University of South Carolina Libraries
COLUMBIA, lg C. Firday Morning. March 18,1875. Vtkm Need of Technical dnd AgrlcnUn ral Edncntlon. Oar friend, Col. D. Wyatt Aikeu, in the March number of tbo Rural Caro? linian, treats in his usnal praotioal and sensible way of the value and the want ?amongst us of "farm economy." He 'Shows it to exist in the habit of no -glootihg to raise sufficient brea?Btuils for the family, in the lack of co-opera tion iu preparing land, planting and -cultivating it, in harvesting the crops, and in making the necessary purchases. Each man buys for himself without consulting bis neighbor, whether it be moles', plows, wagons, floor, grain or anything else that is needed. Of course ho loses all the advantage^ that may be found in bulking his orders with others. There is only one excep? tion to this rnle of praotioe, and that ought hot to exist. There is apparent? ly a universal determination to plant ?oaOro cotton v annually than the world needs, and to .throw the entire orop upon the market at the same time. Oar agrioultarists are thus retail oon samers all tbe year, und wholesale sellers in tbe fall. This oulpablo lack of oonosrt and co-operation results not only in injury to material prosperity, bnt in deprivation of those educational' advantages which are neoeasary to de? velop the groat soienoe of agriculture. - How many, farmers, aays Ool. Aikon, ovar otndy the science of agrioolture? Gov7 mciny of them know anything aboat the proper food for plants, the analysis and capacity of soils, the ele? ments of all prodaots, or Of botany or chemistry? Indeed, how many of .them have even a praotioal knowledge of tho simple. reqairements of the ? f?*mer, suoh as drainage, ditobing, ? sab-soiliDg or proper onlture? Go ?operation is the thing that is needed, and is entirely practicable, too, to diminish the expouooa o? the farmiug interest, to save it time, money and trouble. This Ool. Aiken shows und illustrates in several ways. Tbe same principle, applied to the extirpation of the other evils he describes, tbe ab? sence of educational advantages, the lack of adequate information and training for this bnainess, would be equally effioaoions. To this, we have called attention repeatedly, and we wonid be pleased to see from the pen of Ool. Aiken an exhaustive disousaion of this point. Wo need sohools, Where? the prinoiplea of agrioultare shoald be imparted and knowledge stored away in the minds of tboae ?poB? who as 'the management of tbia great interest devolves. Oar educa? tional facilities are lamentably few and oontraoted.. Oar young men go forth to tha battles of lifer ill equipped for the straggles in whioh they are to en? gage. This is an eminently practica? ble and buoy age, in whioh the workers in every department of human activity shoold be furnished with the foil mind, the cultivated faculties, the ac? quisitions of special knowledge, the ready band, and the quick eye neoas aery .to take rank and impart efficiency in thorn. Workero are now required to be thinkers, too. We have muob, almost everything, to learn iu the South in tbe matter of both general o)pd technical, education. Essentially and chiefly agricultural in our pursuits, we have no sohools whjsire this noble and distinotive employment oan be studied to ad yentogo. Like everything else, it requires special training to under? stand it fully, and to puisne it profita? bly and pleasantly. We may, perhaps, b'utter appreciate our wants in this le? aped, by considering the result of cer? tain inquiries addressed by the English Committee of* Council for Education to the Chambers of Commerce in Great Britain, with regard to the value of teobnical education, its progress in other countries, and the means of its better development in tbat country. Tbe investigation was ? made, and tbe replies printed. Every branch of ma? nufacture requiring skilled labor was declared to oaffet greatly for'tho want of technical oduoatiua *a,|3ogUsh workmen** Tho chief points of the su? periority ol !?renoh and Oermafi wor k men overJ?BgU?b/V?r?'deolared-to be "tho knowledge pf tho ;nnderlyiog principles Of their work and in taste of dopjgn, to i7bioh a brpad, general edu ani of the working olasa and special i'ioaVinstruo^on ih ' taoh trade are essential." We may*' profitably take this lesson to ourselves. Oor leading intorest*; agricultural and mechanical, ?u?ioc irora tue wnut vi ??uOGi? iu whioh aVon may ho trained for their pursuiUv.iRIaDy of our troubles are be* yOftd'pr^Bont remedy, but this is one tbatcanWauroiountbd to o oonoider able) extent. We should bo pleasad if the State Groago ebould take the mat ter into Berioua ponaiderntiop, and Ool. Aifeon is a suitable man to lead in this direction. Jaba Mltcbel. The election of John Mitchtl as member of the British Parliament, by the men of Tipperary, bus been re? ceived by the Ministry of her Majesty the Queen with deoided disfavor. Upon motion of DTsraeli, the Prime Minister, a new writ was issued and a new eleotion will tako place early this montb. A very vigorous dit.oussion hns been gone into ub to whether the oiroamstanoes of his conviotion on a political offduoe, twenty-seven years ago, and of his escapo from tho penal oolony of Van Diemau's Land, should h??e operated to hin exclusion from the high privileges to whioh the par Utility of hia countrymen has culled 1 him. The London Times has obosen to go further and arraign Mr. Milche! for his sympathy with tho Confederate) side in oar recent oivil war. It is willing to grant him amnesty after six and twenty years of exile. It would not condemn him beyond all hope of pardon for breaking his parole in Australia,' whioh charge, by-the-way, cannot bo ??dtaioed. But it objt&ts to the sympathy and affection of his own countrymen being extended to him, because although not born in Virginia, and not bred up in the midst of negro slavery, he devoted himself, in the maternity of his intellect, to fight with] mind and body to maintain it. We are familiar in this country with the habit of vituperation, which those indulge in who turned their backs on slavery after reaping all its profits. The Times is not alone in thna belittling the questions whioh were in issue between the Northern and Southern States. It is a cheap satisfaction, bat one whioh those who look below the surface cannot honestly oherish. John Mitchel's sense of honor and true discernment stand out in strong contrast with the great thanderer'd in the defiant answur he eends it: "I own the soft impeach? ment. The Times waa a Confederate. So were all the best men I know in Amorioa." This was the answer of a man who turns his back on neither friend or foe. And, in making it, he rebukes the narrow aud illiberal view whioh the 7'imcs takes of the great questions involved, as well as of itn hypocrisy and time-serving. ? ? ? . The Philadelphia Bulletin, speukiug of the bloody ruffians who infest the the mining districts of Pennsylvauia, says: "Thin kind of brigandage ought not to be permitted to attain vigorous life in ouch a State as this, where the senti? ment of nearly the eatiro population is in favor of the supremacy of law and order, and it will speedily come to an end if the Sheriff in question is deter? mined to do his duty with or without the assistance of the Governor." Yet this "brigandage" has existed in all its ferocity for several years in law abiding Pennsylvania, in spite of the Sheriffs and the "law-abiding" popu? lation. There merely needs to be some wholesome reconstrucion there. If the Sheriffs are afraid to do their duty, and brigands attain "vigorous life," there must be some intimidation and general Kq Kluxing. The condi? tion is perfect, excepting in one par? ticular, for Federal occupation. The negro and two or throe ex Confede? rates are wanting. Until this vaoantn is filled, the "briganda" of the miniug districts will probably continue to in? timidate Pennsylvania. The liquidation bill, to boil down claims amounting to $832,000 to $500,000, and then to scale that sum ono-half, and provide for its payment in four yeara by a tax on the people, has passed both booses. But it in not law yet, and it is to be hoped that the means to prevent its becoming soch will bo sternly nsed. As originally drawn, tho bill was free from, one of the most .serious objeotions that oan be m?do to it now. In the first seo tfou, the power of appointment of the commissioners nnder it was placed iu tto handa of the Governor. It re? ceived votea on this very account 3ow that the power of appointing the immissioners has been, exercised by the Legiatstore itaelf, embracing those among its members, who mainly hold ok are interested in the claims, the bill is -ihoru of whatever merit it ever bad. -, A North Carolina United Slate* Commissioner deoidea that the Civil Rights Bil| does not apply to bar fjjnmo. A pflaro nan ha refused a drink, fcbeb, with impunity in a white man's saloon. Is hia meat more than his drink in importance? Or, boo ho no oivil right to take hia bitter? where1 he pleaaea? Pertinent queries,' these. The Trtaiiiry Iav?Mt(mct?a. The Special Joint Gommittee opon the address to the* Governor for the removal of the State Treasurer, Car? doso, reported to the Hooso of Repre? sentatives, last evening, the roles of procedure in relation to the case. They fix the time for heatiog it on Tuesday, 16th instant, at 12 M., in the House, and on Wednesday, 17th, at the same hour, in the Senate. They exclude counsel on tho part of the General Ab pembly. They allow the Treasurer to be heard, either in person or by coun? sel, and further allow nine hours for the arguments of his counsel. They limit tho tcstimouy iu thu uuse to re? ports and resolutions made to the Le islature, and to tho reoords, books, vonoberH and other papers in the of? fices of Treasurer, Comptroller-Genoruj and Secretary of State. A letter received from tho Treasurer, aakiDg to bo beard by oonnsel, and designating Messrs. W. D. Porter, O. JD. Mel? ton and L. F. Yonmans, whioh request was grauted, and tho whole time to be used by them fixed at nine bonrs, as stated above The Treaanrer also re? quested ten days within which to make his preparation to auswar, whioh re? quest wa# not aooeded to. The House took a recess from last owning till Monday, 7* P. M. The Senate, after this morning's session, will take recess till Tuesday next. An interview of Gov. Chamberlain with the reporter of tho Charleston Hews and Courier, appeared in that journal, yesterday. He takes a strong and determined position in favor of the Treasurer, and avows his purpose to stand by bim to the last. The views of the Governor, as thus expressed, were the subject of much comment. The present winter is a mere snow flake to that of 1813 in New York. In that year, "there was sleighing in Datchess County on the 10th of Octo? ber, and the weight of wet snow oo tho maple trees ruined many of them, planted for ornament and shade. There were suow drifts in the North? ern part of Dutohesa County luto iu May, 1813. Iu March, there won: very heavy pnow-storme; in one of thorn, Fulton street was banked up with suow four to six feot high, while a pair of horsed were lost in a snow? drift near the present Central Park, and the driver and his companion nar? rowly escaped the same fate." ? ^ ? ?? ?-? - Au interesting description of a burn? ing well in Pennsylvania is given by a oorrespomlent. The well is about ' seven miles f:om Tnroutown, on the farm of Wm. Ilervey, and is owned by Mr. Hcrvey and others in the oil business. The well is 1,145 feet deep, and was bored for oil. It is in a hol? low betweon two abrupt hills, but the light from it is vibible at a distance of thirteen miles. In the immediate1 vicinity the illumination of the trees and rooks is grand beyond description. The flume is about forty feet high and fifteen broad, and the current rashes 1 from tho ground with a rumbling noise. Hou. Samuel Spenoer, LL.D., and oue of the Judges of the Superior Court of North Carolina, who has been in feeble health for a length of time, was sitting in bis piazza with a red oap on his head, when a large cock turkey passed. The Judge, being sleepy, began to nod, when the turkey, mistaking the nodding and red cap for a challenge, made so violent an attack on his Honor, that he threw bim out of his chair on the floor, and before he could get assistance, so beat aud bruised him that he died within a fow days after. The Fkeshets.?The pabt week has given us three heavy freshets, a thing unprecedented in this section. Bridges, fences und lands have suffered severely. The streams in the up country have not boon as high in sixty years. In the low country, the streams were not so high. Tho bridges on Little River, in this County, have been washed away. The bridges on tho other streams have been injured, but not so many washed away. The loss by the freshet has been groat. The farming interest has suffered severely. [Keowee Courier. Tbey have had a revival of religion in Poland; that is, some Poles have been converted to Greek Church or tbodoxy, and the way it is done somewhat peculiar. The Emperor, yearning to see the nnregenerate Poles brought into the light and afiiaenoe of the tratb, ordered a regiment of Cos sacka to arm themielve with bayonets and whips. These formidable ?von geiists then proceeded to the district; indicated, aud went to work, and oconrged 50,000 wretohes into a sub? scription to the Greek oreed. It ia said that all the converts will "stick." New Gold and Silveb Minks ?A spooial from Springfield, Massachu? setts, aaya thos gold and silver mines have been discovered at Neeburyport. Massachusetts, uud the Springfield capitalists havo become interested in them. The discoverer of the rhinos is so bid miner, and baa been able'to trace one vein for three miles, which contains iron, copper, oarbonate of iron and gold and silver. He has a shaft at work whiah has already pro? duced $60,000, white the expense of working has only baeh $1,500. , Cm Matt?bs?Subscribe for tbe Phoenix--do n't borrow. ; Reading matter on every page. The weather la all tbat oould be de* eirod?really indescribable. Egg-picking ie all the go now. Easter is approaohing. Transient advertisements and no? tices must bo paid for in advance. We learn that tbe depot at Hope's Station was robbed of a quantity of bacon, a few nights ago. Euclose tho postage with your sub? scription?Daily, six months, 25 cents; Tri-Wutkly, 15: Weekly, 10 cents. Cull for your tickets iu the roal estate distribution before tbe lucky numbers are all selected. There are a few still left. Joh printing uf every kind, from a miniature visiting oard to n four-sheet poster, turned out; ?! ?bort option, from Phoenix office. Try us. Our thanks aro due to the manageis for a card of invitation to the Fair in aid of tbe Enterprise Fire Eugiuo Company, wbioh is being held in Ir wiu's Hall. Representative Sever, of Virginia, was on the floor or the House, yester? day. Two Congressmen iu as many days is something unusu .1 for Colum? bia. Tbe new Qrm of Jones, Davis Sc Boukuight? Bunounco the receipt, of u lot of select goods; and whut they wank now ia for the pubiio tu oall and see them. Both houses of the General Assem? bly havu agreed to n recess until next week?the House until Monday night nud the Senate, after to-day, until Tuesday morning. The springs aro muddy, and that'* what's tbe matter with the water, j Col. Pearce says the Congaree is not emptying its muddy stream into (he city. The brilliant illumination uf ibe Eastern sky, last night, was caused by tho burning of a held of broomsedge, on the farm of Maj. T. Starke, iu the suburbs of the city. There are no "olfijial" newspapers in tili- State. Public officers and pri? vate citizens can publish every notice required by law to bo made public in auy newspaper they may select. Messrs. J. C. Squier, Winnaboro, E. R. Wallace, Union, D. Bieniao, Wal? halla, aud Julius Poppe, Anderson, are authorized to dispose of tickets for the real estate distribution in this city. A fount of second-hand bourgeois, of about 800 pounds, and a fount of minion, of about 500 pounds, can be obtained at a very low price, (with or without the necessary eases,) by early application at phoenix office. A hand press will bring a good impression. The Washington Street Methodic Church is nearly completed, and it is believed it will bo dedicated within three months. The interior walls are tastily painted in imitation of colored stooe. The pulpit, wall-facing pew backs, .to., of waloot. The gallery extends across the front only. In ro-arraoging our mail-book, ilia Winnsboro News was accidentally omitted. The omission wonld have been corrected before this, had onr at? tention been culled to tbe matter. Wo suppose we must thank tbo News man for bis left-handed compliment. The bird is vain enough to believe tbat it has been on the "right side" in mure than oue instance. Eight new boarders wero received at the Hotel do Donnis, yesterday, viz: From Edge?eld County?William Robertson, grand larceny, four years; Barroll Brooks, burglary and larceny, three years; Robert Mima, Middleton Kiblur, alias Djvonport, burglary and larceny, onoh four years. Sportanbnrg Coauty?William Davis and Samnel Neilson, grand larceny, ono year. Charleston Conu ty?Casper Capers and Jcsso Riohardson, barglary and lar? ceny, two years eaoh. Post Office Matters.?Charleston mail opens 8 A. M. and 3 P. M.; closes 3.30 and 6 P. M. Greenville opens 5 P. M.; doses 8 80 P. M. Northern opens 6 A. M. and 8.30 P. M.; oloses 6 and 1 P. M. Western opens 6 A. M. and 3.30 P. M.; oloSea 1 and 7 p. M. Wilmington opens 5.80 P. M:; cloaca 7.80 A. M. On Snnday, the Post Office is open from 3.15 P. M. to 4.15 P. M. . Phcbnixiaha.?Qnilt and gilt, and then tho grave for tbe oiuuiug world. Don't envy people what they pos? sess, nntil yoo And oat what they en? joy. Many a clergyman has broken down through preaching line-print B?fmono to ooaroo-print pocplc. Hope won't Dear a man up ni?no. If you doubt it, watch the man who] Stauda on the street corner.aliaay hoping for better times. Hope V/onld not do without tho lamp-post* ' I'A 1' i - '1 !. ? ' -* ?? r' ? . ..1 ' I .IT? I. i. -*?-'~4??.-L..., . - _ Co opeiiation.?It is will bs seen by the appended correspondence that nq arrangement is likely to be effected by whioh a joint dam will be con atrnoted across the Ooogaroe. Col. Fearoe) of the Colombia Water Power Company, bed an interview with a committee of the corporators of the Ooogaree Manufacturing Company, recently, whioh lud to this corres? pondence. A general meeting of the corporators of the latter will, doubt lesH, soon bo called, when the mutter will be more fully discussed. If the arrangement can be sutisfactorily cur? ried out, it will prove of immense ad vuutugu uot only to the companies, bat to the city. "Now is too accepted time" for the oiticeus generally to move in this matter: Columbia, February 26. 1875. j 5. A. Pearce, Esq , Agent Columbia Water Power Company?Sib: At a meeting of the corporators of the Con garee Manufacturing Company, held in this city on the 19th instant, the undersigned were appointed a commit? tee to confer with tho representatives of your company iu this city, for the purpose of obtaining from them pledges, first, that they will not inter? fere in auy way with our aompany in oar effort to develop the water power at this place; and, second, that they will co-operate with onr company iu any way promising to be mutually ad? vantageous. Referring tu the pereonul interview we havo already had with yoot sir, as the representative of your company in this city, we havo the houor to request, that you will famish ub as early an practicable witu n formal expression of your conclusions on tho several matters above referred to, in writing, that we may report,the same to the corporators of oar company. Very respectfully, jour obedient aor vants, W. B. NASH, R. D. SENN, JOHN ALEXANDER, . JOHNC. SEEQERS. JOSEPH D. BOSTON? Omca Columbia Watbb Foweb Co., Colombia, S. C, March 2, 1875. Gentlkmen: I received, on yester? day, your communication, dated the 26th nit, informing mu that you were appointed a committee to confer with the representatives of this oompany, i for the purpose of obtaining from them pledges, first, that they will not inter? fere in any way with your company in your efforts to develop the water power at this place; and second, that tbsy will co operate with yonr com? pany ia any way, promising to be mutually advantageous. In reply to said communication, I have to say, that I look with no disfavor upon the proposed scheme of developing the water power of tho Congaree River, and so far from iuterfering with the progress of such work, I am ready to co-operate with you in the enterprise, in oonformity to the Act of the Gene? ral Assembly, granting to yonr com? pany and others that privilege, and feel quite confident that if we combine oar forces there will be no failure. . The construction of the dan' ia a j matter of great moment to the' com? pany I represent, as well as to the community at large; and it wo old have I been boilt by na ssveral years ago, had I the right to do so been accorded to at wben we pleaded for it before the I General Assembly. The power, whan developed by the proper const motion of the dam, will more than suffice for both companies; cud I ohtjll bo satis? fied with an eqnal share With you bf the power, as contemplated by the Act, if we ean, by onr co-operation, seoare the construction of the dam. The matter is of too much importance tons and to the community, to war? rant the interposition of factions Op? position. I am, very respectfully, yonr obedient eervsnt, SAMUEL A. PEARCE, Jb., Agent Colombia Water Power Co. To Messrs. W. B. Nash, R. D. Senn-, j Jobn Alhxanbeb, John O. Sbeqebs and Joseph D. Boston, Committee of Corporators of Oongareo Manu? facturing Company. Land DiSTnintmoN.?A descriptive advertisement in another column an? nounces that preparations are being made for the distribntion of a quantity of real estate in this city?honeeo and lots, building lota, etc, together with a stylish pair of horses, with p.-. vehicle and fixtures, several watches} and other articles of jewelry. There 'are twenty piecea of real estate?some of it Main street property. Tho tiokets be 85?entitling the holdeste admission to the Opera House on tho evonlog'pf the diatribntfon. It 1b desirable that the awards be made at an,early datei ao thst persons intending to inyestwil) please come op at onoei, Tickotd for the distribution'?An ho obtained at Indian1 Girl Cigar Storo, Colambi'n Hotel Cigar Store, So)zbaolior'o .Califoioia Cigar Store, Wheeler House, B: Shvri* dan'e grocery store and afc tho,PnaiKix office. The .drawing bo ander tho supervision of the ticket-holders. Pro eore ticket*at bhee, aa'ii la desirable to get up tho dietribnHoa, pfc the ear? liest possible date. ? :?? RHTT/.t T f v.tiia..^<Uma-?v.x*UU-. \M On* neighbor, Mrs: Hoffrnml/'re? ceived a largo addition, to hor stock, yesterday,' 'f if ft? flfty. *fjg|IS; and vegctablea?oranges, < lomona,1 Malaga grapes, applesy oranbewien cabbages, parsnips, carrots, etc. >;J t'\ T CiSCUXATZOS;JkFP CoKVEKIBHT 8lZ8. The next thing in impotwDoo to the onivorsal circulation of a daily morn? ing paper, as an od vor tie ing medium, is a convenient size, so that it can be handled at the breakfast table'or any? where else without being,tiresome. Snob is the Pikesix. The SpringQcld Republican says: > "If two-thirds of the American newspapers were forced to out down tbeir size 25 to 50 per cent., and get the same matter iuto the reduced spacp, it would be occasion of rejoic iug both for their creditors and their readers." A Western journal, in no tioiog tbe enlargement of its contem? porary, says: "The only drawback to an inorease of tho circulation of the paper is that the weither is too cold to read it in the apple orchard, and the paper is too large to unfold in any or? dinary houHe in Ohio." List of Nbw adveutisement3 Meeting Hook and Ladder Go. Cottage to Bent. Jones, Davis & Boukuights?- Goods. Hotud AR&rvAid, Maroh 11, 1875.? Wheeler House?W T Oabaro, Illinois; W A Baas, H F Hills aod wife, N Y; W 8 Turner, Ga; J B Boner, Vu; B j Lawson, Jr, Baltimore; TM Haookeft, N Y; J S Browniug, Charleston; Jas Hemphill, Chester; H ? Weed and wire, N Y; Mrs: ? B Kimball, Botes | ville; G A Seymour, Charleston; Jas.T Ames and wife, Mass;' J F Walker, and wife, Va; JB Steedmaaj Miss Addie Steedmau, Union; Mrs 0 MoWeryG 8 Mower, Newberry; J F Tceatlin, City; Mrs ? A Lee, Miss; V P Gorjoy, J F Barrow. N Y; M Wesson end wife, ? Hntohins, Mies M F Hutchiao, Mass; Mra J ? Todd aod daughter, Mrs O Thomas; New Haren; Loaia S Bilden, ? Lewis, N C; Mrs N F Tafts, Boston; J N Oobb, Baltimore.. Hendrix House?O O Ablo. Leeaville, 0 Smith, Hardscrahbier J B CLaxkS, j Md; H Anderson; Ga; J G Greer, C ? Randall, Greenville. Mansion House?B D Dean? Ander 1 son; W J Duncan, Charlotte; 8 Hart man, Richmond; Thomas H Bomar, Spartanbnrg; O K Morrison, Doko, Tub Cheat Anti-Pemodio.?Tho certainty and promptitude with whioh Hostetter's Stomach Bitters conquer tbo moat obstinate oases of malarial disease, and the complete protection which they ufiord the system against the miasmatio poison whioh Impreg? nates the air of low lying, marshy lo? calities, stamp them as tbe foremost .of American anti-periodios. Wherever, on this continent, fever and agde is a regular visitant?in tbe bottom lands of tbe South, tbe new clearings and mining districts o*~ the West, and in all localities iu the Eeotoru and Middle States where malaria prevails, the Bit? ters are recognized as, the only troe specific for the disease,-and its most reliable preventive. They are, more? over, a safe and agreeable, as well as a certain, remedy; and on this aoconnt, are immeasurably superior to tho pre? parations of quinine, aruanioybiamatb and other mineral poisons; .'mistakenly administered, as osrativea for. maladies caused by miasma, und whioh, if per siated in, -work irreparable injury to tbe constitution. < ??-?> u ? ? Unfortunately, fever, and ague, and tbe other febrile complaints generated by miasma, are not the only ovilo which, result from it. i A great, variety of disorders are superinduosd' by the irritation which it sautes. Among these are neuralgia, rheumatism, gout, periodical headaohe, palpitation, pain? ful affections of the spleen, and various derangements of the stomach. When traceable to malaria, tbo above affec? tions are apt to eseamev like tbe dis? ease whioh originated them, an inter? mittent type; that is io sj?y, they recur at regular intervals. I Hss tetter 's Bit? tere, however, obviates them all, by banishing the miasmatio virua from the ay stem. ! ? Mar Urfftfl Consumptives, Taiuj , Noticb.?? Every moment pf delay makes yoor enre more hopeless, and much depends on the judicious ohoico of a remedy. The amount of testimony In .favor of Dr. Sohenok's Pulmoaio Sjrnp, as a curs for consumption, for .exceeds all that can be brought tp aupport tho pretensions of any other, medicine. See Dr. 8jqhenok s Almaswo, contain, I ing the certificates of many persose of the highest respectability, who . have be on restored to health, after, being pronounced incurable by phyoiciano .of acknowledged ability*, Sohenqh'aPul monio Syrup alone has cured many,.qg these evidences ,will chotybot tho onre is moot Bchtnck wsie-es ^ox. Wft .pu>._. These ... >^i9M,.:,Mm?^J^P d4ak^,Pi^8.37rths ?ws)r,oeo ol ilon?*fr,J%fttto moat anV cake of coijhocopUpn.msy bQpwedi Dr. Schenok ig j?rofeosionally at his. principalloffloe, corner.B^xtb, and.Arch reason; ? ? *-^'t gfctj A?Btcrjryrtrtut. L^.^#'jWlrV? not already??ortei^oWtVf?nliBttA Liens .to'edOdt0'n^hA?? 'W!,a* oii^.i' Walker.1 TV^^*<?fr?*V{ Charleston. S.'O-VWistf bfi^for! four differefifcfeinW aftirttftmttfef ?l thi tieft fo\i ttoWVb&fafwpawd tot Farmer Acoonnt?nt. ? lio?k for simple farm so counts, iei him ooSu wi oucu, 1 T~ 0^