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Shadows. . Shados ltting: past the.starlight, Shadows darkling is.the air. Shadows is the swaying tree tops, Shadows gliding.everywhere.. Nights like this are born of shadows, Everything is weird and dic: Shadowy gitoss haupt. every ,valley With a presence dread and grim. There are times when everyheart-throb t Seems to summon shadows near, Waking ghosts in every chamber Of the beart that's dark wilh fear. Ghosts that tread with noiseless footsteps, Gate around with mournful eyes, Clutch our hands with bony Augers, Fill our souls with tears and sighs. Every heart must have its night fall Phadows come with every night, Blasted hopes-old dreams of glory Are the ghosts that step so light ; Thronging the heart's dim chambers, Where they revel with delight, Till we shudier at their resence, Pale and trembling with affright. After night fall comes the morning, And the golden beams of day, . Waking joy in every valley, Driv, the shadowy ghosts away. Every heart shall have its morning, !lope will shine with cheering ray, Then the ghosts that come with heart throbs, Powerless, will flee away. Nothing Lost. l othing is lost. The drop of dew That trembles on the leaf or flower Is but exhaled to fall anew In summer's thunder shower; Perchance to shine within-the bow, 'hat fronts the sun at fall of day ; Perchance to sparkle in the ow Of fountains far away. So with your deeds, for good or ill, They have their power soarce understood; Then let. us use our better will To make them rife with good ; Like oero:eJ on a lake they go, ling within ring never stay, Oh I that our deeds were fashioned so t That they might bless alway. Paper-money Demooraoy, The theory that paper money is good enough for tho bloated bondholders was first propouinded in a moment of spite by that great republican leader of the House, lion. Thad. Stevens, of Penn sylvania. It was also taken up and advocated, earnestly for a while, by that distinguished republican Senator, 1Hon. John Sherman, of Ohio. In the belief that it was likely to become popu. lar, the democrats of the West, and es. pecially in the two States we have clamed, seized upon the now- doctrine and incorporated in their political creed. We have warned them against such use of this infamous proposition. We show. ed that it involves all that is demosealiz .ing and dishonest in the management .of the national finances. It repeats, .confirms and extends the greatest errors .ma<hy by the Republican party in pro viding ways and means for the groat struggle. The better class of the Republicans never followed the lead of the represen. dative -men who originated and advocat iel this plan of national repudiation. The same is true of the Democrats as a party, their beet men insisting that issu eng one promise for another can never -be regarded as an honest payment of a delbt. But some of the leaders in Ohio and ?eansylvanta thought to profit by :the dodge, and now they may see what has come of it. Instead of the over whelning triumph they expected, they have gathered no new adherents, and hiave achieved no subetimntial victory, alhouugh the general apathy of their opponents gave them all the- advat~tage had they underatood how to avail them= selves of it. In this State the Democ racy, while, as we believe, really l.old ing with their beet men that only actual money could satisfy an honest debt, were led to trimn'ing and evasion in their late platforn, lest they might injure the party in other States where the pa por money scheme was aupposed to be popular. They, too, may learn a lesson fromt the election returns now before them. Trhere ia no real, permaenent gain to any person or party In the use or ad. vocacy of falsehood. It is undoubtedly true, also, that the Democrats in the two great States where the controversy was sharp die plhayedl a want of practical common sense in cliniging to old watchwords hay ing no present s'Sniflcance, and in at templttg to renew as living issues some of those questions .a hich have been dofi nitely- settled by the recent civil conflict. It is worse than useless, it is positive madtness, for any political party or fac tion to ignore thme progress of events, even though the facto may upset their bhot theories. The P'endletonian style of Democracy has had its day, and every body who cling to it will soon be buried in the grave ofthe dead past, beyond all hope' of renewed vitality in our gene ration.--Jurna f Constre, (Dcem.), GEN. THolfAs ON A LABKA.--Afler a thorough inspeotion of Alaska, General George H. -Thomas, a man of caroful inquiry and -sound judgment, pronoun. ces substantially that grdat purchase "a selL lie does not agree with Mr. Seward at alla What if the American - eagle soars in the skies of Alaska- and the 'humming~ bird doea dot diedhin to 11lit. ter, there3" General Thomas still ,think. the territory: "good for itX, '';They hare plenty of timber and-coal up shore ; bust we -have plenty of theae articles neare? home. - d'r (arming Alaskca is of no earthly accqunt. Graini cannot -d raised there, and the few vegitables that can be, i t'ou attempt to keep them, Will-be foutirotten at the end of a V eole.e- The7 llave too' assieh rIeinAp~topitte sh iU' og poai' . gione for farming ordng or stdol raising, end the bee ny the Sovern.. mnq ohn'dd for Alaska Ite to out down te *tpensof ovt'tnig it to a veryr snill rhliary AMtsbetirdent. Such i th'e opinion of General Touias aip4 'i shake. our faith very serio'usly in the tterdIptoo#tio, k9 4n?6)i. iunred hage of Aubuirj It.faet, NewbLC lieve~list i p/ pId soldier is a better.j.,dge of Alak.(b tkenuths. slistic old politician ; butistill we -mustj not forget the codlsh and salmnon,-~.M Y Herald, hghIfedb1o* ta4-1 Nobby fl;ck S.Fortia espwiil ,4l taaon of the a andiul of scalawags in our State, we t opy from Forney's Chronicle. the fol o owing notice of a recent "tashionablo" l egro wedding in Washington, merely 1 oting the interesting circumstance that he groomsmen and bridesmaids, (and he whole audience for that matter,) vere made up of "whites and blacks, n equal proportioni. The Chronicle o aye: One of the most select audiences ever n reseeble t in this city among the colored r )eople met at the Fifteenth street Pros 3 >yterian Church on Tuesday evening, he 12th inst., to witness the nuptials of t l'homas S. Boston, Esq.. assistant cash- t er of the National Savings Baink, and t, dise Anne M. Wilson, only daugh- r or of Wm. Wilson, Esq., cashier of t hat institution in this city. The church t ras crowded to its utmost capacity, r with both white and colored persons. l'he parents of the bride er.t.red the r :hntrch precisely at half-past 8 o'clock, t preceded by the Rev. 0. H. Thompson, t >d Newark, New Jeroev, the ofliciating i lergyman. The bride was rkihly nwttr- 4 .d in white satin trimmed with blonde t tmd lace. The bridesmaids, Miss Litc" < Barber, sister of R. H. Booker, anu 1 Wiss Laura Fisher, daughter of Mr 1. 1 Pisher, were dressed in white tarletan, rimmed. The groom was neatly attir- t Ad in a- fashionable suit of black. The I troomsmen were Dr. C. B. Purvis, 1 Professor of Howard University, and t Hr. Bohert Burton, of Washington.- < [mmediately after the conclusion of the I eremony at the church, the bridal par I y proceeded to the house of the bride's ather on L street, the doors of which 1 were thrown open, and was soon filled I with a gay throne of invited guests.-< imong the notables present were Major Seneral O. O. Howard, ex-President 1 Roberts, of Liberia, and lady; John M. i Langston. Esq., Law Professor of the Howard University ; Professor Bascom < tnd lady ; Professor Barber and lady; I Dr. A. S. Augusta and lady, of the Reward University ; Col D. L. Eaton, 3f the National Savings Bank ; If. E. Rockwell and lady, and Messis, Dove raux and Finney, well known Govern mont officials. The bridal party left on Ahe morning train for the North. The old homely adage of'tho "burnt child dreading the fire," is appreciated here in Charleston to the fullest extent. 1 Uharleston has subscribed to the "Mem. 1 phis" and "Nashville," the "Blue Ridge," "Northeastern," "Charlotte," "Cheraw" and other roads, and hostile interests now push her ,aside and use most of these roads against her mer ahants, by means of discriminating freight tariffs. The latest news from the Blue Ridge subscription of $1,000, 000, and as much more accruing inter. eat, is that it is to bo put in the shape of second mortgage bonds, with enough of first mortgage paper ahead of the sec ond to swamp the whole amount. The "Charlotte Road" charges more on cot ton for Charleston than to Ports mouth. Under all these discouraging circum. stances, Charleston has to be patient, and while wishing eell to all the nuner ous railroad enterprises projected in South Carolina, she must husband her remaining rsources, and use the w.s - ly anld eicientlyl in the future. 'Althoughi not as strong as before the war, "the1 City by the Sea" will yet make herself felt in'the South as a port and .market, second to no other.-C6ourier. It is admitted that the Ohio election confirms the belief, heretofore expressed by Senator Sherman, that the West will present a strong front in opposition to the financial policy of the Adininistra tion. Many of the Republican voters thoug~h withholding their srtffrage from Pendleton, are~ pledged to his policy of paying the United States Bonds in greenbacks. There is to'be a great struggle on this question, and it will cowr.mence during the present Congress. New party .lines are to be drawn in reference to the debt, anid the currency and taxation. As to the Fifteer.tli 4mietdmenst it is still left in doubt. The declaion of Ohio will be -deferred for another eleotion. But if this question be disposed of prior to 1872, the chief politloal issue will be uspoi. the financial queasions.--Cor; Charleagon Courier. BatxrAP's APPOINTMENT As SicORE TARY O~ WAu.- Washingeon, October 17.--General Belknap is a happy man ing btn old of the War Ofice ; for, to judge- by what one hears about the capital, he is entirely acceptable to all parties, or rather to the two great .par. ties of the country. The radicals claim he will do what they want to secure Tex as and Mississippi to the dominant party, whille'the democrats, on the other hand, declare that Belknap is a sound conser vative, pretty much after the pattern cf William Tecumseh Sherman, and that Butler and Boutwell, Instead of securing a warm .all, will find that they have captured a al-tat'. T'ua STNON OP SOUTH CA Ro.IA. 1The.8ynpd of South Carolina met in Cheuter, October 20. From the Rlepor pt aea g t ilo Synod is composed ofieghtysii nlia9 trn'a44 churchr op. h boundaries S4ie Sy nod are ooe eM I h ~ p it in olu0o Niitwbtei, Th'e synod is connermed *ft ta iAseaplgly O. 8) v 05 $rian~ -CfIrch, recen aeknow eded ad rhe orri rn Qonfedera(o besides the~ State bf l~en. being ;oifre by th.tt o ao aYat~ makes you rat I" hastily e jdOtofl9?da.' all. oh t* tag knakevan w. anfta.. T'.fe ant o wingd a the oonolusion of u kadr'es'Y oti *airtegrity of Charac' or," deli ferd qt the Ognimebioiqient f the Kntuoky '1ilitgry: Institute, rune 4th,. 1869 by Itv. ift. A. Iol' and, who is to deliver lectures in' Au ;usta on the 2d and 3d proximo, for he benefit of St. Jatnqs' (Methodist) Jhuroh: I rejoice, young gentlemen, that I an find an embodiment of.;his sub Ime integrity of charactor in .a hero ot of the Past, but of the Present ot of some distant realm, but of our own suffering section-not of oreign birth, but of blood brother to hit which thrills with euthusiasm hrough your veins at tho mention of is name. I rej ice that- we possess a model of manhood worth more to our oblest attributes , than all the, for uns spent in th tori ible war that evealed his grenleur to our gaso. "Whatever way have been the or ore of the South-errors for which, if hey existed, she has by dearest heca ombs suifluiently atoned-the world s indebted to her for a gift that shall urich mankind forover. That gift is he example of a man who, in civil onfliot, when hate rages to flesh its >loodathirsty fangs in hostile hearts, vine the admiration of his enemies; rho charms envy into love and awes nalice into silence; who ooine forth rom amid the smoke and carnugo of >attle revealing a brow unstained with lishonor, and hands unolotted with cruelty ; who, although victor in a tundred fights, against such odds of ,roops and treasures as eskill never ranquished before, sufI ra no word of )asting to soil his pure lips, and no ices his success only in. modest as riptions of gratitude to the Lord of elosts; who, marebing forward in the >erilous path of duty, rofusop. mo nent's. pause for dalliance with Fame, which must follow, but which, like one mntranced, tracks his steps and courts he condescension of his kingly glance; who, as he kneels under trion mphe, rises Lbove the reverses, when the last blow a struck and genius can no longer mope with force, surrenders his sword with the same eq.iniusity with which re over wielded it and reueiv as it back rom the conqueror in mute testimon.. al that none but himself is worthy to wear a weapon whose blade blases with a lustre of purity and prowe s bright as the soimetars of EJen's son Ainels. "Great in victory, r renter still in Jefeat ; great as deseried through the red haze of war, greater still is contemplated through the clear air f peace, great as a General, but reatest as a men-behold in him a haracter which, if not perfect, con meals its faults with the refulgence of ts virtues, even as the sun conceals he spots on its d;zzling disc. I need 0ot call his naun ; ; nor need History when she carves for the highest niche 'a her Pantheon a statue to represent nanhood apotheosized by its own glo ry, inscribe beneath it a name which .he very design of the statute speaks iloud-the immortal name of LEE. ENGLISH SPARROWS FJR OUR SA [EsLAND.-Our sea islands are yearly levastated by caterpillars, and while nany means for their destruction have beon suggested, the English sparrow aas escaped notice. It is well known Ghat two years. ago the shade trees of biew York was infested withi worms, which gave great annioy ance by drop ping on persons passing under them. 1'he nglish sparrow was suggested as the certain remedy, and as an experi tuent, a few were imnported, which rapidly increased in numbers, anid somipletely cured the evil, so that now it is a rare occurrence for a wormn to be seen in either of those cities. I'heae pretty and sprightly little birds ian be easily imported from Liverpool it an insignificant cost, by any of the steamers of our regular line, would r'apidly increase, and in a very few years be in 'sufficient -:numbersM do serious injury to the destr'uctive cater pillars. Our climate being wild, they would not need any of the household protection given them at the. North, and they being small insignificant' birds would be secure frem destrue blon by negroes, who also would soon Learn their great usefulness. It would be well for our- planters to give the introduction of these birds their at ention.--Oharleston News. .GooD-Nawa FnoM Da. LrviNG8'roNFa -THE MiGH'rY MH.--We have late and authentio news fromi that indon itable African explorer, Drh. Living stone, that he is trot only 'alive and well, but that he is prosecuting his geographical researches he has dilscov ered that one of the sources of th6 Nile, empting into the :gregon~ lake Nictoria yanza, rises, some too de. ~rees south. ot the 'equatnr.. ,f tts, e-true the -Nile becomes thelongest river, in the worldl, eclipsing. svemit): tremendous sweep . of.the. Missouri rrom Its sources to the Mississippi'and thence to the Qulf. , A-. faieddea of long line of the Nild may be formed from the fact~ that.ths ' distaegce bem' tween its last reported sodiosoant its f elta along the 14editerranaapjs equal ~o the distance famr fjilain- erp, 0 the city of New York, or' fromn ~Ity of Mexico away up te 1&uit St. inay the aneient r ver o y al led the taighty Nie H Y3 "Dooto~ wiladootatip natter w Itl "ty litilgboy?" V ''Why It is IRi a antispf d ertaefrf Tu HEbU o t r'iicT .- Ohio 1a. r returns indicate tidisastrous result ror te Deminoroy The majority against Mr. Pendleton is thought to be 10,000. We do not believe it will saceed 5,000. This result will be fatal to the presidential aspirations of Mir. Jendleton in the next National Donvention of the Democracy. In proportion as it will militate against dir. Pendleton, it will strengthen with his own patty, Gdvernor Hoff man, of New York, who is no less an idol with the Democracy of the Eist srn States, ;ian is Mr. Pendleton with the Western Democracy. Mr. Hlofm',uan is of the same style of man as his Western rival-a gentleman of flue culture and high impulses. The intelligent public will see in these eleotioun a 6ofirniition of the propriety of the position which this purnal has maintained for months past. The position is that the South is guilty of .madness in waiting'For or expecting her deliverence by the Na tional Democray. We do not desire Republican successes, but we cannot make the lemooracy sucoessful. For four years we have clung to the hope f - deliverance through Democratic victories, and to-day we are further removed from the goal of our hopes, than we were six months after the ter minatlon of the war. Is it stateN manship; is it wisdom, or is it sheer blind, stupid Bourbonism, that looks only to the past, closes its eyes to the otents that are sweeping on with ir reiistible power, and continues its aborative struggle against the inevita ble 1-W Itilmingtun Star. CUna vOR THP WHoOPING COUGE. A physician writes to Demoreet's AMonthly Magazine an interesting com thluniention on the nature and treat ment of whooping cough, and adds : "The remedy for the cure of this terrible disease is simple. It is with in roach and procurable by all. Per haps its very simpli6fty will cause it to be neglected. It is simply to ad minister the decoction or infusion of the common castenea vesca, chesnut leaves ; or. if better understood,ches miY$ (ars tea. The infusion is pro pared in tio ordinary manner that tea is daily prepared for domestic purpos es, to wit : Pour one quart boiling water on one ounce of the chesnut leaves, and keep covered. When co. ., an ordinary teacupful may be given three or four times daiy ; the last at the time of the patient retiring to rest for the night. SugaamiA'd mfilk may be added, if ncbssarf, <d 4Q ceive the pat feft." The Washington correspondent of the Baltimoro Guzete says : "It is now quite certain that Congress will refuse to confirm the nomination of General Sickles as Minister to Spain. The appointment was purely one of Presi dential favor. General Sickles has no friends among the leading men of his party. That he is morally and so cially unfitted for the position is gene rally conceded ; that he is no diplo matist,'has by himself been demon strated. That he was sent to Madrid at all was a mistake, due to the obsti nancy and self-will of the Executive. It will be for Congress to rectify the error as p.-omptly as possible." THE~ SWEDEs IN' Mjssoua.-An eK tensive cotton manufacturer near Stockholm, in 8Sweden, hias just pur chased twelve thousand acr-eq of land ini Southeast Missourl, where he pro p oses to colonise some ffeen hundr~d famil ies 'of Swedish immigrants, and to tiy, on a grand Boale, the experi ment of at once raising and mnazufac turing cotton. The great manufae turers of New England are already turning their eyes towards the South and its peculiar advantages under the new conditions of labor for precisely such an experiment. If successful and it can hardly fail--it will inaugu rare a revolution the consequences of which are at presen~t incalculable. N. Y. Herald Y6Vpy HAnD OAs."-What an age of-shams we live in. Hlero lies before us a letter from President Grant to Mr. Bonner, driver of Dex ter .and ,the New York Ledger, assev errating that. the Cadinet is not a clique of gold swindlers, but imply ing that the highest dignitarie~s of the government are not enlj lable to, but that theyav .actu inereta suspiin.;4 y t terr erh -a trin oy rinner -5-bn't the cboek flu ahqa at the thouglpt that there, could be a call for sucel a letter, and a grant for such an advertisement in the W.Ltte. House. Ab a otarge of this sort~ how Lady Washington would have snapped her constant knitting. kneedles, -and how fiercely hmer lord would havea shaken 'th4 'powvder from his. bair, " 1 l dend rops from the hioti's '?nane l"Chiar. Neuios. Negro wnstery hos b, ,uglit d'ennes. Ree to a ptotty pass, It has burthened her ith' a pubid debt of $40,00.0,000 which c nt! 'be #14 ironiptly; and eakamit.1. re pd ad.' Ire expeng1 hure il *100,000 ayear more than her rovhetute eAgs4.1' SeAut Carolin is A present the least Mu dqbt of any/Soutpeorn 8tate, sind we hope' tie sterrible fact of our later BaaiNord Cr6ra bJ.atie* eeIlttuf6a h ihrN Y L . iof two ,5~1A1%*rb4OlamniM Afrid of -the.oh, Pete Whetstone, of 'Arkansas, .wa 8tI66 tit+elipg oh- horseback througl the interior of the State, and calle4 one evening to stay all night at a lit tio log house near the road Whore en tertainmonts and post-office were kept Iwo other strangers were there, on the mail ridor rodo up about daik Supper being over, the .ialt edgrc and the throo gentlemen were invite' In a small room furnished with a goo< fire and two beds, which wore to a ocimmodate the four persbfis for th night. The mail carrier was a little shabby, dirty looking wretch, witl whom none of the gentlemen liked th idea of sleeping. Pete WIitdton eyed him cloadyi as h nsk6t : 'Wiere are you going to sleep tc night my lad T" "I'll thieep with you, I reckon, lisped the youth, "or one of them fol lorsf I don't care which." Tho other two gentlemen took th hint and occupied one of the beds t< gether immediately, leaving the otlh bed and confab to be enjoyed b Veto and the mail boy together n best they could. Pete aid tbe be commenced hauling off their duds an Pete getting into bed Irst, and wisl ing to get rid of sleeping with th boy, remarked very earnestly : "My friend, I'll tell you befor< hand, I've got the Itch, and you'd be ter not got in boro with me for th disease is catching." The boy who was just getting int bed, too, drawled out very coolly. "Wol, I reckon that don't make bit of difference-I've had it no nearly this seven years," and into be he pitched along with Pete, who pitol 4d out in as groat hurry as if he ha waked up a hornet's nest in the bed. ''ho other gentlemen roared, an the mail boy who hail got penocahl possession of the Led to bii:sol drawled out : "Why, you muth be a sot o' darne fools : main and dad's got the itch worth than I is, and they thlep i that bed lath night when they wat here a quiltin." The other two strang6y woro no in a worse predicament than Pete ha been, and bouncing from their nei as if the house had been on fire, stril Pod, t1h bk their cloth hag? put them o Again, ordered their horses, an though it was nearly ton o'clock, the all three left and rode several mile to the next town before they atop leaving the imperturbable mail cai tief' to the bliss of scratching an sleeping alone. EvIDENeCs OF FULLY.-Asking th publisher of a new periodival' ho many ,copies be sells per week. Maki'n yourself disagreeable an wondering tliat no 6W% will visit yoi Getting drunk and complainin next day of headache. Judging people's piety by their al tendance at church, Ne6gle'dchig to ad ertile,- aicd wo dering that you don't succeed in bus ness, Refa'sing to take a newspaper, an being surprised that the pudyle Ihtug at your ignorance; SAvYD 1 li IPPIN.-A lit urchin seven or eight years obI, i school where a Miss Bkudgett wi teacher, comiposedl the following an and wrote it on his slate at prays time, to the great amusemncnt of t~i boys : "A little mouse ran upl stalru, To hear Miss Bliodgeti say her prayers." The teacher discovered the rhfyr and called out the eulprit. For punishntent she gave him choice,i make another rhyme in five minute or be whipped. 8o after winking ay blinking and seratohing his head ti his time wasnearly ot, and the teace er was lifting the stiok in a threato1 ing pnanner~, at the last moment he e: claimed: "He re I stand before Miss Blodgetty. She's going to strike, and I'm going dodge it." Ie wa ont to his seat. Many years ago the London Puru contained somne verses which are wi enough described by their title: " Lunatic to his Mistress." Their rhayn and rythmn were faultless, anid, althou expreseing nothing but. the eheerest noi sense, they' still contrived, by the sound alone, to conivey to the reader certain sensee of lover-like adoration ai p eal. nero are a half doen lines. sini arly constructed, but it would be stranj if a careless reader should at oes di cover all the startling absurdities at1 the strange juinble of natural phenom nja which they contain: 'Tis midnight, 'and the setting sun Is risisg in the wide, wide West ;.: The-rapi rivers slowly run, Tihe frog is in his downy nest ; The pmnsivo goat &nd spore ise cow: Hilarious hop frein bough to bough. "Why,' said Bob Pittings to .Wn Swipes, wilen he caught him drinkinj "I thought you hiad .bignod tli pledge 1" "So I have," said S wipei "batyou know 'all signs fail ju dt weatherP" . . Ajellatwras'tely hiLtInd be id his bieldved ad bent oab lihi( of anything to say, asked hbet'rbf s was like a talo. "I Idon't keow Iown h4t ,dsi dbtee adosittggta4 th9eg9 9 ofesions th.ek 1wMygg iB#k~ 4anlila' agiri. gqthi to h s r . .)*~ * 0 v ti r e inet land land sea aninsals, and posnsess gunlitie at. We annex the analysis of Profcssor Shtepn 0 -L : IBORATORY OF TiE \EDIC, Analysis of a sample of Carolina Pertilizer, y a Moisture expelled at 212* F, y Organic Malter, writh somno waler of co~mbinatib d Fixed Ingredienbs, A mmonia, dPhusporio Acid-Soluble, l .ing Epluies d insolblo, 0.d 1 E L tnsi di 1 i. 13 SSulphuric Ao'd. 11.01 Equiv Sulphate of Ptih'al P, Sulphate of Soda, Sand, d On the strengths of these resutlti sI am glad C, a na Fertilizer. aWe til furnish this excellent FFlTJLIZElf h 2,000 Ilbs. act 0-]y d P. P. TOALE, it Charleston, S. C., Manufnelurer of n sOiRiSlSuA , B tLIN.DSi d .Y W 1. 8 TAVING TIIlE L'ARGEST AND MOS'7 . CO.\PLE:TE FAtITOlRY in the Snuth ern States, and keepi.ng always on innd ~ large and most complete stock of DOORS. SAhat, BLINDS' gash Doors, Stor . o'ofi, Sh'ntTi-s, M iblfinigs, &a . &a . I an: " nnbddto sell low and at manufnlturre rt.t [ 1 prices. - s SN. I3.--Strict. attention paid t o shippi- p & in goodorder. July 2) . REEDER & DAI I booit; .,ADW; BLIND. Is ADP. s Rf *A * C A RR E T ON," . C OnignetsRspcful.Slcie. o lVNOTl LCOTTQSS T TI~D MS' b, eA RSaes A TNNTi lCKs TIESn unsr d pasbd obyl o and yet nanufacturedu. ' ForN nea-tness, ston ad urabhiipy, thi T has goooeqa. Hain uollte forthe 2 diGnal rcmnd themot alerPlant s AGEi' O. W. WLLIAS& ,. FactorA, Charlest, . (. I aug 20-8m DVS , EA RA DS P ATENT LCKOTITON Gnr eo encor srenghanr dras.til T~e o equAHagt d e for the ao ' p2 ast eByas, sout ofteeld ost enicor. tr aug 10--ors' Charleston, S.CO. a. -AL' 8AJN OPQ n R.0FElED1I&t 00 C.TO AORELEY General CoAntsioh Mat. SEatBROWN' sot Wo he Fos ofie ir hargle-ston, lsto, 0 DOMESTIA1ECONOMY., OW OWN'S WH87.4RFA M 0* D V00 Cartet on add 0.es ss ot onf *rore he eee ,b ROW~k~ r I'OtWNt FM REC I P n R p144~ Skngil a4 o an Engilsh Hvoevoehe hoe' Leter, bb T; P e a Ouhl7 from the Phosphat es of South Carolina, he best Manures known, only inferior to rheso Phosphates aro the remains of ex. s of the greatest vanluo to the agrioultut rd. LL COLLEGE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. ersonally seloeted. 1670 mi expelled t.a low red heat, 16.40 6tt.8) 2. ) alent to 11.27 Soluble Ptosphate of Lime, alent to 13 -18 Insoluble (b ne). 2.1.75 Phosphate of Lime. alent to 23.05 Sulphate of Lime. 80 8.50 11.06 certify to the superiority of the ('aroli. C. U. BiiEPAltD, Jr. to Planters and others at. $60 per ton of GEO. W. WILLIAMS & CO.. Factors. il'pok'ers and Maitktactu rs of COACH AND SADDLERY IA~EI.DWARE. fACKENZIE BROTHERS, N~o. 222 Be.limore 'f., Baltimor,. EbTAnLIMUE 1825. oxing Mlachinee, elleos, hubs, Spokes, Springs, Eanamlle dCanvas, Saddle irces, Hog Skins, Sheep Skins, Shoe Thread. Saddlers' flair, Varnish. Carriage Dolts, Tire Belts, Moss, heels, Enameled Leather, Eag Loather, kiring, tiarness Leather, Stirraps, Bits, o. Also, all other articles appertaininq (e er busieue* sept 18-6u REMOVAL i* JAf;lNd d'isposed' of nif entire stock of ooelf ii WViii~oro, I have removed to* ongl own, (Iharrison's olietand) 'dio'p'en I a first class Dry Goods and Grocery tore. Where will befound every variety Dry Goods/ thetest of Oroceries and set of Liquors, The public are request. I to call and examine may stook. Jf'1)./f/cCarley~ Consolidatlit of Stock. IIAnRLO-rr, CoxLOarrA, & AUO'A R. R. Co,y TaxRasuRER's Orrzeg;. CorLUrBa, 8. 0., September 24, 1 889. TilE undersigned is now prepared to is 'e Certificates of Stock in this Compan, lieu of tho Stock of the Charlotte Vs auth Carolina and the Columbia and iN 1sig Rathocad Companies, in accordance Ich the terms of Consoldation, adopted by .o Stockholders in Joint Convention, July. 1869, vis: '-Each share t racek in the ChaarIote antd auth Carolina R ailroad Octupany shall be nverted Iato a thate in the consolidation mpany; and every fer and one-half tares of stock in the Columbia an~t Augus Railroad Comp~any , shall be converted to a share in the consolidated company i td where, in the last namued apportion. sot, firactions of a shaA. may redelt, the moer thereof mear, at their option, comn etc the unit by. payinag for the neessity Idhuionail shares of Columbia and August.a astroad stock a& the rate of $t2.50 per dre, o4 they tnay receive pay for their irpluis sharoi at the same rafe." Stockholders or their legal repreon yes are required 44to su4.i the old Cer.. lleatqe, when applylng ne, set 28 Beoretiirf and reasdrer. ~JA f t38 .e.0 k 4 d without rphi , Jevw6g Psan' Old Rings, 10,18a d le; pd Shirt But. mu fjtay*1vr orb ha and ellteve. Allwt doduI kmhalikemannae. 1'hiksales ii~Ii t-- 9W on' 0 oe,