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THE lDOOMI OF CLU% ERIUS. No Apparent Chance. tor Him to Egocape the Gallows--muething, of the Urime ie Cow adtted. The ease of Thomas J. Chiverius, con victed of the murder of Fannie Lillian Madison. has attracted widespread atten tion. As the facts of the case may have #dssed out of recollection, a brief state ment may now be proper. On the 13th March, 1885, at 3 o'clock, a. m1., Miss Fannie Lillian 'Madison arrived in Rich mond from Bath county and went to the American Hotel, where she registered as "Miss F. L. Merton." Next morning her dead body was found in the old city reservoir, a short distance west of Holly vwood cemetery. On the 18th, near Little Plymouth. in the county of King and Queen, her first cousin, T. J. Cluve rins (Kla-veers), was arrested, charged with the murder of the deceased. He waived an examination before the Police Justice, was indicted in April, and was brought to trial in the Hustings Court of -Richmond at the May term. On'the 4th day of JIune the jury returned a verdict of "guilty." The case went to the Court of Appeals, the decision of which was adverse to the prisoner-as already published. The Richmond papers give some addi 'donal particulars of the result of the case in the Court of Appeals. The judg ment of the lower court is sustained in all particulars. Little or no surprise was manifested at the decision; in fact, public opinion had been very well settled upon the presumption that no new hear ing would be granted. For over a week the air has been full of rumors that the court stood four to one against a new trial, and that two of the four disagreed -only as to the certain particulars, and for once rumor was correct. How these facts leaked out is not known, or wheth er it was only one of the lucky surmises of those who are supposed to know everything. After the reading of the opinion of the court, as expressed, had been arrived at after a very patient and searching review of all the facts as set forth at the time of the trial, and -%as supported by copious quotations and references to the most learned and com petent authorities. Thus is ended anoth e'act in the great tragedy which shocked a continent and for a time made Rich moid unenviably famous. . Cluverius knew what the decision of the court would be at least one hour be fore Judge Fauntleroy finished reading .the opinion. The first few pages that were read indicated a decision unfavora ble to the prisoner, and about half-past 12.o'cloek Mr. McGeorge, a feed dealer, dqing business in Richmond, left the court room and went down to the jail. 4:vas he who told Cluverius how the case would be decided, but it was after t* o'clock before the prisoner was aware that the Supreme Court had sus tafiked the decision of the lower court on every point that was raised by the pris ond's counsel. When the action of the court was . d own to him he never trembled or moved a muscle, except perhaps a little twitching of the facial muscles, and this soon passed away, giving place to that sternness and self-control which has ex cilpa so-much wonder, and has been a Jzr~e to so many. When he heard the words, "The decision is unfavorable to you," lie raised his eyes, which had been gazing at the floor, and, in a clear -v'oie said, "I am surprised." Here he paused, an<ctthe silence seemed as pain ful to thoefwho saw the prisoner as it was tethe prisoner himself. Presently he qnalified his remnarks, and in a voice more trombling than at any time hereto fore, he remarked, "I had hoped for better results." - Sergeant Lee subsequently said: "Mr. Cluverius, I will now have to put you in solitary confinement. Your treatment herefter must be somewhat different from what it has been, and it is my duty to have you put in solitary confinement and a guard placed at your cell." .Cluverius looked up at Sergeant Lee and replied: "Sergeant, I make no ob jection. I have tried not to give trouble to anyone in this jail and I will continue not to do so." The only hope now left to the prisozer is executive clemency, for unless the Governor interferes, Cluverius will pay the penalty of his crime upon the scaf fold. The action of the Supreme Cdurt will doubtless be certified to the Hustings Court before the June term, and when that is done the~ prisoner will be brought up to be resentenced. Something for t he G rIs'. Every housekeeper knows how careful treatment keeps table-linen and house hold furniture. Girls do not always know or remember that great care of their own little possessions will often enable them to dress nicely on very little 1 money. A lady says: ~When I was a girl there was one of mj young friends who was distinguishcd for mak'ng her things last.' Her dress, hats, gloves and ribbons were a marvel of darability. I used to wonder how she managed to make them last so with oup~ their looking shabby, but I ceased to'do so after I had visited her at her own home. The reason why her clothes 'wore-so long was that she took such good care of them. Her dresses were br?ushed and fealed away carefully, and the slightest spot on them was removed ast soon as it was discovered. Her hat was, wrapped in an old pocket handkerchief, and put away in a box as soon as done with, the strings and laces being straight ened and roiled out most symmetrically each time. Hecr gloves were never fold ed together, but were pulled out straightr and laid fiat in a b)ox, one upo' ite oth er, each time they were used, time tiniest hole being mended almost before it had f time to show itself. But the thing that impressed me most was the care she be- C stowed on her ribbons. When making t up bows she used to line the upj~er part I of the ribbon with white paper, and this t not only preveutedi the ribbon from be cominghlmp and creased, but kept it ~ clean, so that when the bow was sie on one side she eenid turn the ribbon, r and the ribbon. and the part that had c been covered came ""t Looking new and rD fresh. 'That girl ed andi brrughtt up a large fanaly. 2-: husband had to , fight his way, and ddi so bravely, and ' was unusuaiiy succesful, inir he becamea wealthy. But i nrosperity w..: due I quite as much to his wrife's care and d economy in saving inoney as it was to d A TORNADO IN MISS-RI. Twenty Liepi Lost in hansas City--Factory Girl1 Buried inz the Busiu of Their HU:lndin: The Street Perfect Riher%. A fearful storm of wind and rain swept ever Kans City, Missouri, .n the 11th inst. continuing from 11 o'clock till nooln. The court house on SecOnld street was totally demolished above the second story. The Lathrop school build illg on Ei"hth strCt was partially wreek ei and many chil dren caught in the ruins. An overall factory on Second street was blown down. The old water works building near the court house was blown down. At the Western Union telegraph office but one i ire is working out of the citv. Communication has been established with St. Louis over that wire by way of Dallas, Galveston, New Orleans and Memphis. One span at the North end of the railroad bridge aeross the Missouri River was blown into the river, block:ng the Hannibal and St. Joseph. Rock Island. Wabash and Kan sas City. St. Joe and Council Blifts Roads. Eight girls have been taken out of the overall factory, four of whom are dead: many others are in the ruins, but there is scarcely a hope for their lives. In the confusion it is impossible to ascer tain definitely the extent of the calamity, but it is said that over twenty employees are imprisoned in the basement of the factory. The disastrous fury of the storm was confined to the north end of the city except in the destruction of the Lathrope school building on Eighth street. The buildings generally except ing those mentioned withstood the fury of the storm. As nearly as can be learned amid the iutense excitement and confusion, about tw enty persons are known to be' dead. At the Lathrope school eleven children are reported dead. Of the four build ings wrecked all were more or less un sound. The school building has been twice condemned and the court house bv many was considered unsafe. No one was killed except in these four houses. The storm, although entailing such heavy loss of life, was nothing of the nature of the tornado that visited the city three years ago. It was a violent wind, accompanied by a flood of water and heavy hail, which turned many streets into rivers. Signs, shutters, chimneys, etc., were blown with the gale and a large number of vehicles were overturned in the streets. The black clouds that rolled over the city created almost the darkness of night and made timid ones crouch in terror in cel lars. The streets were entirely deserted, and in some instances horses were seen wandering about attached to vehicles and seeking refuge from the pelting storm. THE MASTER WORKMAVS ADDRESS. Want of Discipline in the Order---A Plan for the Future Government of the Knights to be Submitted to the General Assembly. The Chicago Daily News publishes the following secret circular, which, it says, has been received by the Knights of Labor of Chicago, and will be read i the various assemblies during the coming week. The cirenular is rm Grand Master Workman P'ow derly, and is a very long~ one. It com plains of the hundreds oftuseless let ters (four hundred a day) and committees with which lie is bored by the order, and states that lhe must have timec to mature plans for the benefit of the Order anmd mutst not be interrupted, und that he will nmot receive letters or eommittees,.or-ga anywhere from this time unitil the meeting of the General Assembly, which is ordered for May 25, at Cleveland, Ohio. The only part of the circular of general inter-est is as follows: "-Nearly four- thousand assemblies have leded themselves to act on the advice coutained in the circular of the 9th; ultimno. I feel that it only re quires the coming to the front of real nen of our Order to set us r-ight bef ore the world. We have been iowing ground so far us public opinion is concerned for- some time. One oi the cames is that we have allowed hinig to be done under the name of ihe Knights of Labor for which the >rgamtz.m~on was in no way respon ihle. I ask of our members to keep a jeaious eye oni the avinigs of labor wmn who ne9er labor, and when they charnge mything to the Order in your locality ~et the seal of your condemnnation upon tat once b) denving it. If a paper :riticises the Knighis of Labor oir its )flerIs, (do not boy cot t it, and if you iar e any such boycotts on r-emove r hiem. '-A journal not long~ since made some micoimpliumentary uldtusionis to the Geni-f ~ral Master Work man of the Knig ite )f Labor, andl at the next mneeting of be- nearest as-cemblv a motion wva ast, to boycott the paper-not that lone, hut every per-on who adver ised in the coluimnms of the paper. I vrote to the assemibly asking that the' emove the boycott, and it wvas done. 1 YVe must bear in mind that the Gen ral Master Workman is only a main, nd is not above criticism. We de uand for oura-lves the righti of free peech. We cannot consistently deny to otheis. We must tolerate fair, tpen criticism. If a reply is neces ary make it in a gentlemnanly, (digni ed manner. If we are criticised or butied by a blackgtuard sheet, treat it ' ou would the blackguard hinmself i kilence. That our aimus anid objects re good is no season why our mem~ ers sh~ould be regarded as beinug ofi aperioi build or material. We are ; o more the salt of the earth thani s mIlions of unknown toilers who do a he work of the world. In our deal igs with laborers and capitalists we msttt deal justly and fairly by them; ifi -e would have it equally done to us wei imst in turn dG it equally to others. A hlii is the aim of theKnightsof Labor md ust not be lost sintht of in the .11ure. "We hiave had soua. tronble from - rinkinig miemubers and(. from:I mren who I' ilk abouit buying guns anid dynamite. r: fthe men who possess money- enough " b uy gulns and dynamite would ini-a est it. in the purchase of some well bl eced work on labor, they wo-ild ptt ~e nmoney to good use. They will eve;- teed guns or dynatmite in this an who does notstud h poi e ~e nation and the wants of the people ir ~o'id make but little use of a rifle. ) he utani wh~ cannot vote intelligenttly, id who will not wth 2e :mn be >tes for after he is elected, cannot be ser'eded on to use eithier- gun or iaitc. If the head and brain of o. an cnnn wrkrL o,.t h:iwhlem inw in confronting us, his hand alone will SOnever soe it. If I kill my enemy I silence him, it is true, but I do not convince him. I would make a con vert rather than a corpse of my enemy. "The men who own capital are not enr e(eiiises. If that theory held good the workman of to-day would be th- eneny of his fellow-toiler on- the itorrow-for, after all, it is how to 'e 'inir capital and how to use it prop eriy that we are endeavoring to learn. N, The man of capital is not neces sailV the enenv of h:borers. On the CUnItrary ,hcv Iu-st be brought closer to-ether. I am weil aware that some iex -t-; will say I amn advocating a waik plan. and will say that bloodshed al rI Iuction f property alone will slv tlie problein. If a inan speaks Lttch sentiients in an assembly read for lhii the charge which the Master Work mai repeats to tile niewlv ilnitiat ed who join. our 'army of peace.' if he repeais I;, noniiCiiSe put hin out." T) 11E SAVIOUIZ 0F T1E WO RLD. T;e Isaelites of the New Covenant who Confe" titat Jt-tt is the Messiah. Under the leader:-hip of a preacher named I abinowitz, a Jewish Chris tian movelmient has been in progress for son timie in Bes-arabia, which is de-velo;ins toward an organic form. k hese Ciristians have adopted . a vinbol of the Congregation of the lsrealitv ot the New Covenant," Iromt which, as pri;;ted in The IAde p).lent, we extract the following sig uanlt passages: ''2. 1 believe with an unwavering f:iih thai our Fatier in Heaven, in ac.ordlance with His promise given to our father, our prophets and our King I).ivi!, the son of Jesse, has awakened fr.; Irael a Redeemier-nanely, Jesus, w b. was borI of Mary the virgin, in the city (f Bethleh'iem, of Judlea, W1ho suffredl, was xrueitied, died, and was buried for our salvation; who arose :'gaii from the dead and lives, and tiehold le is sitting at the rignt hand of our Fat her in Heaven, and w ill cone from there to judge the cireuit of ihe earth, the living and the dead, and lie is king over the House of Jacob forever, and IHis kingdom knows no end. " 1 believe with an unwavering faith tbar, according_ to the determina ot Gol to pass judgment, and His foreknowkdge, ur fathers were strick et with: hardine-ss of heart, that they b! pheml) ousl V resisted their Messiah, the Lo)rd Je-u, in order to arouse the othIer nations of the carti to all the greater zeal, and to reconcile them all th rogii their faith in Christ, according to the words of His evangelists, in order that the earth should be full of the knowlcdge of the Lord, and that the Lord should be king over the whole earth. "4. 1 believe with an unwavering fait h that only through faith in Jesus, the Messiah, any man can be justified, without the works of the law, and that there is one God, who, through faitb, justifies the circumcised Jew and the itinci'cumcised Gentiles, and that there is no diff'erence between Jews and Greeks, se-vants and freemen, titenand women ;they are all one in Chriist." s-otrri CAnOLNA NEW,%. A so n of Burwell Blackwell. of Lancas ter, was teverely injured by :I kick from a horo. .''e unrnie ghama. colo red, of Abtbeville, wvas killed byv 'C:tar Thiomna, colored, with .\ eoored bov was s-h't :mdit killed by .tn otr a nar Branch vitle. duing a difti (ulii abou~tt thteiri mrtting meal. I -:ne Wardlaw. colored, who is in Abbe' v ii janti chrged wi h.arcvny of live stock. hasi -zone crazv. and has not eatent or drank thling for si- as ('iver Hester. the slaver of his brother in-1.iw. Barnett. in Slartanbuir, camne in awl .urrendered to the Sherii. H~e claims that the deed was done in self-defense. Tliwo young~ children of Alfred Stevens, :mI inst rious colored resident of a iken, we: redly wounded by a toad of shot and atdtire :trelessiy from an old guni bya :olore'td lad. .\ astin Moody. a Lancaster lad, had two Sn:.wt s of his left hand torn ott and his :ih: hand badly injured by the explosion fa dy namnite cap otn the end of a lead >eril. iLuthetr Barnett. of Spartanburg, was illed by his i roth-tr-in-law. Oliver Hester, tith a )low~ hovei. The ditticulty grew utflester seve'rely beating one of his oung children. Jo Wa l. of Sptartanbturg. caught his out in tbte traces itf a runaway teani and vr ira:gd over 100' yardls and seriously i. Nea-'r the samej place another teamtr 'n mcT anlh Adkins brothers were badly murt. Itis, no tongerr the Ubatriotte. Columbia mdl Augus-ta, lut the Rtichmond and D~an -'lle Rtailroad, South Carolina Division. (hXClumnbia aid CGreenville is the Rlich- f nind amd Danville Rtaiiroad, Columbia and reenviile division. An aged colored mant named Bynum, I ormnerly the ptroperty of Cttl. Jthn B. 'oren and who had charge of the racing tibh- of lt-a rentleman. died recently in. n~r.U uum wats 100 years old, and d va v.l known in sporting circles in ante- 1, 3r. Greenflea f, of Spartanburg, lost a val- d mbtle horse by a peculiair accident. The t '0orse was plowing ini a fild andi stepped on n hot, when the handle flew up. was5 pushed .v Ito lis thigh, siruck an artery and the ani mi bied to death. The store and warehouse of W. P. Caini, ii f Orangeburg, with the entire contents, b ere- burnt by an accidental tire yesterday b: vening'. The safe door was open and the ocuks, pipers and nmoney were conisumned. } .s :about $25.000. insur-mece m$350. The ujateut property was saved with ditlicuity. f (Capt. Robtert W. Andrewvs and his comi- ci ani! :i, Fidoe. will leave Sumter about the jthi iasa. tt o his wayv to Boston. MIass., r ki North Hamtptotu, Va., and Washington. a I. C. T1he Captain, who will be 9)6 next e: th .Juil,ater's anyv man in the United b tates for a walk of one thousand miles or tore. t ' - - **' iiitrftal Elttenry." S a::.e dpe are slo w in telling~ witat w i d Ithiini:.'~Cv been dlone for them, lbut Ir. J1ohn P. i )aly, of Gillistonville, S. C. d ti e tazkes irrent pleasuire in testify'ingt t wonide-rful eflicacy tof Brown's Iron h tiers in tlyspep-ia, fe-;er antd ague. and *:ral debility of the system, Ilt has -iri:ally expterienced thL- most satisfacto -tesults fromu the- uie of this valuiableC edie;ute Mlake atumemorandumur of this. c y e whose systemis aret runa down; Brown's t'n Bitters will eure Vt ui. - Herir 3Most, the Anarchist, was arrestecd st weeck and lckged ini the Tombs pr iso m a w'v~-i~ Yo e tund -ditpped" in om (Chicaigo, to escapte at-rest, lie was be *ought up on Friday, aitd released on til in the sum of onle thiou.-and dollars. bi 2:y wa~au sinbteijed~ by some oIf Vt lost's friends. He complained bitterly tri having been haindcuffed and of the ki -~ o a1 mlat the time be was m,-retd. GENERAL NEWS ITEMs. Factx of Interent Gathered from Various Quarters. The business outlook: Look out Winter clothes have been put in cain phor. Some of the new names for candies are very absurd. Collars now are of all shapes and sizes and all are fashionable. 'Tis not against the laws of man to kiss a girl whenever he can. The gallows exerts a necative influence on the life of eriminals. Whom the gods love die young; but the gods do not love spring chickens. 74.420 persons visited the Central Park menagerie on Sunday. Geronimo's band are still on the war path and several murders are eredited to them. Three soldiers were drowned in the Yel lowstone River by a skiff upsetting. All coats are made loose, even cuLtwys, and hardly any smooth-surfaced cloth is used. Big hats, wasp-like waists and a Jumbo hustle. make the average woman on the streets an absu'd caricature. Running accounts" is bad business for both buyer and seller. It has ruined many men and will ruin many more. "People who live in glass houses" should go to bed with their clothes on to avoid making spectacles of themselves. A number of counterfeit ?100 Bank of England notes have been sent to America for circulation. Edward Brehran. a German bar keeper in New York, committed suicide through homesickness. A tornado passed through Wayne County. N. C.. destroying everything in its track. Several people were killed. The Grand Division of the Sons of Tem perance will meet in Columbia in July next. The Toledo girl who married the fellow to get rid of him has commenced a divorce suit for the same object. "Where are the men of '-6?" shrieks an excited exchange. Oh, to Halifax with the men of 76. Give us the women of 23. Up in Kentucky now they settlef'Piels by arbitration. This shows that Kentucky is progressing. The Orangemen of Ulster, Ireland, are enrolling, men from 18 to 60 and are regu larly drilling. Queen Victoria has paid her second visit to Liverpool-this time to open the Inter national Exhibition. Preston Valentine, the negro murderer, has been sentenced to be hung privately in Augusta on the 2d of July. The new German tariff is threhtening the industries of the empire with loss, instead of promoting them, as Bismarck expected. George H. Butler, Consul General to Egypt. and a prominent newspaper man. died in Washington Thursday. Four persons were drowned in the Nevoho River at Maguire's Ferry, Kansas. They all belonged to one family. A eyclone struck Pontiac, Ill., Thursday, destroying seven stores, a hotel and several other buildings. Joliet also suffered se verely. The remarkable charge is made that the prohibition amendment to Rhode Island's Constitution was carried by the wholesale bribery of voters. F. Sh'a1w. a farmer living near Dallas, Texas. killed two brothers-Jeff. and Tom Bradbury-in a difliculty about some stolen bacon. Dr. G. N. Palmer, a prominent physi cian of Boston, .umped overboard from a steamer with his four-year old grandson and both were drowned. A nwd dog bit a cow near Little Rock, Ark., and - -:: 'ersons who partook of the milk N ,ie ::d are seriously ill, with symptom., .a -..;r'rphobia. Ten chibir- -idlig in Brookv-ille, Pa., were poiso -- - eati.ur snakeroot in mis take for swe:' ,'i rrh. T'he attending ph siciaus think eni bit one w.ll recover. Hugio Fles. a you G-r'an who shot :a burge:~r is his uncle's stcoe in Hanrtford, C~onn., h ;s heen coni uitte.l in at eine of manslaughter.] The seven year locust is due thissumimer. This will please the bug collector, but it w~on't throw the farmer into a very highi state of exhilaration. James Mananion, a member of the Chat mam Artillery, was drowned in Savannah1 River. It is thought that he stumbled and fell in the dark. Rev. J. M1. Wilkes, of Montevallo, Ala., delegate to the Baptist Convention in lIontgomery, dropped dead in the street ronm heart disease. Those people who want to know why I rinters call thin boy the "devil" can readilyc >ring themselves to understand it by cm >loymng a boy for a few days. When your watch stop, be sure it is cound up before rushing off to the jeweler vith it. Don't assume it is broken because here is a temporary stoppage. The Milwaukee City Council has passed 1. resolution looking to the impeachment of klderman Rudzinski, Polish Alderman, or the part he took in the labor riots. The conductor, engineer and firemen of a S reight train on the Pennsylvania Railroad c rere killed in Conemaugh Valley by run- f, ing into an obstruction on the rond caused a, y a storm. Another terrible and destructive cvelone evastatedl portions of several Northwiestern f tates~ yesterday. An immense amount of 1 amage wvas done, and a number of lives r >st. 8 A large camp-meeting tent was blown P own in.Johnson Cou.t', Kansas, while 2e services were in progress. A man amed Jackson. hms wife and their babe P cere killed and many more injured. The legality of the Act annulling the a barter of the Brmoadway Surface Railroad iNew Yiork is to be te~stecd in the courtsa y a bank which advanced money on its e onds. t t1 An effort is being made to naturalize the tI nglish bumblebee in Au~stralia. The c: rimitive attire of the natives certainlyfl irnishes all the induicemients a bumblebee u >uld expect. a Of the Polish and Bohemian rioters who~ te ~galed themselves with liquid refreshments t1l hen they sacked the drug storein Chicago ght have died and at least four more are ol syond hope of recovery. b It seems to have taken a good many years discover the true birthplace of Columbus. en he next thing we shall liear is that Mark mh waini, when he wept at the grave of Adam, ar et the wrong spot. c 11er Most, the New York anarchis; and L 'namiter, will be tried tu-day for ri 't anidT endiarism. The best thing the jury in G s case coldd do would be t' bring in a I :rdict of guilty, and swing him up. Robert Wright. anmerchaNn pf Elizabeth, >d., was shot and killed by a woman who Pined that he had betrayed her and re sed to make repmarationi. The woman .ve herself up, but refused to give her .me. The American Colonizationi Society tuts $100 a head for settling colored nericans in Liberia. Petitionis have been esented to Contrrets from coiload pe'ople the Souith and West asking that such aid granted.I Three tramps attempted to rob the gro ry- store of Amos Harkins at Ilaneytown, . Va. A large bulldog that had been t on guard in the r~tore atta-cked the in iders, seizing one of them by the neck, ling him instantly. Xoman T. Lonserry, a farmer living near Oswego. N. Y., became jealous of hi wife and a man named Horace Pearson and killed them both. he then suicided: in eachn case the heads were ahnost forn off by bul lets from a shotgun. Anv material canl be made fashional;ic now if the right person introduces it. The variety of dress goods ;his season is inpr cedente. and hnindreds of hldies daily ut on shoppinlg excursion~s ire Newililerrid to know what to buy. A bill has been passed by the Kentucky Legislature for levyin.r school taxes. one cise of which readts: "Any widow, spin ster or alien who is a -tax-payer and h1:1 children of a school age shall be qualiiil to vote." Who would have thoughlut it': Mr. John Sherman is indignant at the Southern pe ple for the denionstrations that have he:; made on Mr. IDivis' account. Poor J.im ie didn't do any of the tighting-those who did are not inihgnant. Mr. D:miel Sedford founld a riuhr1 in Cn County, N. C.. and sold it for i.5. t next sold for $3:1)0, 1 hen for $;.o0. ndi a lapidary was the next purchaser. After working upon it for a awlnle Il: sold Ith:! same for the sum of $10,000. The P1plar 0-0wy Sorn assert thO the average length of life is constantly in creasing. and the time may yet come when persons 100 vears old will excite no m)e curiosity than one of eighty years at th present time. Charles Sleun. an eleirly farmer. wen early to feed his stock hi ncoharie, N. Y., and it is supposed fell in a fit and broke his lantern. which set tire to the barn and he was burnt to death, together with seven COW 1s and three horses. 31rs. J. Stranann :itteipti i iorder her young daughter inl West Denver, CoL. and then shot and killed herself. She is said to have been deranged by ;rie over the murder of her father inl Cincinnati in Decembea last and the death of her mother a month later. Sanders Manning, a young r-ient of Macon, Ga.. wile ht::.*in-r hearers. a whai he hiiu;:ht was ::ef th!e ;nimiatih, moving nair the water a:nid tired. killing Joseph flay. a vonigii 11an1. whoi was fish ing. Thei hd who did the shooting i6 in terrible distress at the result. Charles Raynor was killed in Erie, Penn.. on the Conneaut Bridge. The tnfortinate young man was caught by a gle. raised from the top of his train and dropped be tween the cars. He was (ut in tw.in, and one-ha'f of his body went down the ravine, 110 feet deep, while the other remained on the track. It was notice able in the riots in Chieucao, as in the disturbances in Belgimn aed in the history of.all anarchy in France. that women are more aggfressive and violent in their demonstrations of passion and devil try than men. There seems to be a fiendiish side to fema.le nature that knows no law or limit. A monument has been erected in Glas novia, Ireland, in memory of O'Donnell, who killed James Carey, the informer in the trial of the Phnnix Park murderers. An inscription on the monument says: Ie died for Ireland." The expeisC of the monum-nt was defrayed chiefly by Irish-' Americans. An esteemed Radical contemporary says: "Did you observe the names of the *Amer icans' who precipitated last night's outrage in Chicago?" And yet these same "Ameri cans ' were considered good enough to enter the Federal Army as soldiers during the W1ar. Perhaps, howevvr. they were oily good enough -patriots- until after the con ERic". Ohio is still having polit ical war. Twen ty-two Democratie members of the Ohio Senate have left the State to avoid bein-L compellel to attend the ses-ions :nd formii quortim. Fourteen of thetm are at Chatta nooga, campled in a palace car. They are trying to def-t the exOres-ed puirpOse of the Republbi-:m .ntors to fraunduilent ly t-ount the D e~lioirat fr ihm Iiilton~ (Coun ty out and the Ihepubie in Jspirants ini. There is a ;-ruod deald - bustle about the White Hoiuse just now, which ilot duae to irnual hous-e ciadui.. Niety young la flies who profsin ! w :" u ab)out it as sign the C:mise to th1 :. 'ronetila. transfer af Miss Cle'rebind ftou ie' ex: hed social post site h:- CKf-rmr ih: a year tad the suec :. - . lsomi to tihe >ositionu of iirt Ia of the land. "Did I piay for that w ine we hlad 1a1st aight. landlord?"' isked Crimusonbeak, (com ng down one mnirng ith his heal tied ip in a towvel. --Why, you outghtt te knoiw 1lr. Crimsoubcak." replied a bystnden okingly. "- Well." said Crimsonhueak, "I onsulted my pocketbook, anid it seemed to ay that I did; lint when I consulted my end I came to the coneluisioin that I was. >aying for it this morning." The Supreme Court at Washington has lismissed the three Snow polygamy cases or want of jurisdiction, it has also re alled the mandate in the Cannon polygamy ase, set aside the former judgment andl ismnissed1 it for want of jtrisdiction. The ourt has decided that a United Stites ourt has jurisdi-tion over a ease of mur er of one Inidian by another oi~ or on a eservation. Frank Clements, at handsome :ani poplu ir actor of New York. and a mnember of lod jeska's company, threw himself before moving train at Newark, N. J.. on Satur ay and wvas grround to pieces. Hie was a *eotchman of noble faiiyi and had taken rders in the Church of- England, but was - ari-ed from the pulpit by the intemuperane ad scandalous conduct of his wife, to whom e was passionately aittachledl. The number of bills introduced in the louse this session is 8.740. joint resolutions 71, total 8,.911: private bills which have assed the House 651, public11 hills 172, total 23. Of this niunber 170 private and -19 ublic bills have passed the Senate. The [ouse has received 381 bill passed by- the_ enate, 129 of vwhich were public and 252 rivate The House has passed 136 of these ills, 33~ of which were of a public nature id .53 private. It is stated that the Socialists wear dyna- - tite bombs attached to their waists 'and1 >nealed by their coat tails. If such-l is G to case, it would not be a bad ide-atoequip te police with a long pole, so that v ienct ley are called upoan a disperse a riotous owd of men they can punch thenm under. e coat tails with the poles. and thtus blowv ti p the dynamiters with their own pietardls. " id at the same time ascertain the charae. r oif the assemblage with out danger to G .emselves. Mr. Jefferson Davis is seventy-eight years y d. Mr. Lincoln andI Mr. Davis weore both >rn in Kentucky. Mr. Davis came South. r. Lincoln wenit North, and their politi .1 courses diverged accordingly until cul ination as opposig chieftains of great mies and governments in thre irrepressible nilict. 31r. Davis was a y-ear older tan neoln, two years older than the tierv >ombs, four years older than the " Little atnt" D ou glas, live years oldetr than Wil mn L. Yancey, tour vetars older thtan dah P. Benjiamiin, and twel'.eyvatrs older an .lohn C. :neckinr ige 5 GR MPHL NASRV EI SPRINGFEVER At thjis isea(;- very~ Vn17e needs to use some ctoftonic. ! EJN ;eter. nto d moeteery phy sician'a prscription for thoso % to need building up. BROWM !4A _BEST TOMNIC. For Weakneny, Tasitrde. ]ark of :;er ehm., it A NO EQA, and tote&l rnmedicine that is nt Injurious. Iz Enrlc'h-s the Blood. Invigrate,. The .System, iie;tures Appetite,Aidsig~entlit It do~es not blacken or injure the teeth, cause head. ache or prodnce constipation.--wr Iron -nedicines do DV. (.. H. BI'.KLEY, a leading physician of Svringfiold.0. rs Brown'4 ITon Ehter iA thoronghlypod medi cir.e. I tare it in i mypractice, and tind its action edepln all other forms of iron. Inweaknes ioralow condititfl of tho mytomr. Brown's Iron Bitters is usualiy &pstive nocessiLy. It is all that is claimed for it." Genuine has trade mark and cresed red lines on wiapper. Take no other. Madeonlyby BROWN CHEMICAL CO.. RALTIMORE.MD. LA s e an d attractive con taiin lir4 prized; for recipes, infarmnation about coins etc..a siren away by a dealers in medicine. cr mailed to*eny Add-ss.4 On receipt of 12o. staup. FOR COUCHS AND CROUP USi WEE RE Tb. sweet gumas gathered from atres of the usname growing aleng the small streams In the SoutArn Sats4 contains a stimulating expectorant principle that loosens the phlegm produeing the early morning cough. and stimu law the child to throw off the false membrane in croup and whe oping-tough. When combined with the healing mud. latgIous1rincpl tio the mullein plant of the old felds, pre snsI AznsCnaloxal Ezxisiur ~Swmar Gum eon ULxxxau the finest known remedy for *Coughs, Croup, WhopngCog andConsumption;ands paat eany ehild ispl a;.sed ttaet.Akordrgitfrt.riE, 25c. 8 1. ATR.TYOAlna a Use DR. BIGGERS* EtCKLEBERRi CORDIAL ft Idarrhcea. Dysentery and Children Teething. ror oWW b2 AURANTIIl Most of the diseases which afflict mankind are origin ally caused by adisordered condition of the LIVER. For all complaints of this kind, such as Torpidity of the Liver, Biliousness. Nervous Dysapepsia, Indiges tion, Irregularity of the Bowels, Constipation, Flatas lency. Eructations and Burning of the Stomach (sometimes called Heartburn). Miasma. Malaria, Bloody Flux, Chills and Fever, Breakbone Fever, Exhaustion before or after Fevors, Chronic Diar rha. Loss of Appetite, Headache, Fool Breath, Irregulauities incidental to Fema!:s Bearing-down Pins Back. STA D IG ER'S A URAN TIl islinvaluable. It isnot apanaca foralldiseases, bCut R lE sae o h L IVE R, It changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow tinge. to a ruddy. hoalthy color. It entirely removes low, gloomy spirits, It is one of the BEST A L TERATIVES and PURIFIERS OF THE BLOOD, and Is A VALUABLE TONIC. STADICER'S AURANTII, For slo by aflDruggists. Price $1.00 per bottle, C. F. STA DICE R, Proprietor, 140 SO. FRONT ST.. PhiladelphIa, Pa. Many a Lady is beautiful, all but her skin; and nobody has ever told her how easy it is to put beauty on the skin. Beauty on the skin is Magnolia Balm. WHITE LIEGHORNS. I ami now breeding fromi birds that score -oin 85 to 90) poinits. Eggs $1.00 per sit nlg of 113. Chicks, this fall, at $2.50 per -io. Egas paceked carefu'lv in baskets. air hatch guaranteed. Foi- further in >rmtioni, addeews J. S. MIcCREIGHT, Ap10L1mt W ysiono, S. C. SHLEY ,OLU The Solub kl/G taois'a'highly Concentrated rade Fortilizer for all crops. ASH LEY COTTON AND CORN COMPOI 70 crops antd alko largely used by the Truckel ASULEY A.81 ELE MEN T.-A very cheap izer for (ottont, Corn anid Smiall Grain Crops lies, etc. ASIL EY DISSO)LVED) BONE: ASHLEY rades--for n.a. alonle and ill Compost heap. For T1ermse, D)iretions-, Testimlonials, and for iblicationis of the Compatny, address v5vTHE ASHLEY PHOSP~ AIN I ~ nlena Hackrf 5.CoghVhoopin Co'ugh ,rrheia, Kidney Troubles, and Spinal Diseases. Pamiph RS 'N sese ll z'r wonderful disovry. No ethers 19l oe Sold everywere, or sent by mal o 25. in: tamps dris absolutly rothr'-n. t** & vrywhere, o se by talfr 25 canta in stamps. Men Think they know all about Mustang Lin iment. Few do. Not to know is not to have. "M~OTHER~S' NO More Terror! 'Not only shrten the timie of labor and& lessens the intensity Negore. Pan! 'f (1Pan, .It, f7,. Ne~orePain! reatly duminshes the danger to life of both Noore Banger!mother and child, an(d Neaves the mother in a condition highly fa vorable to speeay re coverv, and far less, Mother or Ohld.ableto iooding, Col, vidsions, and other alarming sy mp tom s incident to slow or The Dread of painful labor. Its Mother h t ru wonderfuleffica Mohr oa yi this respect en titles it to be called Transforned to TH E M 0 T ri E R'S FRIEND and to be ranked as one of the life-saving remedies Hof the nineteenth cen :turv. eid Prom the nature of the case it will of Jocourse be understood that we cannot pub . 0 Y ,lish certificates con 'cerning this REMEDY without weundiug the delicacy of the writers Safety and Ease:Yet we have hundreds .of such testimonialson file, and no mother who has once used it will ever again be Suffering Woman without it in her time of trouble. % A prominent physician lately remarked to the proprietor, that if it were admissible to nadke public the letters we receive, the 'Mothers' Friend" would outsell anything n the market. GENTLEMEN:-During my career in the practice of medicine I uset, your "MOTH ER'S FRIEND" in a great number of eases, with the happiest results in every instance. It makes labor easy, hastens de livery and recovery, and TNsUREs sAFETY rO BOTI MOTHER AND CHILD. No woman man be induced to go through the ordeal. Vithout it after once using it. Yours truly, T. E. PENNINGTON, . D. Palmetto, Ga., June 10, 18S4. Send for our Treatise on "Uealth and Happiness of Woman," mailed free. B ADFIELD REGULATOR Co., Atlanta, Ga. Emmi TRADE 4~ MARK. IneegrowinCounries of Europe, thes ofThisMedicated&ineisniversal. Itis camosedof themostapproved, VEGETABLE TONICS, h1ilearen mi..ucediato a - generousWine. Theveryfist beingitsmedicalasis,itisconidenilly reemnmended~as a cure anadpreventive af F'EVER AND AG UE e n alohdseases orinang fram. 'malarious causes or- purifying the BLOOID Eaimprovmg the Secretions,Chirunio, Rheumnatism,Bloodpoisoning,arcertaiL cmIbr fpp ia,Cramp in the stomaab. ainediaterelieffor DysentrIy,Calic. Cholera-morbus and kindred diseaes, General Weakness,Nervous and Mental Debilityasauvereignremedyinrliver Complaint.anadiseases of the ludnies,an excellent appetizur ana& TONIC without a rival? 'Isota mgrtn aLheundiis ofthe system,it is un equalled. Asmnalwine-sfulthretimes a day Sold by all Dnuggists and dealers geeally. TOPAZ CINCHONA CO RDIAL CO, ~5J.zeto' NC*anuftaekawra. SS. 'R TANBURG. S.C. Price per Bottle $l.00. BL E PUA NO. A.mmoniated Guxan \, a complete High* ~ND.-A "eomplete Fertilizer for these s near Charleston for vegetal*ir etc. and excellent Noni- Mr.niaied Fer ., and alo fo~r Fru'-MMeer, Grape ACID PHO1SPHA TE, of very High the various attractivo iand instructive ATE CO., CharlestonitSjC. INODYNE ENTi9 etD..r.Lz~. &ensn'0d.,"Ratn, Maaa. MAKE E W, R ICH& BLOOD. 15 ae ox swrth l'ae the co of a ox *C 21-d ib.a t can s i t mag r2