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E um, m REIAD C. SD Ri rilnlhm always In I HAVE now made the groates thing, if possible. And if Goods ssoi era, I can convinco them that the Gc tiTtv 3K i Seal Plush Modjcskas advertis | houses at 316 50 to 320, I -will s< Misses N ewmarkets, fine Good T.O/1 ? AO ^ aiuviico nice 11 ^ Those Goods are "worth double I have the fashionable Tricot fi Those Goods are 54 inches wide. Cashmeres, double width, from I have all dress trimmings, incl 55c. worth 85c. Worsted dress G ^ Jeans, Flannels, Ticking, Towe BOOTS A HATS I | I I II ill is acknowledged by every person, have ever seen above Charleston. I have thousands of other artic tion ; but if you want as many < for $16, * DO N O FA D. C. LEADER AND Mav 27 ^ ? The Many Climate* of Japan. Japan is a land of mountain* a valleys, and it has as many differ* climates as the United States. Y may find vour Minnesota in Te your Florida about Nagasaki, and 01 all you will find the green of old 1 land. Surrqrfjded by the sea, the is over full ox moisture, and even winter tho land is green. It is a la of flowers. I saw camellia hedges 1 i trees near Yokohama. There i acres and quarter sections of wa about Tokio covered with lotus flow as big as a round 6 cent loaf of Ami can bread and surrounded by gr< discs, each of which is am big a palmieaf fan. The wisteria here grc wild and Japan is the land or ' chrysanthemum. This flower for tho crest of the mikado, and the jx* xiaiure 01 iuo j apaneso people shown in their lovo ror flowers. T1 have their flower shows three time month and when the trees blossom whole nation goes wild. Flower p dlers are everywhere and Toldo 1 city of gardens.?Frank G. Carp ters Letter. Creole Gumbo. Northern visitors to New Orlei are invariably interested to learn 1 Creole way of making bisque a gumbo. They take back with th packages of fllee and serve up at tb home tables a mess which they info their victims is New Orleans gum ?Now Orleans Picayune. Leeas, England, has a perman art gallery. ennhuoing museum, oo and vestibulo, sculpture raiicry, i _ ii ?:_ui 1 . six wen ?wui? i''^y Its own collection Is sull MiiUl. tho exhibition la enlarged by picu lent from other museum* Derlio Apartment*. Life in Berlin is essentially an ant ment one. There are no homes h in our sense of the word$ that is, p pie do not livo in their own hows out in apartments. This is the u versa I custom in all the largo cities Europe. Berlin has many large a handsomo apartment houses; In 1 nearly all llie dwellings exoept t palaces are on that plan, and the re: are not dear, considering that this the capital and the metropolis of I empire. I know of a nice apart tri< in an excellent neighborhood that c bo had for $70 a month, complet furnished. It would cost two or th; times that sum in New York.--? jj ' ^ \ ' ^ ^ ' ins out selling Out AREFULLY SMEMBER, M?n (he T.eadcr of Low Prices in ton or country.; V*"1 ! t effort of my lifo to cloan out the whole rifiood in prioo will oooviuoo the closest buytods ORIFIOED. ed at Evrick's Ridleys and other large sll at $12 50 and $15. 8) At $2 50, $2 75, $3, up to $5 50. 1 at $3 25, $3 75, $5. what we ask for them. rora 19c. to the finest, grades at 671c. 14$c to 30c. uding watered silk, which I will sell for oods from 4c a yard up. ils, White Counterpaines, very cheap. WD SHOES, TD TRUN KS .OF CLOTHING to b? the largest and best selected the^ lies that space will not admit me to menGroods for $10 as can bo had elsewhere -IL TO CALL AT FLYNN'S, CHAMPION OF LOW PRICES. 21 tf rianttvs witn a onnntra. Alexander Nasmyth, tho landscape nd painter, was a man fruitful in expedient ents. To bis mipd, the fact that a ou thing could not bo dono in tho ordiso, nary manner was no reason why it rer should be given up. His son relates JO- the following interesting oxample of *ir his ingenuity s in The Duke of Athol consulted him as nd to some improvements which he do wrea u> mate in us -woodland scenery near Dunkeld. *?r Amonj other things, a certain rocky y crag needed to be planted with trees, 5ri" to relieve the grim barrenness of its appearance. The question was how to * do it. as it was impossible for any man T* *? ol[mb craff- *n order to sot seed tho or plants in the clefts of the rock. e?* A happy idea struck my father. >tio Having observed in front of tho castlo i* a pair of small cannon, used for firing ie7 salutes on great days, it occurred to s a bdm to turn them to account th? A tinsmith in the village was orl?d" derod to make a number of canisters with covers. The canisters were filled ?n" with all sorts of suitablo tree seeds. The cannon was loaded, and the canisters were fired up against tho high face of the rook. Tney burst, and ins scattered the seed in all directions, the Some years after, when my father md revisited the place, he was delighted ess to find that his scheme of planting by leir artillery had proved completely sucrm oeosfnl; the trees were flourishing bo. luxuriantly In all the recesses of the oliff.?Youth's Companion. ent Narrow Escape for the Child. "55 I ww the witness of a streot scene the otuci <-uj nuich might hiive rel > suited very badly for tho youngest person concerned. Two women wore walking with a little girl between thorn, each of them having her by the hand. All three started to cross the street, when a hack came along at a 1*1- brisk pace, whereupon one of the nrs womon hurried in front of the horsos ??" while the other held back, but both re?e, tained their hold of the child, and tho ni- consequence wae that for a moment 1 of she was held in tho path of destruction, id her feet scarcely touching the ground, not her littlo arms extended and the nolo of the the carriago threatening to impale her. uta Fortunately, at last ono of theso danit gorous guardians let go her hold, and the tho small girl was hauled out of dansit gor by the other. It would bo well, an perhape, if, whenever a child is thus sly made to serve as n connecting link beroe tween two grown persons, the rcsponAn sibility oh guarding her should rest . . with one alone.?Boston Post. I '' ' ' 1 i nnrrinu I UMIMlTls A U anter Got* PoartMn or Them Wltbotri llumlng a Grain of Powder. "I did?.'t have any fun with boars," said Mr. Fletcher, but I was determined to get 6ome wild turkoys before tho season closed with the end of the year, and I Rot 'em. Shooting wild turkeys is pretty fine work, and if you happen to get sight of a gobbler's fiery reel wattles in the woods, the chances aro about twenty to one that you won't get the gobblor if you fire at nim. So 1 didn't fool away any powder on any of theso fourteen turkoys, and I got overy one of 'em without firing a shot. n ,i:.i t j ? ii? t * uuw um x uu il f i caugni mem alive in rustic coops and then wrung their necks. All they cost me was a little labor with a hatchet and jack knife and about a bushel of corn. "When I find where the wild turkeys room or are in the habit of roosting on the mountains, I go to the placo any time in the forenoon and rig up a number of coops out of saplings and withes. 1 mako them look as harmless and as much like the surroundings as I possibly can, pulling limbs down over them and partly concoaling them. The saplings I use 1 cut quite a distance from whore I build tho trap, using the hatchet for that purpose, and with my jack knife I out and trim the withos. Then I drive three stakes into the ground, and build up a three cornered trap, ny laying one sapling on top of anothor, after 1 L-? L. lui mu ok} iu ui uui uuuaing, until I havo got a coop four feet high and big enough to hold half a dozen turkeys, binding tho corners together i with withes. The end opposite the sharpest corner is mode much narrower than tho sides, and I leave that entirely open fifteen inches from the ground until I get the trap made and covered with brush. The front is about three feet wido. Thon I weave withes together till 1 get a mat fifteen inches by thirty-six, making it so light that tho push of a turkoy s head will lift it as it hangs by witho hinges from the inside of tho lower sapling. That is all there is to tho coop. Then I dump about a quart of corn in the center 01 it, pull the brush around carefully toward tho entrance, and sprinkle corn along the ground from tho heap in tho trap for a distance of a couple of rods or so. "Wild turkeys aro just as fond of corn as tamo ones arc. Just so sure as tlicy run across that row of kernels, just so 6uro will they pick and gobble , them till they find themselves poking their bills into the little heap or corn in tho traps. After they have made way with all the corn in Bight, ana Sot their crops full, they begin to link about going to their roosting place, ana then tlioy find that - -.--Q caged, and, after nosing uviv ?v? biivu* vvy i vub Vl^ tlicv squut down and gido their gixzarus a chance to grind the corn. They might null the witho gato ouon if they only know enough to, buttney don't know enough, and thoy stay there gobbling aiul clucking till 1 come along the next morning and wring thoir uccks. The most that I ever caught at one time was a torn and two liens, and I got them in the first trap I made. The gobbler was a splendid specimen, and I hated to kill him. llo weighed twenty-one pounds dressed. I ncvor got less than two, and tho wholo fourteen didn't cost me as much as I got for a pair of thorn." ?Scran to n (Pa.) Cor. New York Sun. Decline of Trotting in Kentucky. A dozen years ago tho trotter flourished like the green bay tree, and running races, outside of those upon the timo honored course at Loxlngton, were practically unknown in thestato. Every fair had its trots and everybody was interested in tho trotter. Now the thoroughbred reigns supreme, and the trotter lias been rolegated to tho roar. Thousands can now bo found who will read the most trifling gossip about Proctor Knott, while a poll of thestate would hardly disclose a dozen whc could name too sire of Maud S. or JayEye-See. Tho Kontucky stud formi still breed trotters for tho outside market, but none for "homo consumption." Tftio people here will have none but running races, and notliing in the shape of a thoroughbred bang-tail is toe rich for their blood. This love for the flyer, however, is not solely responsible for tho declino of trotting in Kentucky. Before its dissolution, a dozen or more years ago. the trotting ring had become rotten to tho core, and (1 was this corruption moro than any tiling clso that caused its death. The efforts of the Louisville Driving Pari to revive tho corpse and to conduct future races on an honorable basil were praisoworthy enough, but they camo too late. The public taste hao changed, never, probably, to be m claimed again in that direction.? Louisville Poet Running a Paper. 1 There was once, in Arkansaw, c country editor who experienced mucl troublo in meeting his bills?in paying them, rather, for ho met them ot i nearly ovory corner. One week, it order to attend ? press convention, hi did not get out an' issue of his nuwr , When ho returned ho discovered thai the "suspended issue" was, of thi , whole year. the only one thai had no( run lum in debt. This diacovein oponcd his eyes to a new idea. Eu saw that the only way to make money i on his paper was not to print it.? Arkansaw Traveler. Tho uses of the cotton plant nro de velopinff rapidly. Formerly the fib? of lue blossom was tho only pari ulil 17.0(1. Tlien the seed began to supply I lnrj^o proportion of thoolivo oil am "lard' in tho country, and now tin i hulls arc found to be cheaper and bet tor than wood for papor pulp. | jS'otMnpr spits my pride better ttun. to see Eomo proud man humble himself in my presence?to see him stoop U1 ' things of low degree.?Bar Homan. WOOING Of AN AUTHOR. i Sober* Unto Bteremon'a Roman tie Mar- i rla|( to a Ulvoroed Woau. ? Robert Louis Stevenson first came , here eight years ago to ret married- j i Whon ne was taking that trip that bore i fruit in his book, 'An Inland Voy- ( L age," he met in Paris Mrs. Samuel Osborne, of San Francisco. She bad , married young Samuel Osborne, who , was private secretary to Senator Stan- 1 ford. She waa a brilliant brunette. ,1 , Her husband had gone with her on a j vacation, but he luul been recalled* , 1 She and Stevenson fell in love t at first sight. Their literary and , - personal tastes ran in the same chan. , nels, and the author spent much time , in her company. When she left for , ; home it was understood that she was i to get a divorce from her husband by i means of the easy proooeses of the , California courts, and when this was , accomplished Stevenson would oorae , out to the Golden Stnte hnd. pjakehor his wife. When Osborne waS tola of 1 the desire of his wife ho mado no objection, and even gave his wife all the i , aid in his power. The result was that i she obtained her freedom. Then the tidings were sent to the , JL-i?ij- ~ uisiuui lover, ana no prepared to come out in the west for his inamorata. Stevenson engaged passage in the steerage of ono of the great ocean lines, with the dosign of writing up his experience. Ho liad a sorry time among tho emigrants. Thiscxperionoe, however, didn t cure him, as he too* passage in an emigrant car and crossed the plains in that fashion. This was worse than the steerage trip, and the journey consumed two wee lea When Btevonson reached San Francisco ho was a sorry object. Foul air and poor food had reduced his strength and he was a semi-invalid. He was received, however, with open arms. As soon as ho was cleaned up by a scries of sulphur baths the wedding was held. Osborne gave away the bride, his ex-wife, with the heartiness of manner that might have been expected in the most disinterested person, while he capped tho climax by introducing to the oride and groom a handsome and stylishly dressed young woman as his affianced wife. The marriage feast was very gay. Soon after Stevenson went with his bride to a deserted camp on Howell mountain to recuperate his health. There ho wrote the book which he called "The Silverado Squatters." It is a curious fact that Osborne, to whoso good nature Stevenson was indebted ror his wife, disappeared shortly after his second marriage, and no one has ever heard of him since. The dashing young woman whom he weddoa remained here sever*! mnntlia * alter SamAjel desorted^hcr\ she^ ( Or heard of by^hcir^dWwgS-^afl" ~ Francisco Dispatch. i ' Death In a Lion's Dm.' Tho shocking death of h female tamer of wild beasts Is reported from Hohenmuth, in uonemia. one was a girl 26 years old, named Bertha Baumgartner. During a public performance In a strolling menagerie she entered an empty cage, and the door of an adjoining cage was then opened to let a lion and a Bengal tiger enter. The lion walked in quietly, but the tiger, a ferocious beast, which had three times wounded its keeper, crouched in the doorway* and snowed temper. The girl lost nerve, cried for help and slipped. As she did so the tiger made a spring, bit her on the shoulder, then in the throat, literally rent her to Faeces and tossed her body about Half it? iv. Jr t. i? i tug ouuicwti run WJ mo uwra ID DOr* ror, while the attendants tried to beat off the tiger by poking^ hot irons into tho cage. Bui tho girl waat}**d long before the animal was drfyen away. The lion seemed to have been as much frightened as tho human spectators, as helook no part in the carnage. Iho proprietor of the show has since ad- 1 mitted that this some tiger had already killed two people.?Chicago Journal. Lot* Charms. In the south of France thev make a very peculiar love oharm in a very peouliar way. Under certain ceremonies the young woman catches and boxes up a frog in a box with a lot or * little holes bored , in the wood. The casket is then buried in an ant hill for two weeks. The ants, of course, attack the prisoner and eat up all the flesh, on/1 oil fltoi la la ilia saaftintiala bones. Among these is a shield shaped i bone about as large as one's thumb : nail, upon one end of which is a little l hook. The girl takes this bone and i has it blessea surreptitiously by the - priest without his knowledge?that is, [ she exposes it during the benediction at tho mass?and then she hooks it on the clothing of her sweetheart, that is to be. The charm, when properly prepared with all due ceremony and care, has never been known to fail.? New York Telegram. I Poverty of Cambridge. Many people imagine that the uni1 versifies of Oxford and Cambridge are 1 very wealthy corporations. This is a ? mistake; th"y never were so, and i a ; these days, when they provide for the 1 teaching of a crowd of subjects which * a hundred years ago lay practically or t wholly outside a university education, 1 they have to observe the strictest econ> omy. This is especially the case at r. Cambridge, where the university is sadly crippled in discharging its proper functions through lack of money. There are eoaroely any public lecture - iwmii, mo prwwrjr?apaqmer teacnr erg of natural sciences &m vainly la men ting (he wretchedly insufficient I appliances provided foe their work. 1 ana the university library, and indeed i every institution needful for the adr vanoe of the studiee of the place, are pinchod for iand*.?fit Jaiues' Gazette. ' ' . ; ; Dry rot in timber to said to be oon' tagious, zawz and other tools carrying > It from the infected wood to apuna QmMr. _ ** ..? V ' # ' i A < . ,'i aj'\ a start liu q doctrine. The Jaws as a Separate People ( Must Eventually Disappear. 1 The New York Herald'? ' European c edition publiahcd last Saturday tbo fol- i lowing letter from Paris: For Doarly I two thousand years Israel has been r awaiting the second advent of the Mes- c liah. 'When will tbo Messiah cotnc?' s I asked yesterday of a prominent Israe- 1 lite. 'The Messiah has come and is at v bhis moment "in Paris,' was the astonish- 1 iog reply. t I, of course, supposed that tho person with whom I was talking intended to ' mystify me, but he was serious. I prcs- ? 3d him with further questions and his v iplsnstion was as follows; 'We Jews a have long ago lost faith in a literal In- y parnation of the Messiah. That would not be eonipatiblo with ideas of modern 1 civilisation, but a new doctrine has now s taken root in the hearts of tho Jews all c rttrnp ? 1- - J ?.? >u? nuuu, 111 u uucirMie oi assimtla- a ttOD with Christianity, and the apostlo c of this doctrino, destined to bring about I the salvation of Isarcl, is now in Paris 1 idd is no other than Baron Ilirscb, the 3 well known Parisian banker who has 51 fciven 100,000,000f, in Russia aud Aus- ^ tria alone toward carrying out this 1 glorious conception.' o A New Apostle.?'Will you take mo 1 to see the Baron Hirsoh?' I asked. u Certainly' was the reply, and in a few s noments I was seated beside Baron P Hirsch, in his magnificent bouse next 1 he Palais de l'Elysee. " Baron Hitoh is a fine looking man of ' nediuin height and athletic build. He is appearently about fifty years of ?( ige and his eyes are bright, gray, brim- ? al of intelligence. His none is aquiline, c lis jaw has a determined look about it ind his long milstnry mustache is rning- 7t ed with gray. He lookes moro like tl in Austrain cavalry officer than a fioan- w >ier. f( 'Will yon tell me, Baron, about the g notives that inducod you to make your w nagnificeut donations in Russia?' I ask p id. st *My idea is this/ replied Baron 81 rlirsch. 'I am a bitter enemy of lanat- sl oism, bigotry and exclusive theology. 31 The Jewish question can only be solved v >y the disappearance of the Jewish race, 'l vhich will inevitably be accomplished 31 >y the amalgamation of Christians aud u Tews. The funds I have placed nt the r' lisposal of Russia are not for cduci- c| ional purposes of Jewish children alono 81 lut aa well. ft Horn Jewish children IrT'ltussia, who are in i most destitute condition. They do f< sot even know tho Russian language, w ind speak a sort of Hebraic jargon of " ;heir own. They are frightfully handi- , japped in all that oonecrus earning their u bread and making their way in life. !l rhere is a complete Chinoso wall around u them isolating them from the rest of hu- c inanity.' 11 'My idea was to knock out tho corner stone of this wall by establishing schools () in Russia, on the condition that they (< should be opened to Jews and Christians c on terms of perfeot equality/ j 'Does the Russian government facili- j tale the establishments of these schools () in Rasaia, whero the government is , everything?' o 'Unfortunately tho govei nment seems j to fear that there is some political mo- i tive behind the plao. Tho truth is this: 0 I happen to possess more ot the so-called . good things of the world thao I require ., and I carefully 6tudied how I oould best a accomplish au act of pure philanthropy <j 'I lacked about and found that on the u whole the condition of the Jews in Rus- n sia was worse than that of nny largo a body of people in the civilized world, b I am a Jew myself, and I folt for those | , of the same race and set about giving them a fair chance to work side by side with and assimilate themselves with the p people oPthe country in which they live, j I merely want a guarantee from tho (] Russian government that tho funds I ^ hold at their disposal shall be applied to the purpose intended?namely, the establishment of schools for Christians and ^ Jews on a footing of equality. 'The mixed sohools that are establish_J A.l..:. * " I cu IU vjroinyiu, iiunrill, uro a SUCCESS. CO the; would be iu Russia if the govern- 1 meat would only consent to itself of the 0 idee that there is a political motive in 1 my offer.' a 'You feel convinced, then, that the 1 doctrine of assimilation is the solution of the Semitic question?' 5 'Clearly so,' replied Raron Ilirsch. ll 'Why, you have only to look about to ' see that this is the universal tendency of modern times. Younger members of * the families of Rothchilds and MonteSore c and dozens of others are assimilated that r is to say, married with the Grammonts, i Richclieus and the Roseberys. 1 In other strata of society tho same 1 law prevails. In Saint Antoinc and ' Belleville mixed Cbristain and Jewish ? marriages take plaoe every week. The Jewish race is disapearing There are numerous instauces of conversion of Jews to Christianity, but I cannot recall a solitary instance of a Christian becoming converted to Judaism. The salvation of the Jews is assimilation. 'Let them be almagamato by Christianity. Let the fusion bo complete; let Jewish isolation be broken down; let the Jews as a distinct sect disappear; fPLJ- 1- AI ?. I ?i rr% t iuii m ins loudsuuj 01 ine age. x :il8 j will be the eolation of tbc Jewish ques- j lion end * bleeeing to oiviliietion/ i 13lind Staggers in Hogs.?Wind taggers is a somewhat common dNca.se >f the hog, or rath.-r it is a symptom. When sluggishness is observed iu any particular animal of the h rd, with waut >f appetite, it is an indication that ought lot to be neglected for an hour. If the tog is 'off its feed" it should he separated from the herd aud given especial are. Prompt action in quarantining a ingle animal may save a whole herd, iliud staggers io the hog is caused by >hnt is otdinary termed biliousness. '>001 itnparod digestion, congestion of he liver, or other causes, a portion of die is taken up by the blood, aud ho 'blind staggers' is simply an oxngeratrd 'swimming of the head' The rliitus of the i.?<? - ! " ^ [.i?rin a jaunatccu ppearauce, and the tongue has a dirty ellow coat, darker in the middle tb.iu t the edges-, the discharges show that he bowels arc constipated usually, but ometimes there in diarrhea nud bigholored urine. This complaint usually ttacks hogs soon after the fattening proess, or what is called feeding, begins, j f the animals have been on pasturo hroujfP^rc summer with little or nocoru nd arc then put iu tho fattening pen nd giveu all the corn tbey will cat, ilind staggers arc likely to develop in he first two weeks. The sudden change f diet deranges the etomicb, and this is bo result. A little prudence will ordiarily prevent it. Tho grain feeding bould begin while the hogs aro jet iu asture, and gradually increase from day a day. This disorder rarely or over attacks fat hogs. The custom roui time immemorial has been to cut (T the tail, split the skiu on tho forehead nd put iu salt or turpeotine. If tho ttack is a severo one, this treatment ill kill tho hog every time. If the ngorgomeut of the liver is not very reat it may survive the treatment but , will take some time to get over it. If ne disease is fully developed, tho animal 'ill stagger around nearly in a circle >r three or four times and fall down, euiug up in a weak, dazed sort of ay, only to repeat the stagger. The roper thiug to do is to let a stout roao raddle the hog while it is standing up, ad slip tho noose of a stout cord or nail rope over the nose and upper jaw, ad another c- rd over tjje lower jaw. Zith these pull tho uiouthopcn. Take old of the tongue with the loft hand ad pull it well out, holding tho head p, aud from a paper or spoon in the ght hand pour a full half teaspoonful of doinel as far back on the tongue as posiblo, and let tho animal go. A stick j )ur or five inches long and an inch in J. iametej. n^p r e V <* n f*ih j UPy':^iu i>"b|W/\l> ' ar, but will bo found uiorc or loss in tho ray. If the animal has boon closely ratchcd, however, there has probably oeu found opportunity to givo it i'uis 038 of c.arooacl while it would yet eat little meat drink n little milk. This icdicine is tasteless, and for this rcasou an often be given in food when more auseous medicine would bo refused, lid this is a point not to he despised iu reating hogs. This dose is all that ced be given in a groat majority of ases, but will be prudent to add a ouple of tablospoonfuls of salts the next ay, or as soon as the animal shows any esire to eat, and if necessary this amount lay fce divided into two or three doses, tt the time ol year when fattening beins, if any of the bogs do not take kiody to the corn, and it is often the case t will be found of great benefit to give nc-tbird of a level (easpoonfulof calomel ach morning for throe or four morniuga ud if they exhibit any sigus of worms, dd nearly as much santonino to each j lose. In a few davs there will hp n I (larked improvement in thiir catiug, ud they we as lively as a six weeks' pin nd there will be no further fear of ling staggers.?Dr. Glume, in Amcrititt Agriculturist. Death or the Hon. It. Y. McAdbn.? [on. Rufus Y. McAdm. in his oGth year, ie-1 last night, at II o'clock, at his resienco in this city. Ilis funeral will bo eld to-morrow. Mr McAden leaves a wife, three sons, nd three daughters, all of whom were at is bedside when he died. His ol lest living hild is Mrs. Virginia Baker, wife of Asbby laker, of Baltimore. The other two daughsrs, Misses Mary and Lucy, reside in this rty. The three sons are George, Giles and iturj. vjicurga resiues in ivio.-vuenTill#, nd ihe other two have not finished their tudies at College. In addition to his wife and children, Mr. IcAden'a aunt, Mrs. Geo. Swopson, and lis wife's father, Dr. Terry, wero present rheu he died. Mr. MoAden was a man who had played i conspicuous part in the finances and genra! business of this community, lie was a nan whose acquaintance with the prominent nen of Charlotte was close. The news of lis death was rcccivo I last night, as lata as t occurred, with general expression of tindness for the deceased. ? Charlotte Chron ele, MK. Tiik Mississippi ok a Booh. New Orleans, 'an. 26.?A special from Shreveport, j*., seja: The riser is bank full and risng rapidly. Advices from above indicate hat all the lowlands are submerged. It ia eared that the river will rise higher than t has ever been known to do sinee 1849. [he planters on the river beiow the oily are (Citing ready to move thjfr stock to the mis. lo-uay ine icvec, Deiween the Citron and Caldwell place*, was cut by unmown parties. This levee was being eomjltted by W. V. Robiueon, who removed hia itook with great dithculty. % ^ SUMMRR (}AKI)KNBINTH?SOOT? ?LltO vegetables are bJ DO BUN M abundaut ia the South aa they ehoald bet Our girrioors pride themeelvee on early vegetables but with many o( the early ones arc about all we ever raiae. The complaint U often heard that ear g?rdens 'bum up' aa eooo aa the hot weather sets io. The reaaon of this alaeet universal 'Dtiroiog op7' or 'firing' of our hto gardens is too much manure. While it is nearly impossible to boot tho ground too rich for moet of oar early vegetables, it is any easy matter to over* do the thing with late ones. Very rieh and abundant tnnnaro is neoeosary for early gardens, bat in the South a aauoh smaller doae of fertiliser mast be applied to the lato plantings, if we would have any summer or autumn vegetables. It would bo well for everv farmer te have two garden*, or one derided isle two parts; and upon the ground designed for lato plantings he should not apply more than half as mnoh manure as upon the early garden. It should ba spread in the fall (on both gardens), and turned under thoroughly. Before plauting-timo tho ground should be well broken and harrowed; and the maanre will thus be completely mixed with tbs soil. Many farmers, in their seal to en| rich their gardeus spread almost all ths stables thereon, to the utter neglect ef their field crops, thus surfeiting the one and starving the other. Theooneequeaee is poor .crops in the fie'd, end excepting tho early sprine, fow or no vegetable# in the garden.?American Agr\e*ltmrmi, Factory Failues.?Our Lenrene and Union o:rreepondente appcer te he disgusted by the abuudaooe of talk cad tl c scarcity of reeulls in the movemeate for now manufacturing enterprieea ia their respective c immunities. Bat the experience of Union and Lcureae ie that of every other oommunity. There matt always he a deal of talk whieh feile tc materialize in actual building and aeaehiacry and if any town obtaioe oae eatcrprisu of Qvo suggested end dieeueeed it is doing very well. Greeorille ie teday tho most importaut manafeeturing community ip the State exoept Oherlae ton, and iu the leet nine year* more oapital has been invested in eueh later* prises and more new iuterprieee have bccu established here thaa aay ecmmunitv in the V?* ?? J -"WW.. AW* ?*? V?*U IWH baok over tho files of The JVetce ul find records of soores promising sehsaMO which havo failed. It will not do for newspaper pteple to become discouraged. Their bmsiaeeo U Jo coutiaue pushing and booming, XQOLJWQBa _ r,?. of enterprise and suggestion into active life, to lose no opportunity to radnee people to think and act. Thai is all we cau do, aud it will always tell. There is no use in holding back or halting er becoming disgusted because other men will not see thiogs through oar eyee er usctboir monoy as we would like te heve them use it.'?Greenvillo JVetse. How often do we beer of the anddea and fatal termination of a ease ofereup, when ayouDg life uii^ht have been eevod by the prompt use of Ayer'e Cherry Pectoral. Ayer's Almanao for tho new year is out. Get one: Profit is Carrots.?Few root orope are more profitable than oarrote. They arc excellent food for horsee and eolte; they stimulate the flow of milk in oowe, and give n delightful flavor and oolor te butter. Although there it usually net much sale for them in rural oommunition, in largo cities great quantities can he readily disposed of. The priee does not ofton go below fifty oenta per bnekel and wo have known them te sell far more than double that prioe. On ordinary land, and with rather lose thaa ordinary cultivation, we have grown at the rate of 500 bushels per tore. An Editor Assassinated.?Meant lloreb, Wis , Feb. 1.?G. G. Mendt, editor of tbo Mount lloreb Sun, wae awakened last night by a rapping at hie ? A _1 I- - A xl ? uuui | uuu vvuuu no upcnca iqi aoor some miscreant fired at him, the hall pesaing through the right laag and lodging in his back. It is thought that he is mortally wounded. Thar# it ?? clue to the perpetrator Mandt baa baaa taking an aotivo part in the prohihtica. White oaps have appear*! ia'Spartaaburg county, this State. A party ofaa*k*d men severely whipped Wallaoe Littlejoha, a woak-minded colored man, near Ravema Monday night. A toilet luxury in every reapeet, Ayer'fi Hair Vigor never fails to reetora ,k? .v..iL ! ?I I i - - - ? mi,; ^uuiuiui iresnnsss ana color 10 I#d* ed atid ^ray hair. It also eradicates dandruff and prevents the hair from falling Suicidr or Ex-Cox nucTos MoCool.? "Jim" MoCool, formerly well known m ft conductor on tho Air Line, hanged himself at bis beautiful residence just outside of At* lante on Thursday. He was worth probably $40,000 or more.. Ills suicide was oaosed by an impending loss af $2,000 by the defalcation of County Treasurer Wilsoa, as whose bond he was. The pews in Rev. Dr. Tel mage'a Brooklyn Tabernacle were Monday night let for tho year uqjler the hammer. The first ehoiee ipew was knocked down at $600. The tire amount realised was $6,894.