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A Eig Robbery In CharIeston. Charleston is very much stirred up over the systematic robbery of one of the largest wholesale houses on East Bay, and a Pin kerton detective who has been working up the case has just made his report. it is said that since the death of the se ior som six years ago the houise' has fallen behind between $100.;0 :md b1O00 but it was not until six moutis ago that the house su pectetd anything wro . A Pinketon_ de tective was sent for. S'oon after this a vyoung man was given em.ymlit in the store and gradually worked hinself up from porter, watchman, assistant shipping clerk. etc, remaning in each departnieit long cuough to become thorouhly acquainted with his fellow clerks The young man turned out to be a detective and about a week ago he returned to his emiplovers and made his report to the agency who sent it to the house. The r-port exposed the whole business and designated the gilty parties. The !!rm is now treating with te with a view to recovering a portion of the spoils. It is said that one of the clerks o salesmen, or whoever lie is (nobody seems to know who he is.) has offered $5,000 to get off. This enterprising youth, so the story goes, has managed in five or six years to accunuite a deposit of $10,000 in the city bank, and to do this on a salary of $75 per month.' There are said to be three or four others who have been equally success ful in -business, and-it is stated that the reason-the matter has been kept quiet is be cause the firm is endeavoring to compromise withits wealthy employees. This, it may be repeated, is simply a-summary of the thous and and one rumors that are flying about condensed and put into narrative form. Seurr.aa News. The RaIlroads and the Law. Prominent railroad men suggest a con vention of railroad representatives to agree upon a rise of 100 per cent. in through freight rates, with the anticipated effect of creatig a panic and bringing about the re peal of the inter-State commerce Act. Such an advance would pay the railroads very well unttl the commissioners brought them to books for vi, lating the fundamental requirement of the act, which is that the rates shall be "reasonable and just." An advance of 100 per cent. in rates at one time by all the railroads would look like a pool or conspiracy, and would have to be explained satisfactorily by reference to de tails. There is a penalty of $5,000 for each violation of the act. This penalty, together with the terrors of an investigation, will probably prevent any unnecessary advance of rates. The better policy for the rail roads is to accept the Act loyally and try to carry it out in good faith. They have long desired something to protect them from themselves, and they may yet find the inter State commerce Act the very thing they have wanted. It subjects them to the re stiaints of law, and must tend to substi tute-civilized methods for barbarous and predatory habits. There are some roads probably that never had a solid basis of business. But to roads that are really needed, quiet, steady and honest ways, such as the law requires, will in the end be ad -nitted to be better. Stockholders will un doubtedly fare better when railroad ofiicials lose their autocratic powers and wild-eat adventures have an end.-Baltimore Sun. Head ur ge r44,- erce. Officers of. high rank ~in the army are confident that no action will be taken in the matter of the appointment of a new chief signal officer for the present. It will be impossibleto accomplish anything in the way of '.trmfer of the signal bureau to the civi. service at this session of Con gress. It is the general impression that for this-reason the WVar Department will ase its'ienuine to postpone the appoinment of a niew hidf until after the next session of Congress. Captain Greely will be allowed to remain at the head of the corps untul the fate of the proposed changes is deninitely known. In case the transfer cannot be effected, it is not the opinion that Capt. Greely will be made chief signal officer. It is one oC the '-plums" of the service, and there is not a colonel of the line who would not willingly accept it. Gen. Hlazen held the rank of colonel -when he was ap -pointed, and it is not probable an officer of a lower rank could jump to a brigadier peneralship. Another question has arisen in tonnection with the temyporary appoint * mend -ECaptain Greely. The statutes have it that there shtdl be no temporary ap tments for a longer period than ten dys after the death, resignation or dismis .slofan official. There is somse difference of opinion as to the proper construction to be placoed on the statute. The second comptroller will take up this question when ten days have expired fronm the death of Gen. Hazen, and will probably render some decision on the dispute poimts. Las f the Sate. . PBUTnToN FROMX FOREST FIRES. :A&s Acr to amend Section 2a97 of the General Statutes of South Carolina, in relation to Setting Fire to Grass. "SEcrboN 1. That Section 2497 of the General Statutes of South Carolina be, and the same is hereby, amended, so thait said section, when amended, shall read as follows: "Section 2497. Whoever 'iall mli ciously or negligently set fire to, or burn, any gra, brush or other com bustible matter, so as thereby any woods, fields, fences or marshes of any other person or persons be set on fire, or cause the same to be done, or be thereunto aiding or assisting, shall, upon indictment and conviction thereof, be liable to fine and imprisonment at the discretion of the Court, and shall, more over, be liable to the action of any per son or persons who may have sustained amage thereby: Provi~ded, that no per son or persons shall be prevented from firing woods, fields, hands or marshes within his own bounds, so that he suffer not the fire to get without the bounds of his lands and injure the woods, fence or grass of any other person or persons." THE comencToN OF T.XES. As AcT to Rbegulate: the Time for Col lecting Taxes by Execution or Distress. $zc~roN 1. That,. hereafter county treasurers shall not proceed to colle" delinquent taxes by execution or distress until ten days after the addition of the -fifteen per cent- penalty, so that delin quent taxpayers shall have an opportuni ty within such time to pay the taxes and penalty without additional costs or ex penses. SEc. 2. This Act shall take effect from ..and immediately after the date of its ap proval. - Wall Papersi. If you live in a rentedI house, refuse to sign the next lease unless the house shall be papered for you. Accept a cheap paper if necessary, bnt stipulate that you shall do your choosing yourself. Then mnake your self fit to choose, and don't rely on the glb best clerk that e-ver persad~ed aheatn customer. R~eadl Eastiake's PHits o - Household Taste," get the "lious'e" 'eui ful" from the library.:mnd lookupeib ner's Household Art &-rka. A! le-,... rew Eastlake, andl dIiscover for~ yourse-lf that the so-called Eastlakian pa: pers an.I carpets~ are far from belngt :ale :Uer his dri::ns: are, in short, what -lie me t a! omiraated. 'Then, armed and equtipped with ke'w ledge, mnake a dlete-rmned raid upon the cheap papers; ask for 15 cent rolls itst and then, if you mh~st, go up to t'.>, but .ao higher. One of the prettiest papers 1 ever saw was only 15 cents a roll. Of course there was no gilt, but gilt is of doubtful value in a paper. If you are very short of funds, put the paper on yourself. It is not a all an ;imoeibl task.-k;od llTowe GENERAL NEWS NOTES. The deadlock continues in the Indiana Legilature. The West Virgiuia Legislature failed to elect a Senator. The brewers at Des 'Moines, Ia., have a-'n closed their retail bars. TLe trial of boodle Alderman O'Neill, of Ne'w York. began yesterday. The British steaner Crambrook has been lI at at sea with her crew of :'0 men. A dozcn families in iazelton. Penn., have b'en poisoned by eating a bad cheese. jT'h shot tower of the Gulf Shot and Lead C >pany, of New Orleans, has been burned. The Queen's speech on the openiag of P.:rIiament excited little interest. A fre in Dallas. Tex., on Wednesdav. d , troye 1400.00 worth of proper:. r.x-President Haves a:4 bau :aointed a Trustce ' the UniversitV of Ohi. A ir nt i the te'lephine case bepn .n n: L'nited StatCs Supreme Court 3MondAy. In the last 10 days more tima $.000,000 w th a of Alabaia publIc lands has iibeen The British steamship Nepaln reetly sauh a Chinese transport with 100 matnda rins and soldiers. The lower house of the Texas Legislature has passed a bill forbidding officials of that State from using free passes on railroads. The National Convention of the Woman Suiffrag Association opened its session at Washington yesterday. Governor Foraker, of Ohio, has issued a proclanation of quarantine against the shipment of cattle for Illinois. Judge Thomas S. Ashe. of the State Su pr eme Court. is critically ill at his home, in WVzalesboro, N. c. The residence of II. F. RLoss, at Feruan y, P was burned, and his four chil dren were burned to death. The United Labor party of Philadelphia, Pa., in eonvention have nominated Thomas Phelps, a shoemaker, for Mayor. Two pilots were drowned while attempt ing to make a landing at Barnegat, N. J.. their boat being lost in the gale. The rcsolution to amend the Constitution so as to permit women to vote has been kaled in the Senate. Ex-Sheriff Harry H. Koch. of Buffalo, N. Y., committed suicide Tuesday by hang There has been no advance towards a set tement of the trouble in Higgin's carpet factory at New York. Bisniarck claims that he will soon publish a paper from the Pope, taking sides ivith the government. Over 30.000 longshoremen are on a strike in New York, and many ocean steamships are kept in port. The North Carolina Knights of Labor have passed resolutions urging the passage cf the Blair educational bill. The headquarters of the Richmond and Dmnville railroad will soon be moved back to Richmond. The Chicago Union League has declined to elect Mr. Gladstone an honorary mem ber of that body. The longshoremen's strike in New York is gr6wing in proportions, and has now ex. tended- to nearly all the steamship lines. An order has been issued forbidding the exportation of horses across the German frontier in any direction. The 3emphis (Tenn ) National Bank, with its capital stock of $500,000 all sub scribed, was organized last night. A boiler explosion near Oil City. Pa., in ti:e Egypt oil district, demolished the boiler house and killed two men. The Senate has passed the House bill to appropriate j300,000 for a site and a Pub lic building in Charleston. The Tennessee Legislature, on the sixth ballot for United States Senator, elected ex G .-.ernor W. B. Bates, Democrat. Thle 3Miehigan Legislature has passed a bill directed against imported detedtives like Pinkerton's men. Two boys, aged 12 and 13 respectively, were drowned in the Schuylkill canal. They were skating, and the ice broke. The bill appropriating $100,000 for the reief of the sufferers by the drouth was passed in the Texas Senate. Trhe people of Corinth, MIiss., are elated over the discovery of what appears to be black and white iron ore 12 miles distant. For ballots were taken in joint session in the Texas Legislature for Senator, but without inal result. Reagan leads. The longshoremen's strike in New York is growing serious, and trouble is expected in a few (days when large ocean steamships The Health Commissioners of New York have decided not to declare small pox epi decmical as it would cause the city to lose about .$1,000,000 worth of trade. S'enator Butler has introduced a~n amend. mecnt to the river and harbor bill, providing for' an appropriation of $100,000 for Win yali Blay. The Texas iregislature balioted for United States Senator without result. A joint bal lot will be taken to-day. General Mlaxey leads.. To-day the two houses of the West Vir gintia Iegislature will ballot for Senator in joint assembly. and it is thought that Cam den will be elceted. Hloiiingsworth, the defaulting treasurer of Knox county, Ind., walked into the court room and gave himself up). It is said he will implicate prominent citizens. Several persons have died at Mount Clair, N. J1 . from drinking water from a welli that had lbeen poisoned by the drainage of a cess The New German Liberals of the Second Ber h ldistrict have nonminateti Prof. Vir clhcw for the Reichstng, in opposition to Voa Moltke. .J. Hi. Engel, of Sunbury, Pa., died re cendyv of hydrophobia. He was bitten by a d ag above the eye a short time ago. H~e fro)thedj at the mouth with convulsions be iore dlying. Ten thousand people assembled in Madi son Squnare Garden, New York, Sunday nihin compliment to Michael Davitt and his wife. Go'vcrnor Lee and some friends have gone onl :.n excursion to Minnesota. They will v~i; the ice palace at St. Paul, and after wards: go to D~uiuth. Mrs. Van Zandt, the mother of the girl Iwho wants to marry the anrarchist Spies. saiys she is going with her datughter to Paris tili i he uppeal of Spies be decided. Father McGlynn has replied at length to Arcii!bishop Corrigan. lie actuses the pre late of disingenuousness, and adheres to huis pod~( theory. A puarty of masked men, supposedi to be illicit distillers, in Dawson county,. Ga., wayudd Andrew Howard and stamped hhm In To'mwns county,. Ga., J1. C. JTustice shot :.ad hilecd .J. B. Goddard, whom he suts po-ed of iin~g information to revenue osii. er<. The rmrdrer is ini jail T-" J murym thaw has produced remark a* ' ods and ice gorges in Schuayikill ri l, ea Radinfg, Pa., and at other - rinWhitchurst & Owen's sash and .dfto-y '.:t Richmond, Va., entailed a lon.....:.~>u and cased the death of a col-r-" tirensan. T'- emlomyees in Wi ggins &: Co.'s carpet factory 'at New York, nuimberng 2,500. hav'- struck because of the discharge of someU employees. Gnerl Charle P. Stone, the A mericam ,eneral who in recent vears rendered con picuous service in the Egyptian army, is I tead. St-day nigt the ost ollice: Columbus, diS., wis robbed of i5I :uni seven repzs By a Gre :.t I~ vle Z(..Ni y redo tI f:wi re ::dh1r an hbe . :eiE a ,:nt ::tm m ii h A dispatch fromToii ::th C. wci BCssmi e ::onltere . ;!,.:r.1 Voxka Ta- : '. to i.d. 5 w LA .celllop AL Ei-emni, of .a C e. lis iocked by ;lxctricit i I I -day vight, in try tor' ri\ un e ceetrie ligt. He i :mrceted to die. The Pre-lent's rtcptin o Cres md41 the Judic-ar.u. the e o f this ea ns eries, tOok place at thC Vite House The boot und Shoe ftetu' es of Wercis 'er and Spencer. Mass.. have commnenced a molvemeft 1okito hIlle -clnpiayment f any Knights of Lbr. The Aneica Cti n il C0omt:av. -erating in 2 - :)pp., I:d t ric of Cotton Scud-a vv ory "'r the p:::nters. Postmaster Francis E. Shi-p, or emt Wis., Was lo)Ui jall at -'l .iw ke, 3hg!1 charged with inaving riied la r-e Iiber of registered letters Calculations on the tt:Il yied If the uc-rir crop Of Cuit ba vary betw\Vee .ai'n o,cli) Id S00,060 tolls. There is Sill a fair de 3 and for toiaeco acd ei ca The boiler in the Harvey papi-r m :it Wellsburg. W. V.. exploded, k:iiWc John M41 Thomas N -lsin d severly injuriig John Parish. Frank D. Wae ott. froi Vermont. went I;) an opiaum den in Livingj stonj , o.ttlima. Ad died from the use of 1he druI. The hinamen running the uden were ordered to puit, and they did so. Three colored men were drowned in outl river. near Annapoi-. One oif tie iumnber broke through the ice. and the >iher two were drowned in trying to rescue nlm. Advices from Zanzibar say Count Tele ev's expedition for the expiloatiin of (n .rl Africa, which arrived in Zauzilir hat une. has now started for ihe nminhad. Tanies T. Titus. of Uelvidt-re. N .1.. tie :ollege janitor co.nvicted of the murder in! )>trage of the servant girl named Tillie ;miith, is sentenced to le hanged April 14. Three local assemblies in Pil:ipia. yomiposed of journeymen tailors. L:cve me :eded from the Knights o[ Labor. Their trevance is that "boss" t::i!ors idldlC men) mvye been admitted into the order. A dispatch from SuAkim says is re xorted that a small force of Ainis ituacked Wassowal and wer epu'lse! with loss of 200 killed. Five 'cli:ms were illed. Tlhe Senate 'ct-laration' at Indi.a.c , nd.. is without chauge. Two aHots wre :ken. All the menibers were prezei, :. .c tigures went back to thoe of La veel.. President andl Mrs. Clevelawl. with a arre party of friends. went ti Etimor tiendlar. night and were presenl :4 the :arty ball. They returnca to c\ asuing ,on about 1.00. At Nelson, Minn., Thursdayv niniht, four en in a sleigh, crossingz a railroad track, ere run into ay a train. Twoi of thern ere killed. one was mnortahty a::d the ~orh was badly injned. Ti:imas C. Evans, of Nanticoke. I'.., wh was arrested list fi Ior brier at the RepIublcanl Conventiron. w:: c(nicI in he Criminal Court at Wilksare The striking oper::;ie ine ii':ln cat >et factory :t New i orc are; ot :v rained thie victory iver thir i emiployers. lhey havc retur::ed to work in a b:>dy. Havemeyer's Sugar Red::In:. Cr :'p-m'. vorks on Commercial stre. Bro.l.i . 2ave been closed by a want of 0' coal. r cg a large numb~er of men out of employ nent. Charles Taylor. aged 18, formerly clerk n the post office at Columbus, 3iis.na ,een arrested in Nashville with 0.'o0 of ~tolen money in his possession. The passagre by the U.nited States Sernate f the Edmuinds fisheries bill attracts very ittle attention at Toronto. None of the 2ewspapers conmmenton the matter edito -iall. Seven jucrors in the O'Neill bribery case sae been taiken from the box by chalienges >3 the prosecution. Others hav~n been: ili ainied, and thle day3 csed with ' 11 nthe Tiil demands of the employees of the \tional Tube Works of i cu.u, Pa or an advance of wages has been - rame. n.e increase will average 15 per cent. "'nd ifliets 2,500 ivorikmen. A n immense breaker of tne Parishc (a] opany. at Plymoutb., wastil urned Tuesday night. It was on~e ei ica ar~rest breakers in a thracite coa regices. md ad a eapacity for 1,200 tonsi per day. The origin of the recent great dire:c at verdon. Switzeirl, has been trl:ced tV .narhists. who set flic to many lhuibilincx xithc the oibject of making work for unem leyed~ persons. Thirty Democratic memibers of the House mi niune Democratic Sinars of th - Jersey Leg~islatiireb i)oted ini joima 5iesshm ir Senator ve-sterdar,. but dIid hJIt ave t nequired maljority. ~They adjourn~aed uimil o-day. Advices from 3Iexico say a g-reat deail of uifring~ is repiorteid omong thle Chtinese in Inzaian, arising out of ditfereces- br"etwee he labourers -.ad 'the c("piies hic rocrht them( iut. Coal operiators tOi1( a In th -rior and11 Iown a nnber of.thr w-orksl on avenuntli f the-carcity of ea. About 1(.I 0 ' mn tre htown iout .f ecnpl]ment The oicofthe. l Guf, C(1r.l1 .o Santa Fe rail' i. 1t L~had ex Avas r-,bbedc of '. 1,0 ,in Tin t ni. he s:tin agent was fir'-d,: th muzI if a pistol, to -show them~ the -saf. TheC cottonf eroin Me.:Cic tis yea (w - imountt to about 8.000UI quiat-:ls andc ll0,00 c i nt l ;ce ntiar illup the dt-It willhae id fro tile Un ii ~i.-ite rte. iI ii eato ~.\largoe irodem a in~ toti 'icinity of the custom house and post office, >locking the street and showing great en husiasm. The Indiana Senatorship is as far from a ettleient as ever, and there is no imme lite iprospect of a change. The General Vemlv met in joint convention Monday Ud tok one ballot, which resulted: Tur .i,: Harrison, 70: Allen. 4. T 'e eNlosion of a boiler occurred at & Co.'s iron works at EInaborough, -e:ir1'PitIburg, Pa., badly wrecking the n11. One man naned Patterson was in :mr,; ille(l and a number of others se -isly injured. Friday, MrS. Kuester, of Wisner. Ne faaka. pu, poison in a bottle of whisky xV; which her husband afterwards treated le family of John Wherrer. All who ir:nk were taken violently ill, and Louis Wh arer has since died. Mrs. Kuester has :n arested. Two bills directed against the employ u:vnt of Pinkerton's oflicers within the .7ate wcre introduced in the New Jersey islature yesterday. They were general . rohiitng, under heavy penalty, any 1rson 1o1 actually a citizen of the State r"i "ctinn as police or detective officer. lUnd Cornish went to the house of a rmuer, John Green, near Sharpsvipe, Ky., n' after a few words. shot and killed Lulu reen, aged 16. The mother attempted to ,ave her daiughter and was also seriously aounded. Cornish was arrested and lodgep n ji at Springtield. The ora"ization of the New Jersey Sen :te Is beca postponed until Friday. In he Iouse the Democrats by a party vote -ased a resolution to begin balloting for 'enator, and Leon Abbott, of Hudson. re eived the :0 Democratic votes, the Repub Feans refusing to vote on the ground of Senator Morgan introduced as an amend ent to the bill which passed the House reting a Department of Agriculture and Iibor, a section providing for the transfer of the signal service to one of the civil de p)irt lents of the Government (not named) d providing for the retention of the lresent org'anization. Henry Stiles, a colored boy 10 years old, was arrested in Savannah for the murder nf Charles Bogens, colored, 14 years old. 'he two boys had a quarrel on Tucsday, Ali Stiles struck Bogens in the back with I rickbat. Bogens died Thursday morn . lie was subject to spasms. Stiles 'a.m11,4 that the brick was thrown in self --'fence. About 200 cases of giant powder ex Npoded while in transit over the Missouri Pacilie road half a mile west of Fort Scott, K:allsns. yesterday morning. It was being tr:mnsported in a magazine car. The train -nissted of 23 freight cars and 15 of them wre completely demolished. The engine was't brdly brokent up, but not blown off the tracik. Only one man was killed. An Orsini bomb was thrown near the Town Hall in Altoona last night, but it ex plted soon and did no harm. Fragments i the bomb were analyzed, and it was rountd that it had not been manufactured by an expert. Several Socialists were ar rrsted on suspicion of being concerued in 'he -atair. but they were liberated after a dhort detention. In the sundry civil appropriation bilI re )orted by Senator Allison, the estimates uounted to $31,540,862. The House bill ilopropriated 19,753,411. The Senate com l':ttee has increased the amount to $22, td.S56. Thus the bill as reported is .sI7.,006 below the estimates and $31,945 n excess of the app- priations for the cur enit year. Ie annourcement is made in Cincinnati nat a contract has been signed for the pur *e of putting on the road a theatrical mp--, under the auspices and with the nproval of the Catholic Church, with the ject of collecting a fund for the reliet of a'- ere'.iitois of the late Archbishop Pur 2o 11 hevnt ure is to start very soon, but il not da business during Lent. Aug"ust Goethe, a car-driver in Milwau kwa uled and ro bbed some months g. o voys, Mahon McCullough and n~ m. Pelizo, were arrested oni the charge -f ha-ving done the crime, were convicted misent to the penitentiary for three years. Deve's furnished the evidence against .em. No. Father Decker, a Catholic pre as that the real criminal confessed mhiat lthat lhe cannot reveal his name. The' pit'.S statemnent is generally believed, le it is0 norobable that the boys will be i r.::1 They have been shamefully rented in prison, and one of them is said a edying of consumption. The Salvation A rmy Opens Fire. rTle Salvbation Army did not present a ~ery formidaule array when it opened fire the1 hosts of sin in front of the .eres nice on Sunday afternoon. It consisted ' Adjut~nt Newton, who is a heavily built el! d' ''sed youag Englishman, wearing a medium length blonde beard over his face, atu his w. . Mr. Newton wore a red hirt underc Jiis dress coat and a red band roiund il airlilery cap, bearing the words :lv" in Airmy;"3Irs. Newton wore only ie band about her bonnet. The only .nal weapon visible was a concertina on x.iM eh 31r. Newton played hymn tunes sail!e he and 3Mrs. Newton sang. Anter a few renmarks from 3Mr. Newton m.-i some singing before the number of ieople who assembled the army went to :he hail, which was well filled. Singing, le concertina, prayer and speaking con tituted the services. MIr. and MIrs. New 'cn both spoke, M1r. Newton's remarks be a' soimething of a sermon with a duly an munced -'ex"t. The congregation was re, btt did not seem to be much im pre'seld Adju:ant Newtonm stated that the -rice no b eing held are for white peo pi an1d timt~ special services for colored ecc p e w i be held soon. There was noth n;: especilyInoticable in the sermons. Teservice last nigtht was well attended mud their conduct was as usual, includilng he: collectie i, which seemed to yield but a 'IanOty. suu . The chief impression made y Mj 'atNewton is that he is much in m:nst both in singing and preaching. The Electoral Count Bill. Blothi houses of Congress have passed the -ie,>a count biA anmd it only needs the President' sginature to become alaw. HaIp !!;' there is thiought to be no doubt of the r' it' approval. The. bill passed so niciy atla I throuh hoth houses that it dh.iiluh to realize why it should not have v'come a law~ y'ear ago. It removes all 1e doub a.ii conuion1(' about the coutling ,f the I Pes-~ien ial ote in Congress, aind ei liinates crom1 our quadrennial con essone of thec most disturbing elements a elh have ever been~ conntected with them. 'ai .1nd the P residential succession law of he last session are most important achieve nass lf they could be supplemented a w with a constitutio)nal amendment in -:-a 1n1'h Pre~tdential term to six years .1d, foldn 'the re-election of an incum ra.we sho'll advance still further on * - )e to sability and freedom, foi' at a't de~:t of tile time fro political excite mnt and pamrtisan plotting.-Kne Y..rk .e~il-a -hold e deCected in every' a r:!aingthe S:le and use of the :yi resorted to by woomen 1in r:sraill to obta:1in beautiful com; :::waeth're exists in D~r. Harter's r ':: ie v requisite necessary' to Ic. : i he objet wvithout injuring thbe !'h or n:dmgering life.* A 'n echanim"'c speaks of a man with double 'Ih wh 'an '1rack a walnut. That is ong. There is a policeman in Colum C- who ha a' set of false tee'th and lhe c'an r -' -, r- - L O m . lt BRIC-A-BRAC. WO.LM S AT . When lovely woman throws a rock, A contumacious lien to scare, It gives th' artistic eye a shock To mark her attitude and air, But be not to your danger blini. If you should be besido her then: At once a place of safety find. That is to say, stand near the lien. Parasites-Eye-glasses. A matter of cores--Apples. The plumber's vegetable-Leek. High strung-Telegraph wires. A grave charge-The sexton's fce. Hours of idolness-Sparkling days. Do wiry men make the best telearaphcr: A teetotaller-An accountant in a store. 'Much adieu about rothingr-The p: of two society girls. The wood-chopper is the chap who can always "make his pile." The p's that Russia wants-Piunder, power and prestige. No man can digest thl English gra: until he has et a mology. A maid is ayoung lady who is single .nd who will be won if she marries. When the heart is full th li s are when the man is full it is different. An after-dinner speaker-The banbcrn cracker. Never trust the man who is alwa-ys de preciating his associates. A restaurant keeper can make both cais meet by serying calf's head and ox-tail soun. The latest wrinkle-That in the tails of your overcoat. When a man loses his inlse teeth, coui it lie called a gum drop! The way of the transgressor is hard-e cause many feet have trodden it. "A Terrible Temptation"-To say "ces nut" when an old joke is sprung. The more intelligent you make a jury man believe he is the stupider he gets. A conductor can be polite to the ladies and at the saie time knock down the iare. Hens have an ambition simihir to men. They all want to get on the highest rotst. "Two heads are better than one." This was written before three-story bonnets cane in fashion. It is said of one fashionable voune' man that he never paid anything but a comlti ment. A sporting paper says: "A match rrce has been arranged." We presume it v ilI end in a scratch. The elephant is never troubled with ba gage when he is traveling, his trunk is always "on a head." Mr. John L. Sullivan seldom b(cones unconscious, still his opponents are ahvlays alarmed when he feints. An exchange says that the masctline girl must go. If she have the "go" in her why shouldn't she. Education is something like love. Mos men think they've got it till they come to be about 40 years old. That only can with propriety be styld refinement which, by strengthening the in tellect, purifies the manners. An Ohio girl has had 99 offers of nzr ringes within two years. Perhaps the lo0th man will be the unlucky fellow. A Nebraska court has undertaiken to ex plain "What is in a saniage." At last reports it had got no farther than the bark. "The most unkindnest cut of all" is fre-I quently furnished you by your butcher with the assurance that it is sirloin. When a girl gets mad and rises from a fellow's knce, but thinks better of it and gocs back again, is what they call a relapse. A Louisiana .Judlge decides that a man who loses money for pos?er mayi recover from the man who sells himd the chips. .Some one wants to know why spikes were placed on the head of the Goddess of Liberty. To keep her hair up, of course. An article on ginger-bread says th. it has been made since the 14th century. \W have certainly seen sonme that we thought might have been. "Save the fat," says an exchange. If there is going to be a preference in those to be saved, better save the lean. Ti e fat ones will burn better. A professional palmist says a persons c:mt never tell a lie w-ith his band sis;t. lIe c'an't with his mouth shut, either, Pahuiist ry, it will be seen, is a great study. " -What is the difference between an angry lover and a jilted maid ?" "Give it up." "Why, one is a cross beau, and the other is a cut lass." The discovery of a scarlet snake is re ported by an Ontario paper. The man who discovered it had in all probability b~een painting the town red. A New Yorker shot at his wife, but the bullet hit nothing but her store hair. It i very hard to get at the exact bohndarnies of a woman nowadays. One difference between riding aho: and riding a hobby is this-a mant can ret off a horse at any time, but from a hobby, never. That electric boy in California-just dis covered-can be utilized when he tcomc-nc a few years older by marrying him to n electric belle. Mr. J. H. Hoffman's horse bit luim on the shoulder this morning, to the amutse-. ment of these who wvitnessed it and no pain ful injury to Mr. Hoffman. Miss Stager, of Chicago, is to marry Lord Butler. One would suppose fronm the lady's name that she would prefer a coachman to a butler. The Irishman's marner of obtaininr sound sleep is worth imitation. lie sai.! that a short sleep did for him, because when he slept, he paid attention to it. Fullness under the eye denotes language. When the fullness is !ange and discolored and hurts, this denotes that the man has been using too much of it. She-"Isn't that papa coming"' Hie "How provoking: I was just going to1 stenl a kiss" She (ingeniously)-He's awfully near-sighted, Charley-aw fully'" "If a man cotihl only catc~h tish as easily as he can lie~ abu it:" Inments a Tex:ts editor. IHe could, if he onl' tundersood ishing as we'. as he doesc' l, in.. The expres-ion "sleeps like a top"'i outtCe omon. but we- dachlt if ainybody co:i .sleep ''n a' peg; mot'eople catnnot tand on one lon; when its buic en' i Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed Grain and Poittes, Garden and Flower Seeds, Vegetable & Floweringj Plants Prices quoted on application. Descriptive Catalogue mailed mar. Correspondence Soliciterd. T. W. WOOD&SONS, SEEDSMEN, NO.10 S. FOURTEENTH S-T. BLOOD ALND 10NEY. The blood of mn has much to do in shapiug is actions during his pilgimage throuth ' :.is trou'l eom wtrd reg::rd le! s G"' t,.;( aml~mut Of Cren ",r xpet 'n.) mon '*y in 1e C r *.. t r''0l -.tniy 1, inak. It s cocee* fact 1im t wear It ~ ~ V I1"''~ V' -I I t i h : , t - prettr and . r L'e ar; hee lith o repeated it rr)gatry, "how 14 your he-e-ii io b tter, ur. em::stio tti otrngt ), I, I . iou i-i t i :.: s oe ar :.i d woo. i, :.i" v h au , w-:: t'e l t h"t r i La(i j' 1in paraleiti nra ive ov.r a'-4 wie un 1i.aeJlmble e I:-- l i It, - adi::n e ard Ioni-a, nor t U , f io I cies:. und the giaoenS cr ore ,o t.n t mr im . ioc tor--. fiee a oi c are of er at h, .tlaen t'au, \kin i u roim taints th mot w i rfla. . svu; il-pof - bfr po n. A drIi o: pLu tits, ld cr andOi: cace ,L COrr, tc.a (t P . l ji. io. s _d ::bentthee yerso -a bay is af.:tg a ti o e-but fo rem-d e i 1 Atodt ' ei por everu as-1 unde wlt a nderfU'oul then i its na:..da' is rs inRri d,a e -r lliientil::: r: abov om :::t, m gcroglaca n theraou o f fe :inetd e ..r r l ides as r L.Jio-. Th detc' sio u,.Thspepsl,; czive a re c it freur 2o ua tlro : .-AA .d f. Wn c teyhav ros in-. y n tyi theit aot tnyairl. evenria o eu hn;all pames of :te s d eccinoy.etadnn frtn bet r . W d s : t heni poof v i be a Bi AL CUO.E atE Oa. atc- thi l season All~~~~~#ff~ whfeir alidomtnout the can: t c ure o-[. :-onh cr , hay Clion- . free, a copy of ou 22 page litred. Book ~ ~ Pin ofWnirnlidst t~e wondrituandtarigs proo evBelord, now Aadressi Malaria,'-1 Contiptio 4 natnr~ i! ayle. VOLOA BIALM C.,SAL A. MAE NY PERSON ailpii: t thisD acan Sr rv vT-oi te ;. by-elind the - Olc~ r t of!*rW;i YOzuT.Inn zi t ptawft f Pinion the - igl ed:onsepsia, MalaraContatind neroublrees.ne -+-YOUNfl'A CORN!AL CURES RIHEATISM faroe nhi n the mind n,- bii f o Z-L-1YC it COr A CRE SIK-EAACE .ul 1* .me. - ;L - L~z)3~r CNeria Con e p't-o' Lie . Eonkn and Sde, b Heo'ing th.: r w: ::dsrea ngdnrc th Bucles. sta t ert :.~ cal::a irg~u.po.ao n:Tr-+e. t :2: e Te:G~nesby ezuven T L.HEDAR ER.7 C"..CI3 CMAYIRKED r0 T-' r 'n:,S ' :d Sickl Children. .oi f.. nn e nd ar am!me-d m:. t" o how to* - VOIARC&,CE1CAL CO. BAW MRE,-T MD. U.i* S.n to .e ht ITE. ONLY TRU. will purify ttW~the BEOD.eguat soutlycuedtBne.:ms force. nlivensthe-m*n anWupie Cri ow.. the1CO'2 'pee' iiliar tohIr x n-tn uTRER'S FRIEND Ch d-B h Easy! n %. whn he ter. criacu priod in 1" 7ed. A di ''' , W) Spnlt 44 .- * p1e1:e, left -":rn tiis leracy, aIno. and to-day - - -:.m~n wh:, - .y rc con - n r his name - : h:-:: we c 'a ' : t. ' i: er F,,- Ip .7:a; r, n(Ilhess S Co., Atanta, Ga. IANOS and ORGANS From the World's Best Makers, AT FACTORY PRICES. Easiest Terms of Payment Eight Grand Makers, and Over Three Hundred Styles to Select From. * PIANOS: Chickering, Mason & amune Mathushek, Bent and Arion. ORGANS: Eason & Hamlin, Orchestral and Bay State. Pianos and Organs delivered, freight paid, to all points South. Fifteen days' trial, and Freight Paid Both Ways, if not satisfactory. Order, and test the Instruments in your Own Homes. COLUMBIA MUsIC HOUSE, Branch of LUDDEN & BATES' SOUTHERN MUSIC HOUSE. PRICES AND TERW THE SAM N. W. T~RUP, Mainager. CHARLOTTE YITUTE 7'0 INSTITUTE for YOUNG LADIES .L in the South has advantages supe to t hooe oftered hc:e in every depart renlt-Golegiat., Art and Music. Only 'eperiencd and accomplished tcehers. fhe building is lighted with gas, warmed with the best wrout-!-iron furnaces, has io tLd rold wate- hafth, and first-class tppointnwts as a oLar. T School in "v.-r r C t -1o s'col 1i tile South has. Fr oard ai-nd Tuition in everything 1 in Colltwte cours, including anient ;u-n l anuages, per . . . n : e ... .......$100 !d uti n fr two nr more from same oertnel bro. Pupils charged. Yr Cat a.c ;. a:i particulars, ad ~ Lr~v WM.LJ. ATICINSON, Charlotte, N. C. E. B. IMARKS, 3RiTE~ 8 GEE WOOSITIDN 0QLM81, S. C. ''.fil*C ic-rit cllS cast on he 5110cst notice at the most Rt'a c T.':s. Ud Marks' ~DE . ~K ~ADICATED. SI "rm enr ly well 9f cezema after h'an ~...ch it.":a~ :nt myn taremete :ast of a si M apa nce u w e o w:i:n n a- c s . :~adc. r ma cf az her a00 ealch to get abort ic t::y thed ct o ha itrted~amb~ fee.pospdo.red r puithe ~0. 2ZCutomHoue tretBcoSrhe:rectron