy over us. In coming off the mountain in the morning wo tan upon a P ft huge porcupine, and I learned for the first tune that the tail of a porcupine cus? goes with a spring like a trap. It Seems 19 to bo a set look, and you no sooner touch oy with the weight of a hair ono of the *ej *j quills than tho tail leaps up in the most be^i surprising manner, and tho laugh is not 3 on your side. Tho lieast cantered along " W the path in my front, and I threw xqy- t0 ?? self upon him, shielded by my roll of blankets. Ho submitted quietly to tye oaj indignity, and lay very still under nt take blankets, with his broad tail pressed clo?e atnJbi to tho ground. This I proceeded to in- \ ,0|Xj vestigate, but had not fairly made a be-' , JR ginning when it went off iiko a trap, and my hand and wrist wero full of quills. I 1V This caused mo to let up on tho creature wheu it lumbered away till it tqgaVlCd. down a precipioe. vt,d ' ( Tho quills were quickly removed from Kpuc my hand, and we gave cliaso. When r2hM wo came up to him he had wedged liinv | . >A B?l? (n 1^1 11 1? '> ' ' ' DVU ui U?n<xu HIU [UUKS BOU1QC lie pro- 1 Bentod only a back bristling with quills, with the tail lying in ambush boiow. He I popi bad chosen his position well, and seemed I for i to defy us. After amusing ourselves by Louu repeatedly springing his tall and receiv- kj ing the quills in a rotten stick, wo made _ r a slip nooso out of a spruco root, and; J" * i after much maneuvering got it over his Z, . i head and led him forth. In what a Trai peevish, injured tono the creature did i?nd ' complain of our unfair tnotics! He pro- klnp tested and protested, and whimpered and *1^. soolded hko some infirm old man tor- i880 men ted by boys. His game after wo led him forth was to keep himself as muoh * ns possible in the sbape of a ball, but ,l?a , with two sticks and the oord wo finally ,?at throw him over on his bock and exposed Tho his quillecs and vulnerable under side, way i when ho fairly surrendered and seemed thrc ' to say, "Now you may do-with me as. . L >ou like." His great chisel like teeth, ^ wliich aro quite as formidable as those of p ,ho woodchuck, ho does not appear to usat, * ^ it all In his defense, but relies entirely pon his quills, and when those fail twei aim ho is done for.?^John Burroughs in turn Tho Century. tific ; ?ho| How Throttd Is Numbered. Everybody knows the sizes of thread. 8ori Every seamstress knows whether she aQy wants No. 80 or 60 or 120, and knows, * wtiln she hears tho number, about what 0 is the size of the strand referred to; but uow 3 aow tho numbers bappen to be what they tho 8 ire, and just what they mean, not one Isrfj person in a thousand knows. And yet it cou 's a simple matter to explain, was tho information accorded to a reporter by an smploye of ono of the largest spool cotton v . nanufactories in the United States. . When 840 yards of yam weigh 7,000 ,nt' grains, a pound of ootton, tho yarn is ly 1 _Ho. 1. If 1,680 yards weigh a pound, it . rng .vui U-XVn. ). I would tako 50 multiplied by 840 yarffi^MU weigh a pound. This is tbo whole of tHWH n ram measurement. The early manUt |, 'actured thread was three cord, and th# rlcst ;hread took its number from tho number I^rP )f the yam from which it was made, I ton So. 60 yam made No. 60 thread, though I will in nninf n# * M v* jk?w fci?u uwtufu cailUtT OI INQ?;* inc 1 (0 thread would equal No. 20 yarn, btUtf ' tlJX, ihreo CO strands. ? . . When the sewing machino came into ( e. ho market as tho great consumer, tmf 11 11 reasoning in its work and inexorablolft que ts demands for mechanical nocura^V not tlx cord cotton had to be made of t tmoothor product. As thread nnnn|Bff> cerl . kcto already established, they were jpH (jV0 Utered for the new artfcle, and No|ttll . , dx cord and No. 00 threo cord are idfi^ I '' leal in sizo as well as in number. I iffect this the six cord has to be maMbf I 'u" farn twice as firm as that domopdertfrjr I Sta he three cord. Tho No. 00. six MB line: ipould be six strands of No. 120 yafe. trot o Three cord spool cotton is the aaib|fi?g? dn(j ier as tho yarn It Is made of. pix ejbit ,, ipool cotton is made-eof yarta louble its number. As simple a thing 'H; 1 s thread is there are 2,000 different ' ? 1 tinds made.?New York Mail. -iuci sch Coal In Ancient Times. Dor Fltny, in his natural history, describes and inthracites found in Africa as a black ( i noiscose userui in medicine, bat no men* |lilS ion is made of its inflammability, let ras called black amber?succinium ligrum. When Roman traders told of ta 5 he burning of amber for fuel by^tho Pru lativss on the shores of tbo Black sek^it lilii b supposed the material was a variety of doc ignite, and not amber as reported. and Coal was probably used in Cbing as <] fuel long before it was known in itho ? western world. About the middle oC the 5 thirteenth century a Venetian traveler UQa' ind writer, MoronsPaulusVenetus, gives and he following account: >t "Through the whole province et l'h? Cathay, black stones are dug out of tbs um j Mountains, which being put ifttho flro ourn like wood, and when kindled continue to burn for a long time. * * If lighted in the evening they keep alive ' the whole oigbt." ' ? / 'enr< The ancient Britons made use of coal 1 to a certain extent. Stone hammers liar have been found in cool cropping^, and nee! tho name?formerly "cole"?is of British , origin. After the conqufst the Romans h began to use it, for coal cinders have . been found in Roman walls, and Roman coins in beds of cinders, But ooal was tK)* not brought into* general use Jintil the wo reign of Charles X. in 3025.?-Hsnry Gh sow Hanks in Overland Monthly. ouil wow long dot* It take to km tit* morn- W01 inn; ''tub?' Jfr. Chajwiok says twenty the minuted, which to wiUy an exceoire m- t R timate. But? for three who want to save n toe orer tba frpeaatiop, hare tothe lafeet j or ono-tenth included. The man uo&iHbi|Efl tnt Ki a trav of fcmid water. jBkilZ-u ,bl* when a jet from a twoflB&djf pum *lni plavs upon him topid witipp |e drk. that and dresses himself in JM Winutsa, up i against twenty minutes fi$*Ewh, and a wl with flro gallons of water .HAt soma man seventy in th* usual f ufl.ffl f nil Mali for, M?o^ftjzo of Governor Richardson, hriws presented lo tho Geocral As fycsterduy, in no elaborate pa[y pot two full, by any mean.*, for Meets wbicb it describes and ditiftr vJovernor showa that the DcfieienHps of tho State have beoo refuudpp new 4} per cent Ipmds having i'aold at a par or premium, and recHt that immedinte steps bo takeo iftind the Consolidation bonds and Iwhioh tnaturo in 1893. It is reoRinded also that the Legislature steps to compel the holders of outJing Consolidation bonds of the inal issue to exchange them for So bonds under tho laws now of foroe. Governor thinks that ho forfeited ijj?w of 1887 is praeticnl and effeeBMjracoipmciid that be not immil far as to require the ity sheriff to sell on some regular iday. timing to the public schools, the Irnor finds au Jucrea9e of 18,417 [Is and a larger expenditure of money school houses than ever bofore. Tho ber and quality of tbe school houses 10 oouutry foave groatly advanced, r-- .u iuuiiivivo iui vuu ii amiug ui wauuerb i alto been oolargcd. The Wiuthrop ning School is pleasantly praised, the coQtianauccol the State seholars is heartily recommended. It is tested also that tho practicability of bing phonography, telegraphy and tograpby be considered. The ropubiou of tho uohool law is advised, so i every officer may know his duty. Governor aptly says that 'tho only to reach and elevato tho masses is >ugh a system of free public schools.' 'he Goverabr describes likewise the gaoisation of the University of South olina. This includes now a College .griculture and Mechanic Arts, with oty-threo teachers, eleven carefully aulatcd courses for degrees and cerates, well equipped laboratories and ps, and its farui and provision for stical training. The Governor asa that the University is one of which 'State might be proud, nnd stands md to none in the South. Thcro arc r 221 students in attoudauce. Of 100 students eutering this year, tho ;o majority are pursuing scientific rsea. 1 pgarding the Agricultural College the ition of the Governor that if tho agriiural class the Stato desire a high class itution of learning devoted exclusive0 instruction, in the sciences pertainto agriculture, such a college should I ^PWMfrYsa'yvwithout rbc least d<>hnnco of the organization of a single itution now existing. Nor should it end upon tho acceptance oftho Clernpr any other bequest. The Stale 1 Do amply able to build and support h a college without any increase of stion, as the saving by refunding the t will ifoiottDt to S120,000 a year east. As regards the Clcmsou best, tho Governor holds that it would compart with the interest of dignity he St&to to accept it before it is astained that tho institution shall 'forr remain under the supremo and couof the State/ 'he Governor describes very carey the oondilion and prospects of the to Military Academy, and rccom:ds that tho entire amount received n the general Government for rent i for damages, amounting to $77,250: a the sum due for collection,) shall applied to rebuilding the west wing he Citadel, and to the better equipit and general improvement of tho ool. The reasoning of tho Gotoron this point is particularly clear strong. /laflin College for tho colored neonln r r - c" ruado a good showing, and the Oonianco of of tbc special appropriation ecomuuendcd, us is the usual approition for the Deaf and Dumb nod nd institution, with special appropria is for a building for colored pupils t for water supply. The Governor reviews the operations he department of agriculture and ru ks that 'its good work is apparent t is more appreciated the inoro is investigated and understood.' > experimental Stations aro at Outbid, Spartanburg and Darlington, dr work baa been oxtenaive. Iinbant lines of investigation have been sred npon and much valuable experio has been aoquirod. 'he condition ol the State Pcniteny is more satisfactory than it has n for some years, aa the income from lourcea has been slightly in excess of exDensas. It *l--:: w .. >|i|ivi<i> in mull ll^flura^ operations (ho Penitentiary rd have lost $125,000 by floods io years. Wtihout ibis thoy would have a surplus of $100,000. The ook for next year is considered salisory, and it is believed that the instiot> will be self-supporting. . Tho 'ornor commends tbo suggestion of Board that provision be mado for rformatory for youthful criminal*, 'he Lonatie Asylum has G80 inui\tcs the regents adrooato tho ostabliih\\ ots separate asylum for tho colornsane. There ii no question, of rso, of the necessity of providing suit1 h>r (he insane, but, if the present , em continues, it scouts (o be liktlv i the Lunatic Ayrlum w 11 swallow he whole revenues of (he Stnto after tile. For some reason, or other, y persons who are well able to pay iha care and support of their owo I,- *" % (' r at t! t; ax|icli<"' nf (he public., T!u Governor says th?t thjro were 2,700 pursons classed as insane, epileptic and idiotio in South Carolina in 1880, ami only about one-fouth oF jho number has found its way into tho Ayslam sc for. All the money that can bo saved by refunding the debt, and in every othei way, can bo spent on tho lunatics in this State unless there bo some change of habit or plan. The Governor is especially cmplwyjc in bis remarks concerning the railroad commission, and in the recommendation that tho law be changed so as to 'require railroads within South Carolina to regulate their rctos of frieght within the State, so that tho public shall derive the greatest benefit possible consistent with tho interest tho railroad corporation, The subject is most important, aad there is evident need oI action. nor notes the oombifiMion* of railroads that have boon mado, and considers ii indispensable that tho representative! ol the people shall take care 'that tin supremacy ol their will shall bo main biiacd inviolate, and that tho contro of their own business, commerce, travc and general welfare bo kept strictlj within their owu way and according t< their own pleasure/ Tho militia is upon a much better foot inj than it had occupied for souie years past Tho Legislature is asked to make pro vision for the pay of the Johnson Ilifle while iu service. There ought to b 801110 general provisiou of tho kind Only tlrco counties remain without military organization. The suggestion of tho Adjutaut and Inspector Geuera regarding annual incampmcnts ar earnestly commended. With r?por<ln peMsniii, it is showi that tho number of applications was 2 G23 aud that 2,025 were approved. O those 1,492 were in favor of widows. I is mentioned that the Board 'is apprr housivcf that grossMrauds have ulread crept in, and may continue to creep in, if some system ot the investigation inth counties bo not adopted. Tho auiouu paid for pensions is 819,088. Tho conlinuauco of tho nppropriatio for tho State Agricultural Society is r< commended. For the State House th Governor recommends as liberal a appropriation as is consistent wit the resources of ilio State. The suj. gostion of Major Hammond thu fc-.eps bo taken to perfect a topograph oil survey and trap of tho Savanna /liver, and for the vppointmcnt of joint commission by Georgia &Qd Sout Carolina, is treated as worthy of moi earnest cousi Icralion, tho Governor bi l'eoeral authorities cud those ol " States >jf Georgia and South Carolic tho importaut work can be proper! executed and with comparatively iusij niGcant expenditure. What has been said will give tl public a general idea of the nature of tb Governor's message, aud of the rcoou mcodalious which he makes. It is uioi advisable, however that every citizo road the message lor himself us it contaius a large body ol'itnportant info uiation presented with nil lucidity, an furnishing material for a proper undo stauding of the condition and needs c South Carolina in every department f the publio service, the only topic whic is not discussed, to far as we cau see, the vexed question of the best mode c regulating the assussuicut of propcrt for taxation, ond for securing equality c assessment throughout the Slate.?Ncu and Courier. The Solid Soutii not IIuiit.?lJa timoro Md., No*. 28.?Special repori to the Manufacturer' liacord of th activity of the industrial interests of tb South will show that this week has bee a very busy ono. Among tho new cnte prises is a So,000,000 company compoi ed of Now Eugland capitalists orgai ized at Forte Payne-, Ala., to develo mineral laud, build furnaces, rollin mill, etc.; at Knoxville, a $5,000,00 slate quarrying company, and $300,00 improvuicut oompany, to build stret railroads, etc.; at Ocala, Florida, $50( 000 general improviuent company; Bait more a $500,000 agricultural implt mcnt company, El Paso a $250,000 irr gation company; a $500,000 compao will build a inanulacturing town nea Ashevillo N. C.; cotton mills are bein projected at Gaffnoy City and Winm borro', S. C., and Codartown, Ga.* an at Macon, Ga., a 100,000 spindle mi! will be built at once. At the Table?Young p?oplc d not always make as great an effort a they should to bo at tho tabic promptly If a bell is rung, begin to get road; when it rings. They should be ready t< go tnstantantiy on tho ringing of the bell That is tho only way-to be ready befor the call is made. It is not only annoy inj to others, but it is disrespectful to pa rents, when tho children aro notprompt ly in their places at meal-time. Bo ii your place with clean hands, hair ueatl; brushed and clothes properly arrangot above oil, with pleasant and kiudltr wont* "V Ono of tlio moat atrongly-markcd ?12.? tinctioriM between savages and civilizec people is found in their table manner* Savage* eat liko oniuial*; civilized peoplt meet (it the table for a pleasant inlerooursi and not merely to be led .-Parish Vitiloi ? The constitutional amendment rs tr office of Probate Judge carried a voto 01 26,806 to 20 544.. Tho amendment relative to the < ffio? of fl:hool comtui* Bionor was lost by a voto of 33^45? against it to 15,125 in iUfavor.. ri The" Pil.wrd.M ??h?p obey,. ^ i there! Ahoy! Ahoy! Ahoy! A till, rel uiarkably wijl-proportiooud young man 1 standing by the wast of a sloop 1 shouted out these warning orbs while i beating about the Gollon (lateoneeven? ing this week, says the S m bVauuisco Pout, lie had tlireo companions, and * the party had spent the day i:i fishing i near Jjinc Point. Directly to the west i of tbem, apparently not more than fifty yards away, was :i fnl!-ri_'gcd clipper ! ship, her sails fil'cd with the strong west ffind. The ti la was running fi >>d, aidcoPiv sending her toward an anchorago i iu p<Vt. No one on board seemed to , notice} the little sloop, which was directly ijj her road. 'Ahov! Ahoy! Ahoy!' i rang oat again fro u the tali young man, , his voioV almost shrieking with despair. . And sli'\the clipper name ou, the iook- r out nevcrlnoiieing ll.o sloop of her light. i rEw<? ilvt-.J oreunsioijpi-'ts shouted- !>Kain i and again in the lew moments which t they expected would elapse before j the stem of the clipper would divide ; their craft iu two. Their voic t3 was - echoed buck again by tiie rugged blufis 1 aloug the northern shore. Nearer, near1 er bore the clipper, with her flood of f canvass distended, the wat -r b riling and j swashing about her cutwater and the dark, indistict forms of men could bo 5 teen on her yards Nearer, nearer, twenty yards, ten - )'"rds, aud the jig clipper was gone, a Three thoroughly fii. hteued uicn e stood on tho sloop's deck and shivered I. from foar and the cold westerly wind, a Not a sail, not a 'liglrt was in sight, s Nothing could be heard but the gurg>1 ling of toe water and the dismal bi-llowe ing of the fog sirens. The sloop put about and fairly raced for the wharves, a running with wind and tide. The fial !, crmcn did not dare to land until they if got to Long bridge, and they told their t story to some boatmen. They had scon the ghost of the cipper Tennessee, which y on dark, rainy nights, outside tho heads tho pilot boats occasionally speak but c uever board, aud which is the phantom it terror of the cxporieucod navigators of the coast. She has been seen dozens u of times, the sailors a\er, from decks s- aud Telegraph Ilill. She is always ruue oing for ports with all canva s crowded n on, but she never gets further in than h Lime Point. There she disappears, only to reappear far outside the whistling it bouy prepared for another attempt to i- enter the port, which, as a punishment h to tho captain, eIio will never reach. An* Immigration Convention.? 8t The immigration convention to ho held m Montgomery, Alabam^Aj^nibar 12, ?T invitat l& local committee, and it is an norm 'y that Texas alaue will he represented 1>)VHRH I' a delegation of several ha:. In ing the most progressive men of the LontflK&aB 10 Star Stato. An effort is being made t Jp . ' ly 10 get tho Governor of all tho Souiiicr^^^H States to attend, and ruin.1 ufihim -JP Jt already accepted the invitation to attenP.' a la this connection it may bo menu '8 that tho iinniegruiioii statistics ft" fch? r" port of Now Orleans I'n- t i,, ? IS d October show the very ie p I r" bor of 1,093 arrived, more than for over *SB| ? thrco years p-t. Th < > . .1 is J havo been satisfactory ten led, and have )l found work from the very moment of flj >3 their arrival. Some have remained in d New Orleans; others have been dis- 3 y tributed through the South and west, or ^ d sent even as fur away as California, The colored brother lives and learns. flB B p He may bo a little slow in science nntsfl B s psychology, but when it ocincs loashardB B 0 tarn in business, he is an apt soholar. l0 The Atlanta Constitution gives the iol- ^ ? lowing case in poiut. r_ A saddle-colored negro claiming to bo a \ lawyer from New York eaiuo 'o l'owder j. Springs a few day s a..,., on lite r?B p strongth of Harrison's election told the g negroes that he was sent out to buy up iflfi 0 all the lands he could and soil them to . g?K q negroes on twenty years time at (> per Sm'-I t, cent. His charge in p-edn.' a I'arui was from S10 to SI2, which every one that jagl wanted to buy bid to piy in advauce, NPl ). and ho was to meet thom in Marietta j. Saturday and make tlicut deeds to the . farms, ile picked up a few hundred J J-li ? ? ' " * ir uonars anu sKippoi by tho light of the ;:i;SS d Double H\r.( i tion ?A it chit Katr. -J N Nov. 21.?Jake and Joo Tobior (.oolor~??jj5 ^ cd) were executed in tlio (^iainy"j4Vi ' '* 0 this aiorning by the Federal authori-^p s ties, Deputy Marshal Howard superintend it*. At the scaffold, in answer to the question whether they had anything ^ to say, both replied 'No,' emphatically, 1 Tho trap was sprung at 10:25. Juice . ? Q uevcr moved a muscle, while Joe, dur- Jtt| t ing tho second minute, drew up his logs \ twice. Tho crime for which they were ,'^fl executed was tho killing of (' im and ' .-9 j Godvkuntz, uoar the 8ae nud Fox Agon- -wl ^ cy, in August, 1885. A Noble Gift to a llaprist In. st1tution.?IiOuisvillc, Ky., Nov. 13. J M \ ?'A fifty thousand dollar J . brary building' waa sn aim H , that made our hoart* gltd , Lawrence Smith, a taeutbar of * Fourth and Walnut Chum). ?" donor of this princely gift. And ) not the firrt donation from her I"111 V H f suBLiner aho favo $5,0 >'11 > ' t Professorship' At : ithn- CnM sl>o I f;;ivo $15,000 and scvu-.i! liuuJrowtcree M of land In thaaubdtVs of l#oqjMBlo.? ? fl Gnenvilh Newt | fl