The Camden journal. [volume] (Camden, S.C.) 1866-1891, August 27, 1874, Image 4
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MY BROTHER JIM.
My brother Jim, my brother Jim,
IIow well do I remember him !
lie was tuy senior by two years,
And 1 his junior nearly ten;
At least it so to me appears.
So much inferior I was then.
I loved him then because he was
The only boy that I could sauce,
Or boldly quarrel with, without
The fears of getting soundly licked?
Sometimes I would, without a doubt,
Oo much too far and then get kicked.
Whenever I got in a fuss
With some boy ready for a "muss"
Who was almost my vory size,
I'd always call for brother Jim:
He'd take the job from off my hands,
And very good it was of him.
Hew very proud was I, and bold.
To stand in safety off, and hold
(Behind some very handy tree
To keep tho sun out of my eyes,)
His coat and hat, ar.d gladly see
That boy gel polished in a trice !
Indeed, such was my modesty,
That I would much prefer that he
Should win the honor and renown
Of every fight I had on hand
Than'to't myself; tbeloss, 1 own,
Was something that I well could stand.
And he, I'm very proud to note,
My most original essays wrote?
Did my hard sums in algebra?
Translated nil my Latin dim,
And did my work while I would play:
Oh, how I loved my brother Jim !
I used to let him saw the wood
Just like n kindly brother should;
Permitted him to bear it in;
Allowed him all the tires to make;
I'd let him keep the garden clean,
I'd do most anything for his sake.
I never growled because ho did
The work, to do which I was bid;
I shared with all I had to snare?
Divided all my chores with him ;
I helped him cat his oranges?
1 was so good to brother Jim.
I used to let him take my place
In staying home of nights, and days
In which there was no school to bother ?
I shared his joys and cakes with him?
ThetVs nothing like a bi^jer brother,
If you had one like my brother Jim !
The Water Spout.
We gave a brief account, yesterday
morning, of a water spout which appeared
at Langley, S. C., last Wednesday
afternoon. We copy the following
particulars of this strange phenomenon
from the Augusta Chronicle
and Sentinel:
A dense cloud was first seen ap
proaehing the pond, being apparently
a considerable distance up. Nothing
particular was thought of it, the citizens
of Langley being at the time occupied
in trying to keep cool?a hard
thing to do with the thermometer at
100 degrees in tho shade. But presently
a startling circumstance occurred.
The cloud had halted over the
pond and established connection with
the latter. A genuine water spout
had in fact been evolved, and an immense
quantity of water was rushing
skyward through the liquid conductor.
W?,?r, first seen, the water spout was
near the dam, and traveled slowly across
the pond until it reached the
railroad trestle work, a 'distance of
a miloand a quarter from its startting
point, when it disappeared, unci
the cloud moved majestically off, carrying
with it a thousand gallons of
water which had been drawn from the
the pond. The latter, covering an
area of 600 acres, was in fact lowered
fullv two inches. The huge column
which joined the upper region to the
expanse of water below resembled a
cone in form, and rotated horizontally
with exceeding rapidity. The marvelous
speed with which the column turned
impressed the beholder immediately
with the idea that it was associated
with a whirlwind. This was most probably
the case, as a tremendous wind
passed over Augusta from the direction
of Langlev some hours afterwards.?
Science has demonstrated that in almost
every instance the phenomena
denominated water spouts are dependent
upon some form of whirling wind,
generated by some disturbance of the
elements. Electricity, that great force
with which man has become so intimately
acquainted during the lust
quarter of a century, ami yet knows
so little of, doubtless has much to do
with the phenomena of waterspouts.?
Tlic heavens were urmiam nUU
cessant. flashes of lightning after the
spont described above had disappeared.
There was no rushing noise connected
with it. as is the ease in some instances.
The water underneath the clouds
just before the spout formed was in a
state of great agitation. Waves rolled
angrily and a perceptible bulge was
seen. As the cloud halted, a sort of
funnel protrude 1 from it and dropped
slowly down, becoming larger as it
lengthened, the broader portion or
base being at the surface of the cloud.
When it reached a point about onefourth
the distance between the cloud
and the pond, the bulge on the surface
of the latter rose to meet it, and the
two at length joined, when the water
from the pond commenced ascending
into the cloud, which moved slowly towards
the trestle-work. The waves
in the water?all leaping and tending
towards the spout?and the spout itself
continue I toe vcrtio. < motion referred
to above. The out ide of the
watery funnel was dark and not well
defined, while the centre was much
lighter, being rather of a bluish cast.
This would secui to indicate that the
column was partly hollow, the dark
portions representing the sides. There
can be no doubt but that the immense
quantity of water which was transferred
from the pond to the cloud was
literally sucked up. The spout finally
disappeared, as if it had been drawr
up bodily into the cloud, while the latter
quietly moved oft' to parts unknown.
.Not a drop of rain fell during
the occurrence or afterwards. The
formation and subsequent motions of
the spout are described as having made
up a spectacle grand in extreme. Nothing
of the kind was ever befoie seen in
that section. The strangest part of
the phenomena was the'Jfact that the
cloud, so burdened with water, moved
on without dispensing any of it in the
form of rain in the neighborhood.
Phoenix.
The Economies of Life.
You tell me that debt and despair
arc upon you; that when the clothes,
rent, fuel and lights are paid for, you
have only six hundred dollars left with
which to feed your family of eight,
and that it can't he done. I think I
have heard this story a thousand times,
and that I have written advice about
it a hundred times. And as the whole
subject is very simple, I must go over
the same ground again.
The largest item in your table expenditure
is meat. Beef is high. In
our city market a good 3teak is worth
from thirty to thirty-five cents per
pound. Beef steak for your family
would alone cost, for breakfast and
supper, more than two dollars, and
then if you had a roast of sirloin for
dinner, that would cost nearly as much
more. So if that s the right way to
live, you are managing well to get
on with six bundled dollars per year.
But do you know that there are only
about sixty pounds of sirloin which
i&used for roast and steaks, in an ox
weighing eight hundred pounds ??
There other parts of the animal?good
solid meat?which selis for five cents
a pound. Portions of the neck, which
when properly cooked, are the most
substantial and nourishing parts of
the carcass, are sold for four or five
cents a pound. One pound of this cut
in small pieces and boiled two hours
i in three quarts of water, in a close
vessel, with five cents worth of potatoes,
turnips, parsnips and carrots,
with salt and pepper, and some savory
herb, would make an excellent dinner
for all of you. Lay bits of toasted
bread upon the platter, and then pour
011 your stew. That's a dinner fit for
a king.
Everybody likes variety. Well, puichase
next day a knuckle of veal,
which will cost you all* of ten cents,
and which your wife will treat in the
same way as the beef, except that she
will leave out the carrots and parsnips
and put in bits of toasted bread or dumplings.
)
The next day try a hit of the forcshoulder
of a sheep, which is very
cheap. When mutton chops were selling
for twenty-cents per pound, I
have seen mutton fore-shoulder of fair
quality, selling for two cents. It is a
part which is always very cheap. Cut
up into hits, ami cooked as above, a
"rand dinner for the eight members
.
of your family can be got up for a
quarter of a dollar.
Any of these stews may be made
into a basket meat pie by way of variety.
I have giver, these by the way of illustration.
You needn't have the
<ame dinner twice a month. Fish may
i ?i 1
DC cmpioycu UUUUIMUllilllJ, uuu ruuiv
excellent sorts are very cheap.
Hut these preparations of meat are
comparatively expensive. That beautiful
white Southern corn, cracked
wheat, oat meal, brans, and other similar
foods are very cheap. A breakfast
of oat meal and white corn, with
a little milk, would cost for your
whole family not more than ten cents,
and it would be a breakfast on which
! vou could all work hard. Skipping
the dinner which has already been discussed,
let us consider for a moment
the supper. If you keep a cow?as
every man properly located with a
family of children should?a howl of
l bread and milk, or some warmed up
. bean porridge, and a cup of tea will
satisfy you.
Such food as I have thus hinted at
is not only very cheap, and would
j bring your table expenses within two
! hundred dollars, hut upon it you would
all gain flesh, have brighter eyes, fine
! teeth, sweeter breath, and he a!to?;eth'
O
, er healthier than if you had fed your
J self upon the present fried, greasy,
compounded stuff-, with pies, cakeI
and puddings.?
Not while one human heart beats
will the tales of woman's devotion to
the objects of her affection cease to he
told. In the absence of our poet we
will attempt to note in sober prose,
though with profound emotion, an instance
of this devotion in the Chicago
fire. -I woman with heart-strings torn
with agony watched the roof of her
house glowing with prodigious flames.
Those dear to her still remained in the
building; was it any wonder that her
eye lighted with an almost maniac
glaro, and Iter movements showed all the
torture site was enduring? It was too
much?too much, lb-fore the alarmed
bystanders could arrest her she ha 1
rushed desperately into the flaming
house, animated by a heroic self-sacri'
fiee. Lot us rejoice that it was rewarded;
she emerged unharmed, carry(ing
inlicr noble arms the innocent creatures
she had saved?four eats howljing
and clawing like mad.
!! HI II ! ! Ill ! !! !? ! II I???II
Woman's IIiuhts.?The following
arc the opening sentences of an address
on this subject by Mrs. Skinner:
Miss President, feller wiunnin, and
male trash generally?I am here to-day
for the purpose of discussing woman's
rights, rccussing her wrongs and cussing
the men.
I believe the sexes were-created perfectly
equal, with the women a little
more equal than the men.
I also believe that the world would
to-day he happier if man had never existed.
As a success man is a failure, and I
bless my stars that my mother was a
woman. [Applause.]
1 not only maintain their principles,
hut I maintain a shiftless husband besides.
They say man was created first.?
Well, 'sposc he was. A'nt first cxvmviinnntc
nlwavs failures?
If I was a betting man, I would bet
$250 they arc.
The only decent thing about him
was a rib, and that went to make something
better. [Applause.]
And then they throw into our faces
about taking an apple. I'll bet five
dollars that Adam boosted her up the
tree and only gave her the core.
And what did lie do when he was
found out? True to his masculine instincts,
he sneaked behind Eve's Grecian
bend and said, "Twant me; 'twas
her," and woman has had to father
everything, and mother it too.
What we want is the ballot, and the
ballot we're bound to have, if we have to
let down our back hair and swim in a
sea of gore. [Sensation.]
Before and after?it is always the
same story ! The other day at Detroit
an individual from the rural districts,
having considerable money in his possession
and being moderately drunk,
was warned by a policeman to take
care of himself. To which the self
confident bacchanal responded: "You
bet I will! Why, Mister, I'm chain
lightning rolled in a ball and stuck full
of red hot bowie knives. I'm a thunderbolt
from the North; I'm a regular (
rip-up thunderbolt! Folks want to let
me alone, they do!" Alas! that such a
dream of invincibility should be dissi'
pated! When the next morning dawned,
? * * TO TIT 11 V
the drinker, "where was nc: >>en, r.c
was discovered by tlio same policeman |
fast asleep in a coal-shed. His eyes
were in mourning, and there was an
: unnatural hole in his head. Watch
gone! Money gone! The policeman,
arousing the slumberer, with a touch
of irony in his tone, inquired: "Aren't
you the Thunderbolt from the North?
Then the Thunderbolt sat up, and
slowly and sadly replied: "No; I haint
|'zaekly, a thunderbolt, but I'm the
durncd fool who thought lie was."
rI
" Hard Money, Free Trade " and
1 Home Rule," takes wonderfully with
the people as a political motto 'tEast
and West.
One pint of whiskey cost a jury in
Sullivan, Illinois, about three hundred
dollars the other day, eleven jurors
having been fined by a ferocious judge
$25 each for drinking in the jury
room.
The question why printers do not
i get rich as well as brewers, is well answered
thus: Because printers work
for the head and brewers for the stomach.
and where twenty men have storn*
i i 1
iciis oiny one tins Drains.
A pious soul giving expression to
his devotional fcelingsin a short speech
in church said: "I never shall cease
to love and revere the name of my Savior,
nor can I ever forget how his
name looks in the Bible as it is there
spelled J e-a-s-o-u-s."
A Sunday school teacher was giving
a lesson on Ruth. She wanted to
bring out the kindness of lJoaz in commanding
the reapers to drop large
liandfuls of wheat. *'Xow, children,"
"Boaz did another nice thing forjRuth?
can you tell mewhat it was?" "Married
her," said one of the boys.
A now.-paper contributor says. *Tt
is an exploded theory that women
dress to plca.se men. They dress to
i please or spite each other." We were
1 under the impression they dressed
because they have an idea that it
doesn't look well to be seen without
any clothes on.
At ilie funeral of his sixth wife
: Mr. I), proffered the officiating clerI
.mil I,....!- Tl,?
ITYllliUl il uunai ?* **v|
C? , o t i
! minister declined, it, saying lie was
not accustomed to accept pay for such
services. ".lust as you say," coolly
replied the mourner, "hut that's just
what I have been in the habit of pay\
??gl
'p to the time of Queen Elizabeth,
I chimneys in England were the exception
rather than a rule. The great
castles and abbeys were provided with
them more than two centuries before
il e beginning of her reign; the manorhouses
were furnished with them in the
reign just preceding hers, while the
I houses of the yeomanry were a long
way behind the fashion.
;\(> i tcij.
Our ft ioii-l- fin.I msfoiiMM s will j-lonsc com;
foruunl nial settle their arcoiiM*. Tin losses
: l.y I lie vr en! fir render n fpiT.lv -<>t 11<>incii t
imperative. For flii' Jin ?riif, we w ill lw found
fit liit- ofliee of .1. ]) Kennedy, over W. I..
A rl liar's si ore.
HolnSFOX k MNLAP.
1'orn, 4'oa'ia.
O AAlA ltUtsIlIII..3. K..r Mile low, l.v
j4o,UUU BAL M BltO'S.
liEAKAJiY'N
FLUID EXTKACT
BUCHU.
The only known romcdy for
BRIGHT'S DISEASE,
And a positive cure for
GOUT, GRAVKL. STRICTURES, DIABETES,
DYSPEPSIA, NERVOUS
DEBILITY, DROPSY,
Non-retention or Incontinence of Urine, Irrition,
Inflammation or Ulceration of the
BLABBER AND KIDNEYS,
I SPERMATOKIUKEA,
Lcucliorrhocn, or Whites, Diseases of the
Prostate Gland, Stone in the Bladder.
Calculus Gravel or Brickdust Deposit and Mu
Cltn or Milky Discharges.
KJTCABIVEYN
EXTRACT BUCHU
Permanently Cures all Diseases of (lie
BLADDER, KIDNEY8, AND DROPSICAL
SWELLINGS,
Existing in Men, Women ami Children,
MATTER WHAT THE AGE !
Prof. Steele says: "One bottle of Kearney's
Fluid Extract Bucliu is worth more
than all other Buclms combined."
Price One Dollar per Bottle, or Six Bottles
for Five Dollars.
Depot., 104 Duane St., Neio York
A Physician in attendance to answer correspondence
and give advice gratis,
Send stamp for Pamphlets, free.-^fi
TO THE
Nervous and Debilitated.
OF BOTH SEXES.
No CJtnnjc fur Advice and Consultation.
Dn. J. B. Dvott, graduated of Jefferson
Medical College, Philadelphia, author of
several valuable works, can be consulted on
all diseases of the Sexual or Urinary Organs,
(which lie has made an especial study cither
in male or female, no matter from what cause
originating or of how long standing. a practicc
of 30 years enables to treat diseases with
success. Cures guaranteed. Charge* reasonable.
Those at a distance can forward letter
describing symptoms and enclosing stamp to
prepay postage.
Send for the Gui'le to Health. Price lOcenls.
J. 11. DYOTT, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon, 101 Dunne St.. N. Y..
AMedical Triumph
DR. D. S. PERRY'S
VEGETABLE AliOMATIC
BiTTEUS.
| The^e Hitler^ must pecome tho univer-.il
remedy of the age. 'There is in.tiling l?l.e
| thetu or to e.ju.il them under the sun. They
restore the weak, invigorate the feeble, and
give new life and tone to the broken down
system. In miasmatic and malarious districts
they are worth a ship load of tjtlinine
powders and pills. They arc specially adapted
to persons suffering from
Dyspepsia, Liver Complaints,
Costiveness, Headache,
Neuralgia. Rheumatism,
Chills and Fevers and Piles.
To Delicate Females.
Ladies. oM or young, will furl these Hitters
especially adapted to diseases peculiar in
their sex. Nervousness, Lassitude, Want < {
Appetite, and General Debility, all yield t"
the utagic charm of these inestimable Diners.
HEAR WHAT IS SAID.
IIKAlt WIIAT IS SAID.
NEAR WHAT IS SAID.
"Wonderful effects have resulted from yntir
Dr. Perry's Hitters."
"My chills are gone. 1 can hardly believe
it."
"Send me one case of Perry's Hitters igant.
Nothing like them here."
"I enclose you alii lavit of my case. I had
to do so to convince you of the wonderful
cure."
"Surely they are the most delightful wintonic
in the uorld."
"Dr. Wilson says that you are a public
nenfiucior.
''Hurrah! No mure Rheumatism. '
"No more headache, thanks to you!
Wc couM till this paper twice over w It It
ju.sl such genuine extracts, l>ut tlie al.ovi
must suffice. Our llittcranrc prepared under
tlie supervision of I?i*. It. S. Perry, Member
of lite Royal College of Physicians aiel Surgeons.
Loudon. .England, and of the Medical
'linic of (tintg.ivv.
\ 11 ortlqra should be addrcsacd to TJIC
PKKItV AROMATIC HITTER fit .
new york. u. s.
The liitterx arc sold citlwi' Lj the Lottie
or ease at <?1 per Lottie.
Parties in sending for letters of advice as
to their diseases will confer ?|uilo a favor liy
I giving name of county lis well as town where
tliey reside. It will save us a wonderful
! amount of time and annoyance if this will lie
j observed.
The Perry Aromatic Hitter (?o.
42 Cuurtl.iudt Street.
March lit. 12m
j<*roccrics,
IBJLUlsZ BRO'S,
I
iiavi: in stdhi:, ciioick
I FAMILY GROCERIES
AND
PLANTATION SUPPLIES,
j Which they arc offering on their usual liberal
I terms. Their stock is complete, and will he
replenished uscircuuihtnuccti may leijiure.
I May 28- ' if
mmmmmmmmmmmmmammmamp??
Dr. J. Walker's California
Yiliegar Hitters arc a purely Vegetable
preparation, made chiefly from
the native herbs found oil the lower
rauges of the Sierra Nevada mountains
of California, the medicinal
properties of which aro extracted
therefrom without the use of Alcohol.
The question is almost daily asked,
" What is tho cause of the unparalleled
success of V ix eg ah Bitters
?" Our answer is, that they
remove the cause of disease, and
the patient recovers his health. They
are the great blood purifier and a
life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator
and Invigorator of tho system.
Never before in the history of the world
has a medicine been compounded possessing
the remarkable cjualities of Vinegar
Bitters in healing the sick of
every disease man is heir to. They aro
a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation of
the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious
Diseases
The properties of Dr. Walker's
Vinegar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic.
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative,
Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-irritant,
Sudorific. Alterative, and Anti-Bilious.
grateful Thousands proclaim
Vinegar Bitters the most wonderful
Invigorant that ever sustained
the sinking system.
No Person can take these Bitters
according to directions, and romain
long unwell, provided their
bones are rot destroyed by mineral
poison or other means, and vital organs
wast'd beyond repair.
Bilious, Remittent, find Intermittent
Fevers, which arc so
prevalent in the valleys of our great
fivers throughout the United States,
especially those of the Mississippi
Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee,
Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado,
Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl,
Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke,
James, and many others,
MMtVi tlioir v.ist trilmf-nrips. thrmnrb
out our entire country during tho
Summer and Autumn, and remarkably
so during seasons of unusual
heat and dryness, arc invariably accompanied
by extcusivo derangements
of the stomach and liver, and
other abdominal viscera. In their
treatment, a purgative, exerting a
powerful influence upon these various
organs, is essentially necessary.
There is no cathartic for the purpose
equal to Dr. J. Walker's Vinegar
P'lTTKKs, as they will speedily removo
the dark-colored viscid mutter with which
the bowels are loaded, at the same time
stimulating the secretions of tho liver,
and generally restoring tho healthy functions
of the digestive organs.
Fortify tho body against disease
by purifying all its fluids with
Vixkgar Hitters. So epidemic can
| take hold of a system thus fore-armed.
; Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache.
I'ain in tho Shoulders. Coughs,
Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour
Eructations of tho Stomach, Had Taste
in the Mouth, bilious Attacks, Paipitu
tion of tho Heart, Inflammation of tho
Lungs, I'ain in the region of tho Kidneys,
and a hundred other painful symptoms,
are the offsprings of Dyspepsia One hottic
will prove a better guarantee of its
merits than a lengthy advertisement.
Scrofula, or King's Evil, Whito
Swellings, I'lccrs, Erysipelas, Swelled
Meek, Cioitrc, Scrofulous Inflammations,
Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial affee
tions, Old Sores, lirnpuous 01 me sum,
Soro Eyes, etc. In thcso, as in all other
constitutional Diseases, Walker's Vixi
hoar Bitters have shown their great curntivo
powers in the most obstiuato and
| intractable cases.
For Inflammatory and Chronic
]tlientiiatisin,Gout, Bilious, Remittent
and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases
of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder,
these Bitters havo 110 cijual. Such Diseases
are caused by Vitiated Blood.
Mechanical Diseases.?Persons
engaged in Paints and 2dinoraIs, such as
; Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters and
Miners, as they advanco in life, aro sub|
jeet to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard
against this, take a do?c of Walker's
Vinegar Bitters occasionally.
For Skin Diseases, Eruptions,
Tetter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples,
Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ringworms,
Scald-head, Soro Eyes, Erysipelas,
Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of tho
Skjn, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of
whatever name or nature, aro literally
dug up and carried out of the system in a
short time by the use of these Ititters.
l'in, Tape, and other Worms,
lnrL-irwr in tlu> KVsteill of SO 111 .HIV thoU
Minds, are effectually destroyed Hiid removed.
No system of medicine, no vermifuges.
110 anthelmintics will free tho
i system from worms like these Bitters.
ForFonmlt'C omplainis, in young
or old, married or single, at the dawn of
i womanhood, orthe turn of life, theso Tonic
Bitters display so decided an inilueuce
that improvement is soon perceptible.
('h^inse tho Vitiated Blood
whenever you find its impurities bursting
through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions,
or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstructed
and sluggish in tho veins; ch-auso
it when it is foul ; votir feelings will tell
you when. Keep the blood pure, and the
health of the svstom will follow.
It. II. .M< DO.VU.I) .t CO.,
Dnicgint* &. I Shi. Agt* , San Francisco. Cnlifbrii;a.
\ cor. ot? Washington uml Charlton St*. N. Y.
buhl Ijy ull Druggists anil Dcaltri.
Tin: LAMEST AN!) I1E.ST
As-.o tcd stock of French and Ainericaii
CONPSCTIONS,
NTT'S. KIU'ITS, CANNED OOODS, -vc.
Can al t ay s be fun ml at
K1KKLEY \ IIA BLAND'S.
Jaunary S. It'
E iTi ml for {**;? 3
A?*i;i:s ul'WooD I.AMI. throe miles
Mill from t'annli-ii. on the Clierau mail,
lieloii; in;: to John T. Grnlintu ami N. liraiiiitn.
Apply to
NELSON, Trustee.
December I.
i
To
Tim MIMSt'OI'AL ItiiCi'OKV, until the
first of October next. Apple t>>
April t?. j. M. DAVIS,
20,000 pounds 1?A< <>A
5 barrels II \MS.
I For sale by
j USA * *? BKO
1873 1873.
"fall trade"
We arc now receiving a large stock of .
DS6Y ttOOi>8,
CLOTHING, for Men and Coys,
IIATS, of all styles,
10 ) cases COOTS AND SHOES,
HARDWARE AND CROCKERY,
SADDLERY AND HARNESS.
In fact, a great rnanj articles too'tediousto
mention?all of which we will sell at ot/r
usual low prices.
BAUM BRO.
September 19 tf
Iron and Steel.
15.000 lbs. IRON, of different sizes,
15,000 lbs. PLOW STEEL, ?
For sale by BAUM BRO.
-To nnnrtr 99 tf
The Wilmington Star.
Established only Nix Years.
DAILY STAR.
Has the largest circulation of any Daily
Newspaper in the State, and a circulation in
Wilmington nearly twice as large as any
otber paper.
All the news of the day will be found in it.
oudcnsCd when unimportant, at length when
f moment, and always presented in a clear,
nteiligent and interesting manner.
SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE.)
One Year, ?7 00
Six Months, . 3 50
Three months, 2 UO
WEEKLY STAR.
PlilCE REDUCED.
The Weekly Star is now combined with
the North Carolina Farmer, and is one ol
the cheapest papers in the country, at the
following
DEDUCED RATES:
One copy, one yerr, $1 50
One copy, six months. 1 00
Clubs of 5 lo 10, one year, ?1 25 per copy.
Clubs of 10 or more, one year, only $1 OC
Specimen copies sent on application.
Address,
WM. II. BERNARD,
Editor and Proprietor,
Wilmington, N. C.
R. R. R?
RADWAY'S READY RELIEF
CUBES THE WORST PAINS
In from One to Twenty Minutes.
NOT ONfc riUUn
after rtfadingthDadvcrtiiement need any ono
SUFFER WITH PAIN.
BADWArs READY RELIEF 13 A CUBE FOR
EVERY PAIN.
It was the first and la
Tlie Only Pain Remedy
that Instantly stops the most excruciating palm, allays
; Inilamuiatlona, and cures Congestions. whether of the
I Lung*. stomach, BoweU, or other glands or organs, by
one application.
IN FROM ONF. TO TWENTY MINUTES,
no mailer how rlnlsat or eierueUUng the pain the
RHEUMATIC, ffc.1 ridden. Infirm, Crippled. Nervous,
Neuralgic, or prostrated with disease may suffer,
RADWAY'S READY RELIEF
WILL AFFOBD INSTANT EASE.
infammation OF thf. kidneys.
INFLAMMATION OF THE BLADDER.
INFLAMMATION nF THE BOWELS.
CONGESTION OF TIIE LUNGS.
SORE THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHING.
PALPITATION OF TIIE HEART.
HYSTERICS, CROUP, DIPUTKRIA.
catarrh,influenza.
headache, toothache.
N EUR A LGIA, RHEUMATISM.
COLD CHILLS, AGUE CHILLS.
The application of the Ready Relieriothepartor
parts where the pain or difficulty catsu will afford ease
and CouiiorL
Twenty drops In half a tumbler of water will In a few
moments curs CH It AM PS.SPaSMS.SOU R STOM ACU,
HEARTHI'KN, SICK HEADACHE, DIARRHOEA,
DYSENTERY, COLIC. WIND IN THE BOWELS,
and all I STERNAL PAINS.
Travelers should always carry a bottle or Radwa;'i
Ready Relief with them. A lew drops In
water will prevent sickness or pains from change of
water. It U OcUtrUuu French Brandy or Bitters as a
Stimulant.
FEVER A\D AGUE.
FEVER AND AGUE cured for fifty cents. There Is
Hot a remedial agent In this world that will cure Fever
and Ague, and all other Malarious, Itiloiu, Scarlet,
Typhoid. Yellow, nnd other Fevers [aided hv RADWAY'S
l'll.IAlsoqutckaeRADWAY'tiREADY RELIEF.
Fifty cents pgr bottle.
HEALTH! BEAUTY!!
STRONG AND PURE RICH BLOOD?INCREASE
OK FLESH AND WEIGHT?CLEAR SKIN AND
BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION SECURED TO ALL.
DR. RADWAY'S
Sarsaparillian Resolvent
THE GREAT BLOOD PURSFIER.
HAS M ADKTI1E MOST ASTONISHING CURKSt SO
QUICK.SO R\PI1> are IHK chang Eh. THE
BODt L'NDEROt>KS. UNDER TilEINFl.Uh NCR
OF THIS TRULY WONDERFUL MEDIclNE,
THAT
Every Day an Increase in Flesl
j irr i.a , ? nj t^h
i amiwsjpi ism aim run.
Every limp of th" SARSaPARII.T.IAN RESOLVENT
romir.unlcite* through the Ulood,Sweat, trui*,
and other Flu Us ithdjmctt of the *> ?(xm the vigor or
life, for itmpair* the waste* of the hedy with new and
'>>111.1 material. Scrofula. Syphilis, Consumption,
Glandular dt??u?e, Ulcere in the thrust. Mouth. Titno
ire. Nodes 1 u the ( Una* mid other parts of the ?> ."tern,
tone Eyes Striitnoroiigilischiiiyes front the K.ir- nnd
the worst forms of Skin diseases, Eruptions, Kcvev
Sire*,SMlilll'>|i|. Ring Wi :tn fall Hhcutn.Krysipelai,
' Acne. ItlsekHpoU. Worm sin the Klrsh, Tuition. Can.
c>>ptinthtf Womb, anil oil waken :.? ,-rtSl pnlnlul discharges,
Night Swoats, law* ofbpcriit andu.lwAstesuf
the life principle, are withla the eureltve tar.gaot ibta
wonder ol Modern Chemistry, and a few slays' me mil
procetoany person using lifer e ther of these forms of
disease Us potent power to cure them.
| II the patient, daily becoming reduced by the. wastes
an4dceomp.tsltion that Is r. ntinually progressing. auecccdsitiariestmgtb.so
unites, r.n'l repairs the saqja
I with ti iv material made from health) blood?and thla
tbcSAKSAP \ It I I.I.I A N upland does secure?a enra
lsecriain; for alien once t Ids remedy, commences Ita
workol purification, and to, cgils in diminishing the
loasnf waste*. 1U repairs will 11 rapid, and every day
the patient will feel hoineligrowing better nttd stronger,
the hudngostlng better,appetite improving, and llssh
| and weight Increasing.
Not on' v decs th h4i;*sr*Ktu.uv Rt*oi.vr.*T excel*
all known remedial agent* in thu ouroot t'hrenic.Scrofulous.
Constitutional, and skin disease* , butuislho
I only pos.tivc euro for
Kitlncy ?D Bladder Coinplaintst
Urinary anil Womb diseases Gravel l>i*t>ev*. Dropsy,
Stoppage ol Wal r, Incontinence ol t rine. Ill I, ht's 1)|?ease,
Albuminuria, ami lit *11 esses where there are
brick d'istii.-| ostia, or the water I* thick, chnidv. imied
Willi si|i>stan>'.s like the wbheofan toe. or thread* Ilk*
white auk, ortberelsa nmrhirt. dart, bilious appear lire
ami w hite hone dustth'i '"Oi*. a id when thereto
apri.-kiiiL- burningsruastlou wlien passing water, and
paiu iu the Small of the Deck and along the I. >iu*.
Tumor of 12 Years* Growth
Cured by Had way's Resolvent*
OR. RADWAY'S
- ? I I BUI
Perfect Pargitire iBegiilitujnin
purfrotlc I1?t>h, clectBlly r a'.M Willi owcct com,
norffi*. r*gn ' * * "'''' i*trrn.,iii':i. K?d\??r.t'.|U
i.ri?. rt'tifHliil'" Tii r?#l II r ^nnii.rh,
Iji'or, I. >?: : ,J ?. I' ' '!?r. Nit.
iloi.l? i MMiptlM i ..kin! <. InllgOttoB, Dm.
I inpih III linn inf i I K? . .Inflal B>4tk>n ofllc
Uoirvlt, r i ; -.:i I' ii mmtol iImletonwl
Vim i i. n ., n . hi tI. i . - mi'i'ire Purely
\ i-ii I-*, rot: i ntn.'niimi rt'ii>,iui,iti'u:*ufilelctBincumin
\
fcw i! < ofH \ll\VIV SPTl.l.Snil| f:rr t.'.n aysfinfi.
in ai' 'I ii 'i.ti' I f.'M 4. 1'rirc, 21 cent*
per lun m i.n ItV UttUOUISTS.
I; vl' ' K\l. E INI> Tl'l K ' Scnl rr.e l?tt?r
mil p 11 H * I'V * V .t l . N > "2 W.irri?B St.. New
I'ori. Ii.formation wo.-t.i tUo.u&Lilt win U mcI you,
i
? j
Charleston, S. C. Oct. 18, 187$.
On and after Sunday the 10th inst., (be
Passenger Trains of this Roud will run as
follows?
Leave Columbia at 8 40 a. m.
Arrive at Charleston at 4.20 p. m.
Leave Charleston at 0.00 a. m.
Arrive at Columbia at 6. OOp. m.
nioht expres8.
(Sundays Excepted.) '
Leave Columbia at 7 If) p.m. '
Arrive at Charleston at 7.10 a. m.
Leave Charlestonat 7.10 p. m.
Arrive at Columbia at 6.30 a.m.
Camden Accommodation Train.
W'l run through toColnmbia, Monday, Wednesday
and Saturday as follows:
Leave Camden at 6 60 a. m.
Arrive at Columbia at 11 50 a. m.
Leave Columbia at 1 50 a. m.
Arrive at Camden at 6 36 p m.
JfiTNight Trains connect at Augusta witfc
the Georgia Road, and the Macon and Au.
gusta Road. This is the quickest and most
direct route and ns comfortable and as cheay
as any other route to Louisville, Cincinnati,
Chicago, St. Louis, and all other points West
and Northwest.
jgyDay Trains connect with the Charlotte
Road.
Through Tickets ou sale, via this route, te
all points North.
ftaSrCamden Train connects at Kingsvill
daily (except Sunday) with Day Pagscnge
Train.
S. S. SOLOMONS,
Vice PrtoideM^~~
S. B. Pickkks, G. T. A.
Wilmington, Columbia ^
gusta Rail Road.
Wilmington, May 15.1874.
Change of Schedule
The following schedule will go into effect
on Monday the 18th inst.
night express train.
Leave Wilmington, C:10 p. m.
Leave at Florence 11:37 p, Mj
Arrive at Columbia ^00 a. x.
Leave Columbia * 8:45 p. x.
' Leave rlorcnce 2:10 a. m.
Arrive at Wilmington 7:15a.m.
! Passengers going West to points beyond
Columbia will take Express Train leaving
Wilmington at 6 10 A. M.
DAY EXPRESS TRAIN, (Daily.)
Leave Wilmington 8:C0a. x.
j LeaveatFlorence 4:00p.m.
Arrive at Columbia 9.05 p. x.
Leave Columbia at 6.00a. X.
Leave Florence 12:26P.M.
Arrive at Wilmington 7:15 p. 11.
Acconunoration Train makes no connection
at Columbie. Express Train makes close connection
both North and South.
JAMES ANDERSON. Gen'l. Superin't.
Charlotte, Columbia andAu-^;
gusta Rail Road.
GEXEKALSrPKIIINTEXnAXT's OFFICE, .1
Columbia. July 19, 1874.
On and after this date the following sched
ulc will be run over this roaJ?
OOI.NO NORTH.
Train No. 2. Train No. 4.
Leave Augusta, 745 am 4 15 p. m.
leave Columbia, 12 42 am ?
Arr. at Charlotte, 6 45 p in
Train No. 2 makes close connection, via
Charlotte and Richmond, to nil points North,
arriving at New York at G.OS a. ra. Train No.
I makes close connection via Wilmingtbn and
Richmond, to all points North, arriving it
5 15 p. m.
ooixo SOUTH.
Train No. 1. Train No. 2.
Leave Charlotte, 8 30am
Leave Columbia 2 52 p tn 3 40 a, m.
Arrive at Augusta, 8 05 p ni 845 a. m.
South bound Trains connect closely at Augusta,
for all points South and West.
Through tickets sold and baggage checks, i
ed to all principal points.
Sleeping Cars on all night trains.
A. POPE,
General Passingcrand Ticket Agcnf.
JAMES ANDERSON,
General Superintendent
. <
Greenville and Columbia Railroad, i
Daily, Sundays excepted, connecting with *?
Night Trains ontlic South Carolina Railroad,
up and down: also with trains going North J 1
and South en Charlotte, Columbia and Au?
gusta Railroad, and Wilmington, ,Columbia
aud Augusta Railroad. 4
LenvcColurabia at ^16*
Leave Alston 5i?5 a. m
Leave Newberry 1J.40 a m.
Leave okesbury ^.00 ri m.
Leave Dclton 8.'>0 A.m.
Arrive at Greenville at if> m, ?
DOWN. \Jf
Leave Greenville at O a m. fM
Leave Belt on &&1) a m.
Leave Cokesbury W a m* Ml
Leave Newberry 9'?.30. p m. j
Leave Alston f "V4.20pm. I 1
Arrive at Columbia ^ G.OO p m. J
Anderson Branch^adMho' Ridge Division
I LEAVE } H
Walhallti f? 45} u. Arrive 7 15pm IH
IVrrvville l^Jfn ni. Leave 6 U-5 p in
Pendleton Jj 10 a ro.| Lmv( i SOp jfl
Vnderson 10 a in. Leave 4 50 p ra
Ar. at llellon^Oi) a m. Leave 50 p m J
J8l^y~Acc??tii;iVo<lHiion Train?1 on Abbwjll*. J
('ranch Mondjps.W edonsdays ami Pridays.jBtf
On Anlor.-C Hrnneh, between Helton
Anderson, ojf Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satunlays.
{ V
Tln|S. PODAMKAD, Genl, Supt.
IIiiH \iiHTilh. Osnl. Tiekei Vet.
| RICHMOND 8
BANKINdf AND INSURANCE^
COMPANY. 8
t) l\'Capital,
- PERSONS
w-Nliing to injure in afirst
i iaj w will plrnMto
W. CLYRURV,
llutter and Cheese.
60 boxes CIIKK8K, |H
25 firkins GOSH KN BUTT'-H.
For sale by
BAVil