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CLEVELAND AND IELIUION. Gratified by the Prayers of the Pious, lit A Hating Everythn-g Like Hypocrisy. (Wastngton Letter to Piatsia. >-d.) "A very large -per cent. of the 4eo ple throughout the country seem to be si bent on evangelizing President Cleve land," ob-erved one of the (nief Ex- l' ecutive's most intimate friends to-day. b "Mr. Cleveland was telling ie the al other day that lie sonetimies thougoht - there wa's an impression in the minds of t4o mnaniy good folks thIat he pre- ? seitd a rare pporti~ty tr the III- T sionaries. I asked him why he thonhit , so and he laughingty replied: 'Oh, if the advice given tme was coiccii- ( trated on Africa, it woulI civilize and C Christianize that whole wild and % wicked and dark country.' 1 had to a laugh, for there was so mulch serious- : uess and yet dry humor in it all. e Cleveland realizes, as lie is reminded E. so often and so forcibly, that in a cer- ! tain way he sets an examiple to the n frld, but. it worries hini a little, I I can see, to be told by hundreds of peo- d ple, sometimes in one week, that he N ought to let his light so shine, etc. He s believe- that these people must tl inx eI he is very wicked, or elhe that lie is o the guardian of fifty million of people. f Speiking of this point lie said to me: C 'A President or king-- or other high and d national officer should recognize the I supreme power in every act committed A-man or woman should never get sC exalted as to fail to do this. Now, few public men have as little opportunity t to disseminate personal views a I it have. If I were ever so anxious to % make people believe I was the embodi- c inent of goodness it would be up-hill c work to create that impression, for a t President cannot cry his wares from t the housetops. If this advice about c being a Christian and all that, coming X in every form and from every direc- t tion, is for my own guidance, very 1 well. If it is to change the general course of -my public career, it is ill y given. Ono thing I am bound shall I never be made-the charge that I was b a hypocrite. I like Cbristians; they N are the saltof the earth. A hypocrite, f to My-ids is the basest of sinuers.'- a "The NiNident must be a little an these importunities, is he v ti R iedg' "Not in the least. On Y 'Sme 'C-6601ry he is gratified for the tercstshown in him, if it is respect- c uHy slirt . He doesn't seem to corn piehenid 'he fact that all Presidents n have had to withstand this ordeal. a "The letters he receives are not the only A evidence given him of a desire that he C shall be a moral man. You would be I surprised how many Christian people breathe an audible prayer for him, t: however, when they grasp his hand, t( and it all has a very perceptible efl'et fi upon .Mr. Cleveland, for he said he M didn't think any man or woman with it sense and a heart could fail to be y affected by the prayers of an earnest hi people, when .he or she knew they a were so constantly delivered. 'It is tl something like love in its physical v effect,' said. Mr. Cleveland one' day. I 'Now, if one is very earnestly and I sio9nee eed that atfection is sure, if S ept#ub'd&dde irated, to have its way, unless the suitor is absolutely offensive. The mere fact that so much T confieacid affection is persistently besto d* touch a heart of stone. So A M't'e interest shown by so .t wanyin a man's spiritual welfare must t *entuily touch him, if he thinks, a And the--mag or woman who cannot s, -be reached iM the prayers of a nationt is a'strang 'Seing indeed.'" "In his i, paivatei AQypa'tink-tbe Presidenth i sbre ny :standard of Christian- a A~ity'"Y8S~ e does. In all my inter 'Imrewith-him I do not remember tot -iin~ts beard him say anything im proper.. He sometimes becomes very much perplexed, but he doesn't sweart ahouL t. Adr. Cleveland believes that a honor between man and ,man is the ~ *foundation of Christianity; that unless , one tells-the truth and pays his dues THE NEwYORK SCANDAL. f FYkli. Iebriben (tCity Ofieers---Sao,- ~ NG N AAwman's Vote--Twenty rametat=+ Gkren Ont.t *Theinest of Jiehne, a New York -idermab/n-an indictment chargingi him with bribery in the matter of the r charter of the Broadway Surface Road,. has hedig~eflect oathe politicianis fairly c cop eii.-to an earthquake. in- f * ~e '~nes claims to have wormed t - ..sehoe's confidence, that s having received $20,- f or ' o on that measure, and 1 b si es himself were bribed, c and~ho paid the money to them. c Jaebule is perfectlycomposed, and says s Byrnes's story ota -confession is a t pure fabrication. Byrnes says thatt amoiig other thjings Jaehne described I how one of the alderman had employ- x ed a lawiyer- and -skilled accountant to 1 so fix his books as to account for the t large ebeessions to his bank account t adont the time when this bribe money m *-was bin~g distributed. a Itiwas currently reported that Al- I derman Fuigraff would be arrested, t but if he has been it has not become a known. Mere indictments were look- i ? ~ ~ gnalhlg twenty indict- t *dts werethanded ii by the grand < _jatbey did not embrace any against t th didemen. Alderman Pearson, a cief'rb~se under the clond, was call- c ' d'sa~awitness before the Senate Comn- s eedr Investigation., but failed to c Sand. this added a fresh im- t o-~~~cthe reportthat sonme of Jachne'st ~-~es-ifrthe'bribe-taking have ab esidd. -Ramor is busy with the f namesa of all who were ini tihe Board c when the Broadway franchise was < -Inispector -Byrnes was intervie wed .1 upon this subject. He refu-sed to sayv < who had, according to his information, been guilty of bribe-taking, bum said hescoald: absointely exonerate two members-Alderman Granit and' O'C on-t ner-oneaDemcrat and the other a I! Republican.. Was it Cancer ? 1 Ihave been .taking B. U. B. for six or .seyen weeks for sonmetimi like canlcer on h iny neck; and I would not take on: -rnoc SA-D DOLLAnS5 for the benefit rceive-d. *I had previously tried vatriouis so-called blood remedies, but B. B. U. is the best. the quickest and the cheapest blood purl fier I ever used. I refer to any mnerchiant e of Grifln, Ga. J. 1L. BAltNES, d Ge iflin, Ga. ~ Were we so disposed, we conld make a great case of cancer cure oif the abovo",b but as we do not think that genuine can eers are ever eured, we do not propose to J1 lihmegthie publie. The above is perhaps a only a. case of scrofulous ulcer, which ti B. B. B. cures more speedily than any remedy. It will cure aiiy so-called caces in one half the time and one third the money required by any boasted remedy. ~ - . BLO~OD BA LM CO., s nvcm Atlanta, Ga. c AIEToMOTHIERS. L 3Las. WflStows SoormJSG Smary should & ways be usdfrcade eethmnit. It soothes Y techn~d, softens tegmanlays anl pain. .1 cures wind couic. and is the ts-st remedy for r' 4I~, wenty-nlve cents a bottle. e P1'ESENTIMENT OF DEATH. Curious and Interesting Incident in the Famuiy History of the Bayards. The subject of presentiment concern- ( g death and fatality in families oken-i ot in, ilaticock's caezi recalls ile ad points in the Bavard history. -w families have been more depleted -uddenic% death than the Bayardis, d.1 in umuyV in:.tances there have Leen i r-ew-ra- and presentimtents. It is C id that ala iaardl wrote a ltrt di ni:: her approachii ng dleat h. er re n lw in Wasii ngtioi many 0 . h d tavai ufieers who runtein hur thet erestingt circumstance attetidingt t he Iath of 31is . Bay.d's cousin, tcharles I . avard. at M1unt Vesuvius. Ile as' tht' favorite son of Rtichard Bay -d, of P'hilade-lphia, whose father and meretarv Bavard's father were broth -s. In 184:, while on board the nited States ship Congress, in coi ivy with several young friends, he mde the ascent of Mount Vei-uvins. was .the same Congress that went. dwii in Ilnipton Roads before the terrimac, and in the party was the tne Joseph Smith, who as command of the Congress had his head taken gr by a cannton ball and of whom his ither said. when he heard that the ongress was laken: "Then Joe is ead." In the party also was Lehman It . Ashmead, of Philadelphia, with btoi vouid Bai ard afterwards went Jerusalem to visit the Holy Sepul ire. While there they both had I-i: )oed on their -arms by an old dra-_(o mn the heraldic arms of Jerusalem, ith the date of their visit. In the L ise of young Bavard the tattooed ross developed viiulent features, fes nred and tinally he became sick and .e arm became -reatly swollen. Ile L amtiuually declared that he would die, - tid even after it appeared to grow el rely well he was in the ha.,it of say ie to MAr. Ashmead and other friends: This arm will he the death of me r et." Ten years afterwards young avard left for a cruise in the Colum- I ia as flag lieutenant of Commander lorris. Before leaving he took a sad trewell of all his filends here and t nd declared to one and all that "they ould never see.him again." le was ery rejected and despondctt. Ten t cars to a day from his previous visit, i company with young Carroll Tucker, f Marvland, and a few friends, the 'olumbia being then at .Naples, he lade the ascent of Vesuvius during it eruption. With him were Rear miral Simpson and Rear Admiral alhoun, who were then lieutenants. [e had the arn of a Prussian army ficer. He was quite gay. Just near le Hermitage, where he had halted m years before, the party stopped, uding it would be dangerous to go Darer the crater. As they were turn ig a mass of lava and rock struck .uag Bayard on the arm where he Ld been tattooed, cutting it fearfully ad obliterating the cross, and before ie party coul reach the foot of the >lcano he died. Ilis mother is still ving, upwards of ninety years of age. is body is buried near the foot of esuvi us. A WHOLESALE LYNCHING. Uirteen Negroes Shot Down in a 3lissis sippi Courthouse. A special to the New Orleans Picay ne, dated March 17 says: News of a rrible tragedy enacted at Carrollton, t interior town twenty-four miles >uthwest of Grenada, vas received ere this eventing. Fifty men rodle ito town and repaired to tle Court ause, whet-c thirteeu negroes were ( aaiting their trial. The whitelmen alked into the Courthouse atid shot 4 m negroes (dead and1 and mortallyC -ounded the other three. The shooting rew out of the attempted assassina on of James Liddell, a protninentC tizen, who was shot and seriouslyC -ounded by these negroes several -eeks ago.C PARTICULARS OF THE SLAt'GHTER. NEW ORLEAxs, March 18.-A special 'om Winona, Missiasippi, to the "imes-Democrat gives the particulars f the circumstances leading to the agedy at Carrollton, Mississippi, yes rday aud of the tra-gedy itself. The trouble began some months ago aa slight altercation between a white in ijamed Moore atnd a colored man 1 amed Brown. J. M. Liddell, a fiind f Moore's, afterwards got into a dif culty with Brown through reference1 > Brown's treatment of MIoore in hice Liddel! struck Brown with his t, and was shot in the elbow by ir~own, atnd was fired at by several ther colored men. In the fturther ourse of this difficulty Liddell was ot a second titme andt two colored te were shot slightly. Following tis the negroes made affidavits against sddell and others, charging them rith asaault with ittent to murder. hese cases came up yesterday for rial, and were called at noon, when be Courthouse was immediately filled rith negroes who stationed thtemselves onud and abotut the Brown brothers. 1 'he attorneys were p)roceedling wvith be caise, when there suddenly peared about one humndredl white men all well armed. Perceiving < eir ent ranice, Edwatrd Browut .rew his pistol and fit-ed itn the direc-] int of' Liddell, who was betneent his torneys. T hercupon the firing be ane general. Ten tnegr-oes were in- 1 tantly killed and t wo othere have since C ied. M 3any escaped by jumping ( rough widowvs a distance of at. leastI wenty feet from the ground. On ost 'of the dead bodlies arms- weie mnd. TIhe room was cotmpletehlill d with smoke. The Judge' bench is t the niorth side of the room and the I encnes facinet it are towards the south. t is a very laire cout rom with win ows all atround. On the -outh side] ere counted 1:~ shot holes, in the :1l of the passage leadling? down 4 tairs tetn holes, and in the benches I irt-t shot holes. One shot str-uck the t orthast wimtiow~ sash and glancedj :tto the wall. Five other's show ontt Le nortt w~all fr-om the ditrectiotn of le benches. Large pools of blood ee on the floorn of the courtt r-oom.i 'ie mob left ats quickly and quietly as iy came in. TV~o Brothers Murudered. A special from Salem, Roanoke aunty, Virgoiinia, says: A horrible ouble tmurder- was committed ont ;ack Cireek, this county, Wednesday '1 ight. A mait namaed Grifliey, who i as a wife livitng ott Back Crecek, had tst retuirned ft-om Texas, whei-e, it is Ileged, he set-vedl a term in the peni itiarv. Ills wife refused to recog-C ize him, and leaninthg that John ande ickett Netz, sonts of William 31etz,i ad beeni visiting his wife~ ini his aib ece, Giriffey went to their home, I illed one of the youttg men out atnd iot him through the heart. lie then atered thte house anid shot the oilier( oung man thrtoughm the right breast. ' he murdered yountg men weie agede spectively abiout seveniteen ande WEDDED UNDER DIFFICULTIE". Texas Ceremony Enlivened by the Ele mnent of Danger. Cc'.mbi.!, '.o. 1Nip ic to Ch ol Ti'l s.) xi excitintr anit draiatic incideit I ecurred here last. week(. Sumiav tornig t woml*n roue -into tow. hir remarkae appearance et onice ltrated thei anentidon of every1% 0one. 'lswreoveredt with muid :mld arrietd :1 perfect arsel of ritles, pis >ls and knives with theui. O::e was a unl -)Vilr 9o, wvith hog ray htir, and iood inhis e e; the other was a1 itnaii S:0 '0 ears, built like a gian1t :Id 'varing a terrible scowl on his thee. 'hey were father and soi, Willialln Votiord and Sam Wfford, fromi tile ackwOods of .1ata"gorda contyit. The 'd man said he was loking for his darter Kate, who had "lit out" , ith ler cousinl, 1ill Wvofford. Tie it her id son located the rtunaway coliple, iho were ocenpvinmg a small fi.her .an'1S teit hall a iile omll.ide of the own. When old Wofford fouid olt he locaion of hik erring "i'rter" a arge crowd of clrious imen aid hoyi 1 ollowed the terrible-looking. pair to I he( ViciniitV of thC tClt, as the old m1an ept coitinually examfl1ining1 his gu I .Wd saying: "Sam, 1rn go'en to kill Mil, ah'" A. the ly iarcd the tent he crowd fell b:ick, wlic the old til .nd his giaIt son approached with ifles in hand. Suiddenly the flap of lie tent was vioientlyI thrown openz romi the insidc and there stood Bill nd Kate, each holding a terrible Win bester rifle-one coveriig the old nau, and the other tie sonl. Old rayhead and Saim glared like two vild beasts on the brave lovers and 'ill called out: "Do you S'Pose 1!'11 .oie to give her upl) arter we dolle ramped it together all the way froii lie Colorado to the Bprazos? Not nuch shies mine, and yoN stall! Ihie low and .aec US married. The old nan and Sam, under cover of the uggestive Winchesters, slowly moved ack, all the time theing the boy iBill md his Kate, who had the drop on lcim. Meantine a couricr had gonei o town for a license and a preacher, ud after nlearlv two loulrS, du11rig1 vhich time Liil and Kate never took heir eves off the old mian and Sami od thireateming to kill Citiher shoIlljd i raise a hand, tile preacher and the iClcse arrived. Duriiing the ceremonoy the bride room kept his rifle at a haTcock winting toward his father-in-law. 'he preacher was so afraid they would pen hostilities while he was there lie otld ,carcely ftiish tile cerenony. fter the marriage the old man deliv red a terrible curse o both said lie ould spare their lives now, provided bev never set foot in Matagorda ounty. "If you do," said lie, as ie hook his long, dirty yellow locks and mid violently struck his rifle with one land, "if you do, you're both oil von lead soon as you cross the ine, for vhen Fin gone Sam he's there. You've ot the world before you 'cept 'Mata torda county. Now gol" With this ihlippic the old man and son departed orlorn, while Bill pulled down the lap of the tent. OUR DISA BLED SOLDIEL. :he Comptroller General Seeks the Nanles of all Entitled to Aid from the State. Comptroller General Stoney has ecently issued the fyllowing circular: ihe General Assembly, at its bt essionl, passed an Act instructing the ~optroller-General "to investigate nd repiort to the next session of the ~eneral Assembly the Ialnes andt conl ition of all citizens of this State who re unable to earn a livelihood by rea Oin of wounids or other disabilities in urred while inl the servic:e of the State luring tihe war between the States." In order to carry out the provisions f this Act, the Comptroller-G eneral as prepared blank forms of applica ion and sent tihe same to tile Clerks of jourt, fromn whom they may be ob ained, and he requests thlat all citizens if the State embraced within the pro isions of the Act, will as soon- as ossible forward to him their namles ith all of the iuformation required on he blank. The applicanlt must be a citizen of lhe State, antd mrost have incurred the isability while in the service of the tate. He must file the necessary cer ificates to show thlat he is unable to ar a livelihood by reason of physical isability, anld that this disability is he effect of woun ds (or injury) re :eived while in the service of the State. As the Act provides for a list of such ersons onily, it will be a waste of ime, resulting only in disappointment, o anly others whlo may take the trouble o send their nlames. W. E. SromE, Comptroller-General. Stolen 3Iilltous Rlecovcrel. Hlamiltonl Cole, referee, ill thle actionl rought by Georgte C. Hiolt, at-ignee, 'o the bemnefit of the credilorS 0f erdinanld W:ard, against Wil. S. arner, has filed his report withl the ulerk of the Suprenme Court in New cork. It is ini favor of Jitlian T. Davies, receiver of the firim of Grant & Ward, and finds that the patyment of dil money niade by Mr. Ward, either yv his individual chieek oi ty thie fhccks of Granit & War~d, up~onl so aled contract busines were frauidu et and void as agatinst the defendant, ulian T. Davie-, as receiver, and that arner mnust pay over to D~avies, aej -eeiver, all moners received by himi 'rom WXard over anid above the amou~ttI aid by him to Wad.tm This sum the eferee finds to be 81,255),:3'1, wich, vithi interest theireon from M.ay G, .884, 81.40,391, makes thetotal amrounit o be recovered $1,:195,7532. IIe fulrthler lirects that defendlants, Wariner anud s wife, execute and deliver within hirty (lays from the li~ng of thlis adgnent such deeds of conveyancte Ld release anld qunit-ciaiim aq mlay1 be lecess-ary to satisfy thlSit dgmlert. The Gleorgin C:, mpaign. Ex-Goverinor .Jal. M. Smith openeltd le State Gubernatoriial campaign lhs ilharsday~ with a speech at Talbottoi. e is not a caniditet, but urgued the >eople' to sustaiin the railroad commisl1 ,ion nld elect iio man toi tile Legi'sha ue who favored curtailing its power. -Ie ciargedi the railroads with attempilt ng to bribe the Legislature. The P'res.ident"' lirthday. -The President w as forty-nline veiaris if aZe last Thursday. Ther'e was 110 elbation of the occasion at the hite Ihouse, but in the eveingit tile 'resident, accomlpaniied by Miss Cleve, anl Miss Van Xetchein, and( Col. and l rs. Lamonlt, attendiedl the "Mikado'' erformaince v the Emma Abbott t )pera Company at the new'~ National 1 'h~eatre. The Presidenltial party oc-t uiied a pivate box, and upon their I ntrance were war'mly aplplaulded1 by 1 GENERAL NEWS ITEMZS. 'acts of Interest, Gathered from Various QIarters. -Mrs. Uancrof:, wilfe of the histo ianl, died last week. -There are over fifty thotisatid vorkment in the strikes in America. -Dr. J. .1. Cald well, ole (if the old Est phyzicianits of Atlanta, is diad. -It is again rumored that the Presi enit is to be iarried this summer. -The saie of the Morgan art collec ion in N w ork realized $1,205.400. -The t reat y oi peace between sCrvia ud UnMigaria has been ratified. -Prof. Friz ieider, editor of the ludson count y, N. J., Journal, suicid :d lat week. -It ij lea red that the health of ex. Ire.;ident Arthur has lately becone a ntter for serious concern. -.1. 0. Polk, a supposed horse thief va, lynehed near Copperas Cove, -Ex-Govertior liznm, lIepresenta ive in Cong-ress from Louisiana, died ast week. -Eart hquakes have occurred in Ger nany and Spain. but no serious daim Lse was (10ne1. -About forty per cent. of last year's ,rain crop is reported to be still in the :ands of the fairmners. -Of the :-even thousand bills intro Ittucd in the present Congriss but bree have become laws. - -Four cadets have just been dis ni;sed froi the Naval Aeadetnv at Xatttapolis for11 the ol'entce of hazingi. -King Ludwig of 'iavaria has again -Uiscd a storm of indignation by order ttg the erection of two new palaces. -Dr. Armstrong, of Atlanta, is now issociate editor of tie Sunday Tele Iram antid his congregation has "one 0 pieces. -Diamonds worth Q200,000 were taved from the sunken steamer Oregon )t the owners have not appeared. 41muggled goods, doubtless. -Louise Michel intends to make a tour of America. She is mobbed 'verywliere she attempts to speak in public. -Express MesseneCr Nichols was killed on a train near Chicago and the -afie robbed of about K30,000 in money otd jewelry. -The unknown schooner which col ided with the :teamer Oregon had her >ows stove in and sunk and all on >oard perished. -All the United States prisoners lave een removed from the Fulton :ountv, Ga., jail, but not until four of hem had died of' mentingitis. -The 1itrmers in the northern sec ion of Ohio are much alarmed over he appearance of swarms of young zrasshoppers. -Ex-Attorney-General Brewster is .aid to attribute his wife's death large v to overwork in discharging social iuties. -Police Sergeant Brooks, of Rich nond, Va., was shot while attempting o arrest a burglar who was trying to )oard a train. -The Duke of Portland, with a nillion and a quarter annually from !round rents alone, is the richest obleian in Britian. -No settlement of lie labor troubles )!I .the ou:hiwestern Ilailroads is in 'igit the strikinlr contagn to "e sp~readin.. - iisenst -henry Scott, a negro, sentenced to .e hanged, at Wiimingtonl, for rape has biad his sentence commuted to imipris tnent for life. -MIiss Cleveland will not resume hter lunches to wives of Congressman antil af'ter Lent. The stag dinners will go on all the same. --"'Old Sorrel", Stonewall Jackson's a-ar horse, is dead; the skin is to be 4uff'ed and the skeleton mounted and kept ini thle Confederate Soldiers' IHome -The linseed oil mills of Varney, l'alor' & Co., Toledo, Ohio were burnt last week, involving a loss of $100,000. An explosioni oecurred which damaged buildintgs severat blocks off. -John Gillespie, colored, murdered the wife of Capt. Thos. Grtay, near London, Tenn., stole a horse and ran Al', but was overhatuled anid lynched - Mi's. M1ary Wilemati, a comely aomnan of forty-, htas been convicted of poisotninig her husband at Little Valley, N. Y., and sentetnced to be hiangted on te :30th April. -It is said that Secretary Lamar re :ently rebuked Colonel Ingersoll for his aggressive infidelity, and expressed Shope that he would some day become i Christian preacher. -L. G. Dewitt, a New York drum net', felhl from the ice mound at Niagara Vails and was killed. bt his body onl'l not he i'ecovered f'or two days, ut aghi plaitily visible. -AX six-yeat'-oid child of Joseph I'aylor', in Cl-ty county, Tetnnessee, accidlentallv killed hter' father while baig :a pistol int htis presence last -Emmta Normtan, a young woman, shot atnd killed llenry Ar'noldl,a grocer' in 31emiphis, Te'nn., whlom she chatrges nattied antother' woman. The mut' --Cantada has her fir'st color'ed law cer V. Delos Davis. lIe could ntot rech I tile bar' int thle regular' way by ren n ithe oflice of an attorney, as n) 'ttorney would take hitm, but a -'1r ' . A. Coxe will in a few days 'eceive the keys of her hand(some dwel lin''tcently erected int Greenville. It is in the' Qumeent A nute styie of arch itec :ure and is said to be the fitnest dwell -The btuildittg ini Salisbury, N. C., >uied by 13auerba nni's book store ned thet North Cat'olina HeraUld was lur: burn be a hall-witted negro a:Mitrar~ Bill," who was mortally vn:ded by:. policement while trying to -The liepubtlicans at'e beinig worsted ;a t he inmformation controversy be weetn :he Ptesidenit atwl the Senate. lhe Dutikin case ott which the fight is na'de, i- a rott onte, and the trap of Admnd wAas . well concocted. -Te oflicers of te steamer Oregon tre sh ow~itg up badly' itt the accounts of heO wreek. The New York Timncs htttin ht the saving of' nine hundred tople from the disaster' was owing note to good luck than to good man I-The Ilouse committee oni educa it'on ham'rreed to r'epor't favorably a d ii nhtroduced by Rept'esentative ~mall.-, of South Carolina, to provide or' the redemption and sale of school arm lands now held ini l3eaufort coun v he th., United Stas -Dr. Austin Flint died of apoplexy at his residence in Fifth avenue, New York. le was born in Massachusetts in 1812, but his professional life was mainly passed in New York. He was, perhiaps, the most eminent physician in the United Statc. -McCormick, Abbeville county, is in a muss over its rtcent municipal election. Only thirty-live votes were cast, and since the electioni tweemv-two men have iade agulavit that ther voted for a certain man for imeam-in, and still he was not e.ecte(d. -Buliess failures thronutti1out tIe, country during the last, week, a- re prte to R. G. Dunt & Co., number for the United States 190, ca-LdL ;;5, total 225, again,,t 2:39 last. week and 246 the week previous. The gradual de cline in this country stia continues, but in Canada failures seeiri to increase as spring opens. -Captain James I. Waddell, coi mander of the Maryland fixdherv toree and formerly in command of the Co: federate steamer ASenandoah, which caused such loss to the Amierican muer eant marine daring the late war, died in Annapolis ont Thursday. Ile was a native of North Carolina, aged G2 vears. -Mr. Trevellick, a representative of the Knights of Labor, addressed the Columbia branch of that order and a large assembly of workingmen at Co lumbia on Tuesday. The Reyidcr commends his speech highlv, and says it was an able, conservative and stir ring appeal to working people to stand together for their class. -Mike Coppala, of Charlotte, got a pistol intending to shoot a dog, but his wife and sisters protested against the act and t ried to get the pistol from him. In a slight scufic which ensued the weapon was discharged, the bullet passing through a <iour -aid mortally wounding Miss Maggfie Wil sont, who had left the roomt through fear of an accident from the weapon. -The City Iall at Boston ws as burned on Friday night with its con tents, includitg the city records and seals. The Iilding was of granite, and the vault; and safes were supposed to be fire-proof, but proved not to be. The loss at a cash valuation is a quar ter of a million dollars. Upon the loss of records no estimate can be placed. -Local option is creating great agi tation in Lynichburg, Va., and bu-iness circles are much excited. A long petition has been presented to the Judge of t1he Corporation Court, pray ing him to order an election. whizh fie has decided shall be held on the 26th April. The petition comes from busi ness men, who say the agitation has paralyzed business. A heated and bitter canvass is expected. -A Pensylvania lodge of Knight's of Ucnor is making inquiry relative to D. A. Fuller, a member of that organ ization who came South last year in search of work and has not been heard from. His family are in great distress over his disappearance. Fuller is 48 years old, 5 feet 8 inches high, dark cotplexion, slightly gray hair, dark mustache, blue eyes, and the third finger on left hand cut off below second joint. le is a railroad man. - -The Drummers' Protective Asso ciation is bovcottittg Gower & Reilly, carriers, of Greenville. The boycott has been' ordered because Gower & Reilly refused to han! bagage to and from the depots for less than t wety cenits each way, and is being executed by a colored teamster who was en gaged by rept-esentatives of the asso ciatiotn and p)rovided with a badge designed to secure him the patronage of all drummers. --I is estimated byV intsurance comn panies that in the United States last year dwelling houses wvere b~urtned at the rate of one every hour, with ant averae loss of $1,39G. Barns and stables, 50 per week. Country stores, 3 per day, with a loss of $110,000 per week. Ten hotels burn weekly, with a loss per year ot $4,000,000. Every other day a lumber yard goes up in moke, each representing $20,000. Forty-four cotton factories, the loss in ach case being $28,000; forty-three woolen mills at 82.5.000 each; and forty-two chemical works at $27,000 each, were destroyed by fire last year. Forty-two boot attdshoe factotries were consumed, the loss being $17,000 each. Theatres were lapped up by the flames at the rate of 5 per month, average loss $19,000. Only about half as many court-houses.were destroys ed, the cost of each being about $20,000. THE NEW PARLIAMENT. Changes in it.s Elemnents Make it a Very Different Body from the Old. ((Casegramn to the Ne~w York Hierald.) 'The change itt the temper of parties in the H-ouse toward home role is due to a profound change in the constitu ent element of the House of Commons itself. The new Parliament is essen tially an assembly of workintg men, in the serse that it~s tmembers attend seri ously to their business. The Scotch, Welsh and English Demiocratic. mem ers emulate by theijr constanut and tnremittitng attentiont thte Irish memt bers, and except for the hours neces samry for sleep they seem always pres ent. Hours before the House meets ther- ate itt the library attending to correspondenice. After 4, when the business begins, they semt e l y on hand until 2. :) and event 4 o'clock in the mort~inig, when the House ad ourns. The ola~ timne aristocratic din ler hours hay.a been abolished. "t 'outnts out' are tings of the past. There is no more talking to empty benches. At all hours there is an audience ilord ote having anything to say worthf listening to, atnd what is equally im prtaut, an audience ready promtptly to suppr-ess bores. The Governiiment hasgst its grip) ovet members. The uord "'ministers" is nmo lon-er a law. Ancietnt etiquette andt precedenr are at a discoun t. The tnew imeit arey lhe maters, ktd they wilI tnt stand an nonsettse. They voc te-aitnst the mint isttiv withi refreshing intdepenudemnce. Al ready they have establishied a Pr liatmtt~ry 'reignt ut tuerror itt a maild war. %iistrs are compel led to be cosistent. They to loniger- dare to follow the old tme -nsh tm of speaikintg ini office against the refomm they- ad vocated in opunsition. The sliiebtest inication of a dispositIiont to do 40 immeiately pr-ovokes ominus holn~s of dis-ent and dlissattisfaction. Oll timme polit(iians ar-e ini dismay-. Whigr and fTry alike feat- that with the next Prtliament willcotme the deluge. SA\LESMEN WANTEDI N every neighborhood, either to travel I or sei tat' home, Dickey's Indiain and Blood anid Livem Pills. Alpply now. uEnilg efern.~ce. JNO. 1t. DICKEY, FOR COUCHS AND CROUP US: TAWlEE Ot I P. Of The sweet gum, u gathered from A tree of the same :-, growing ang the small strm in th- Southern contains a stimulating expectorant prircip!e tat itt'eas the phlegm producing the early ruorni:: cw;h. and rins Waes the child to throw -fthe aice it-cbran' in er":' ,.Ti whooping-conch. When combined with te healing :cet laginous principle In the muU-in tlant ofthe old et- . pe- - sects in T.Lrzona Crnoczn n.eArr op Sc-zrcr Gu AO Mersest the finest known remrdy f,.r Cou.-s. Croup, Whooping-Cough and Consumpton: a':1 o paan rth. ry child is plewed to take it. Asik eer d riu t f'r it. Pri 25c. and $1. WALTER A. TAYLOR, Atlanta. C Cse DR. BIGGCnS' IIre !.::Eft!!Y CORDIA, rt.t Diarrhea. Dysentery ani Childraa Te-hirg. For sakt by %-druggists. A STATEMEN-1 OF FACTS FOfl T 7E PU;;LIC TO CONS~i)'. ALANrA. (A. . i of typhioiti fvt-i, ;Ito: -d li ft-vir .ntl e i'. cau nal Ie:i an 351t t-dL h';:-4.1 ni qualenjt y snaiz o h'r - djiltu:fter. exerdith tht ,- t 11 ;vnl b .l: ; S - he I fVl !"s h i l on til::n n !Ir I becoe a\ un -Isn flabby, -pt.-d"': c)learl iil"te. n and Said th t- !!--h -o off i! ; of 1. 1. U. I actedacod aft-tr usuin heill ~. It heti-' e -- lie---1a- -\ U t ;; . -. - *t faction; ofin 1e-h'at . !! puri"-:r. f -Al. .ther 1 of At'an tI tV:I-so. -JA T-I C SS wiVth ,,ur Jr i--& Did u Sup pose Mustang Liniment only good for horses? It is for ignamrima tion of all flesh. AlL - - *3 'k.i --- ) M gyCg.S-Dihtera.Crup Athm.B- nhts Horsnes.Ininnz. acin Cu~h.hop Diarh~a.idny -obc.-nS, (3_Dgct Sherida' - ondto Petrtd. Oeuc anyUother Di.thci is uAtm. rnhts orils medicneO Hakn etoW Oil o fe-Sold everywhere ret by a or :c. s am3 is. wort a ~~cu .d o sd or .C A Clear Skin is only a part of beauty; but it isa part. Everylady .Aay have it; at least, what ooks like it. Magnolia Balm both freshens and benutif~es n N:ot only shortens ..ev t:ime of labor and the intensity zbpaig. but, it -"eav <hnunushes the ianyr to life of both -iither and child, and 5.0- ;.-.-,.,vs the mother mn a floldition highly fa ,orabl he to speedy re . and far less M.lOtiu'" 0-11, ! a b- to ilooding, Col. vulsiois, and other -- -aring sy mpto ms Lineidtent to slow or h nr .i 'nainful labor. Its truir wonderful effica :0A'yth~r :: )d in this respect en itles it to be called TIlE 310 T H E R'S FiZIEND and to be rainid as one of the ife-saving remedies e nineteenth cen tu . Yron the nature of tCse. it will of - - * 1ou'1 be understood h: t we cannot pub ish certificates con g this IEMEDY . I .iout wwnnding the h-livaev of the writers. s t we'hlave hundreds -tt a ty aml u testimonials on fad no mother -~ w0 has once used it ever again be -U00.ng 7Cran v-itiout it in her time a: t:- ibl. t ii ii ltely remarked : t .- r were admissible p I th letter we receive, the --...'..r-*d" ul outsel anything i career in the -vour "MOTH in a ardt number of . :I i:: i t-.sults in every : : asy, hastens de - - r , INSURES SAFETY - ' (n. -No woman -* .m i:n . ugh the ordeal T. :.- 'NI GON, 31. D. -i1 nHealth and u,-::1.: i." ::iled free. - LATOR CO., Atlanta, Gas Th1RA DE -~ MAR K, e, -ice growing Counries oCur~ope, thore fdsMedicate deineisuniversal. Itisscpoedoftemost approved VEGETABLE TONICS, vihacintroducedinto apfre gt..aouls~ae. Theveryfinest &fNiiNOHA RAM, ce: t edie albasis,.tis confidendly uce-.cnded as a cure andIprwentive of FEVER ANDAGU E, o 'crloheraseases originating fromt -nmalarious causes For purif'ying the * r.. po.-ing the Secretions,Caironie, F .h-omatismn,Bloodpoisonin,acertafll Scard:~Dypepsia,Craeip in-the stomach, animmeiabterie~f for DysentryCalic, .Chelaera-mrorbus antdkindred diseases, SGenral w akness,NervousandMental D e bility, a sottmriglrem7edyfOiVer' Corr!plaint and~diseases of the Kidnias,an ex.cellent appetizer; anda, TONEC without a rival? inl shoe Ter irsidorating adhenfunionims of the system, it is un equalled. so W'e-t!assfulLtnreetimes a day, Soldby aillGruggists and dealersgenerally. TCPAZ CINCHONA CORD !AL CO., .Y!c :-cpric~o~ Na:fchz SP.&fTANBUR G. S-C.j SPrice per Bottle $1.00. JP IUANO, ( 1.e .1G~ c:plete High - 3 .1.v rilr for these - '::l l.n fo vzeelables, etc. xNon-An..noniaied Fer . 1 '!. Trpes Grape I..:....-.. fvery Hi1gb -'!v.. ad instructive cNeralia. Rheumatism, Bleeding at the LI.tms gh. Catarrh. Choleraorbus, Dsnterg, Chronio pht free. D. I. S. Johnson & oC., BostOn,. Mass. MAKE N EW, R ICHE li them in the world. Wiloitvl ure or d cach bo:: is wart!! ccn times the cost of a box of thanful.one ill a dose. Illustrated pamphlet p.D.IS.JH oN& CO., 22 C.H. St..Bostonl. YLNottuing on earth Ichicken cholera and * al diseaees of hens. Is worth its weight in 14ld. Illustratedi too by mall free. >s. 2 1-4 lb. air-ight tin cans 1i b mail 1.20