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THE JEWS IN RUSSIA. Representatives of a Persecuted Race Who Are Hated and Hunted by the I'eople. When a Russian sees three men with gaunt faces, long priestly coats danghng at their heels and-a lock of hair hanging over each ear, he says, "Iore govern ment spies. "' These Polish Jews should not be confounded with the thrifty Jews of America. They are another class of people. Their features. their manners, the cut of their hair, and the fashion of their clothing are difierent from what one is accustomed to see in New York. The number of blondes among them is surprisingly large. They seldom travel alone, but in compamies roam the plains of Russia and Poland, ever talking, ever restless; watched, feared and hated; and they in turn ever watching, ever hating, are never afraid, yet distrust ever lurks in their finely chiseled faces, The general opinion expressed by the Russian is that while Polish Jews are spies by nature, they have remarkable gifts for business, and that when one o, f them is so fortunate as to get a consider able sum of monev and embark in wheat speculations, he'speedily grows rich, gathers his clannish friends about him, forms a colossal combination, through which, if not prevented by oppression or legalized conspiracy on the part of his jealous neighbors, he in time is able to control the business of his neighbor hood. It is not until one has seen these Polish Jews, watched their strangely ex pressive faces and studied their peculiar character that he appreciates that they are direct descendants of the Jews of history, who for ages suffered unspeak able outages. The wrongs described by historians are plainly waitten in their faces, and as they glide noiselessly along the street, with restless, Jesuitica coun tenances, one feels suspicious in spite of himself. Many of these people are un doubtedly obnoxious. 1 have seen a weary woman struggle through the crowd at a railway station to get water for her little ones, when a priestly-look ig' dervish snatched the cup from her and drank the with manners of a beast. 'Why these yellow-haired wanderers al ways travel in squads of three no one ex plains. They swarm the country. The cruelties of centuries have given them a ferocious, hunted look and made them asbrutalas animals, yet their intellect lifts them above their oppressors, who call them "spies." A Murderer's Awrul Dreams. Edward Unger, who was sent to Sing Sing for life for the murder of August Bohle, whose body he cut up and shipped in a trunk to Baltimore. is now in the hos pital of the prison, a sufferer from nervous prostration. His physical strength before his trial was great, and his steadiness of nerve in court was surprising; but his stam ina is all gone, and he has become a misera ble cowering wreck. On the first morning in the prison he told a keeper that he had been visited during the night by his dis membered victim, who had proceeded to reconstruct himself in the territied prisoner's Presence. Of this dream he could not be disabuied. He seemed to believe it was reality. Every night it came to him, and at the end of aweek he was much broken down. In the hospital it has been the same with him, except when he is kept very soundly asleep under narcotic influ ance. He dreams that the mangled pieces of his friend are strewn about the room, where they lie a while inanimately, as they did beforehe packed the body in the trunk and threw the head into the river. Then the fragments begin to quiver. Soon they -move slowly toward each other, until they 'are in a heap. Next, they adjust them selves into a human form. But the head is mising? At -length that, too, comes into the room, with its hair dripping with the water of the river in which it has lain. With a horrible smile on its face. it places itself on the shoulders of the figure, and menaces the murderer. Unger shrieks out at this point, and the apparition vanishes from his imagination. All efforts have failed to cure him of these visions, and the prison physician advises his removal to the State Asylum for lunatic criminals. Governor Thomnpson and the Fainting Eride. A&ssistant Secretary Thompson of the Treasury Department is said to be an ex pert in reviving swooning persons, but not until last week did lie have an opportunmty to display his skill in that line for the ben fit of his ofcial associates. A party o: New England excursionists were passi: g through the department, among them be mng a newly married couple. In conse quence of over-exeruiun or the poor sami tary condition of the treasury, the young bride fell in a faint immediately in front of Governor Thompson's office. Hearing the commotion in the corridor, Governor Thompson opened his door, and, taking in the situation at a glance, directed thatthe fainting lady be laid upon the sofa in his room. The young husband was al most frantic, and, with utter disregard for the presence of strangers, he endeavored to restore his wife to consciousness by press ing her to his bosom and caressing her ex travagantly. Governor Thompson sug gestedt his infallible remedy of stretching the patient upon her back. with her head downward, so as to allow the blood to cir culate to the brain. The young husband -at first remonstrated against what seemed to him to be treatment too hero'ic for his better half, but he finally consented, end in a few minutes the young lady was re stored and the happy couple rejoined their friends and continued their sight-seeing ex pedition. Governor Thompson says he obtained his experience in fainting cases from old Dr. Geiger, of Columbia, S..C. The doctor 'was called upon to admnister to a lady who had fainted. U'pon his arrival he found the patient stretched cut upon a sofa with a high pillow under her head. The doctor's irst instructions were to "take that pillow from under her head, place the family Bible under her heels and she will be allfright in a minute." Gov. Thomp son rever forgot this remedy, and he has practiced it repeatedly with great success. Thrashing a Ghost at Midnight. A night or two ago a gentleman living near Sparkill had occasion at a late hour to cross the stone bridge2 over the Sparkill creek, when he encountered the ghostly object which was on its nightly round to frighten people. The man picked up a good-sized stone and hurled it at the object, striking him a pretty hard blow. The spook became angered and clinched 'wit the man. The gentle man proved too muscular, however, for the spectre and girasped it by; the thrat. The ghost, in a h-uman voice, bcggeu for mercy. The Sparkill gentlemen re lented, and, after discovering the identi ty of the person who had be-en person ating a ghost, promised to let him go and not make known his name on con dition that he give up the spook busi ness. The one who has personated the' ghost and caused the wrst scare ever known in the lower part of the county is a man well known in Pied~mont and Sparkill, but the man who discovered h~is identity sticks faithfully to his' ~rmise not to reveal it.-Nyack (N. Y.) spcal to the New York Times. A young poetess says she "told her secret to 'he sweet, wild roses.' She was very imprudent. When the sweet. wild roses "blow" she will wish she had kept the se GENERAL NEWS NOTLS. Po Item of Interest Gathered from Iarious err Quarters. A conlagration in Clarksvilie. Tenn.. :aused a loss of $250,000. au Montgomery has postponed her inter- pV ztate drill until May. 188.b The prohibition amendment in Michigan S smaely defeated by about 5.000. General Logan's novel. -The Volunteer - soldier" will be published early in May. (Clonel Ingersoll is to write his religious mpressions of Dr. McGlynn's theology. Hvgeouhote. Virgta, sold for $52,00. was bought by Mrs. Phoebus. D: The work of evicting delinquent tenants int :ill begin on Lord Lansdowne's estate on an Npril 20. t1 Prince Alexander of Battenberg has f -ain declined to be re-elected as ruler of Bulgaria. - There is no apparent chauge in the situa n of the cotton handlers' strike in .\ew rleans. The Texas Legislature has adopted reso u:tions expressing sympathy with the pe e of Ireland. A Le-islative committee has been ap '>inted to meet a committee of the foreign beadiholders of Virginia. Delegates representing 12,000 Welsh mIners met at Rhonda and adopted a res lution denouncing the irish coercion bill. At Memphis, Tenn., on Sunday, nine ti persons were seriously but not fatally po-w oned by eating ice-cream at a dinner party. e The Secretary of the Inter-State Com merce Commission will receive $3,500 per b . Ben Perley Poore's "Reiinizcences." W anoted a!! over two continents. have netted t i at author but $:500. Ex-President Jefferson Davis will proba It deliver an address before the Willam ( J.well College, Kansas City, Mo. According to Congressman Townscnd sunset Cox will be the next chairman of the ways and means committee. Co!. George Johinstone. charged with the murder of John B. Jones at Newberry. has been admitted to bail in the sum of $1,500. Secretary Whitney has decided to push to completion the work on the cruisers At linta. Boston and Chicago. President Cleveland is said to be saving C three-fifths of his salary for use when the rainy day of the proveb dawns. The wholesale boot and shoe house of S. N. Brickhouse & Co.. Norfolk, Va.. has assigned. Liabilities $90,000: assets above i. that anmount. A large tract of Mississippi pine lands. comprising about 30,000 acres, has been purchased by a party of Michigan capital ists. ti, Four thousand emigrants were startcd Y West from Castle Garden, New York, Sun day. being accumulation of arrivals since r: Friday. The prevailing drought in Texas. added to the results of last year's drought, is caus- h! ing the Legislature to consider the suspen- W sion of tax collections. Plans have been perfected for connecting the Norfolk and Western with the Louis- i ville and Nashville railroad lines. This is said to be a big thing for Norfolk. George Westinghouse adds another $100 out of his own pocket to the death beneilt , ef $100 paid by the Westinghouse Air 1 Brake Company Employes' Relief Society. The first day's canvass for funds to hold an inter-State drill in Montgomery, Ala., in June resulted in the raising of i10,000. The whole amount to be raised is $20,0O. v Senator Palmer, of 3ichigan, is going , to bolster up his boom by building a h:1l y for the G. A. R. posts of Detroit to use. The Secretary of the Navy has invitd sealed proposals from shipbuilde-rs of the United States for building five new wa vessels.5' A bill was passed by the Senate of Penn-i sylvania providing that punishment for i raurder in the first degre3 may be death by,-w the use of electricity. Major Edwards, who wants to be Mayor v of Fargo, Dak., is one of the heaviest a statesmen in the country. Hie tips the beam at :337 pounds. Ex-United States Treasurer Jordan. who t crossed the ocean with ex Secretary MIan- je~ niez. passes miost-of his time with the hst ter at Bournemouth.I Mrs. Lamar has finally returne-d from herv visit to Georg~ia, arid the Secretary of the Interior can again be approached by callers -:.o left their revolvers at home. John G. Saxe's later life derived no ad 1 diional sweetness from the fact that hc nce received $5,000 per year for writing ene poem a week for the New York Ledgerc a The dwelling of MIr. E. J. MIoody, 'six~ miles above MIarion, was burned 31onday vhile 3Mr. 3Ioody and his son were both in 3arion. Loss about $3,000: insuranc said to be $2,000.1 The United States grand jury in San. Francisco, Cal., has returned forty indict- ba ments of conspiracy and perjury against land swindlers, including several Fede-r-l eleers. 1 On account of the report that negro mili tary companies will be admitted to the na tinal drill, it is probable that the Capitatl L Lieht Guards, of Jackson, will withdraw from the drill. Arthur Sullivan, a young New York I) book-keeper, who was arrested for stealing church property from St. Stephen's Church on MIarch 18, pleaded guilty, and was sen tened to six years in the State prison. One of the most munificent recent gifts to churches is that of the Rockafeller C. brothers, John D. and William-S75.000 a:: in all-to the Tabernacle Baptist Church of pu New York. m There is a "reliable" rumor from the na-e t'nal capital to the effect that ex-Scnator e 3aone is to succeed the unsophisticated . .oes as chairman of the Republican na- 's tonal committee. Lord Randolph Churchill says ihat his!4 resignation mesulted in the direct saving of 21,400,000, while opposing the scandalous :ate of public money in the War and Ad miratv Departments. The Swiss government has resolved to etvigorously against the Socialists atndt Aarchisi~s, whose recent activity i.= thought I to be cai'ulated to disturb the peace of the, State. Fire in the dry goods and notion house of Frankel Bros. on Gay street, Baltimore, ihnaged1 $8,000 of stock, fully covered by insurance. The building was damaged Henry Dower & Son, of Philadelphia. taniacturing chemists, have failed. Lii ~ biues are estimatedl at half a million. N o +imate of the assets can be obtairned. 1- se-t.Y mucLh real estate. TePro)hibitionais carried the election I '-wki co'e'unty. MIis. Tis ssot wivmen of .Jaekson. who im ended, (gbhs Otheslvtes in tha couty:n vicinit of Jackson. . J. Corw-il-on has been a rrested and - -ed in jail at Mount Sterling, Kyt 'e out a hree years' sentece for having -:,wniped Judge Reid, who subse nii committed suicide. Rlit. hunterr have stolen Tomi ( chil -.s silk umbrella. gold cane and diamond ::lf pins :md fears are now entertained s htihey will also steal his head for a sun- e -et 4ffct. - -arles de Lesseps. evidently tihe soin of es Li ater als a New Orleans reporter that in - :v hing is propressingxtely on the Pan- i~ m Canal and that the c-ama itself will he 1it pen afor navigation before 1990. sa At' immen e mass meeting has been held me purpose of protesing ;nn!" SO " ;ed coercive legislation by the To )ry - ment of Gre:t Erituin. Iy >ple were preselt. "he Secretar : the Na; t n hornty t) p:e imnwi: hay ih re rs to the Ossipeo. faund ! o e i the Bord of rav. T P nt the Nol- . N .ar a tiWehof le h00%. w~ cp the tnunmen: We nm A hiv n 1n -ment. iand ta .rmes 'N-ge t:: 12 M (1 AP f' - -Govrnor dei......1 'ato." deV e 110 d ' kntin* Of~v Qin L toan-y t id s t iit' I t e'1 n - Dio unti it C::needea Fhe supreme C "f: emdthe ricision of th a n . C.T W Orle-ans aindTes tr. Sudneyliar(( . '::s u lvigr r 1:.an :n :i: '1tie- that the w olst Tue4dy. on: Iets of the "wets" wC rl:.o : m on t paper TV ,r 9 i cre a .1 In rterenttirnn I 1i o 1 r ,tinoil. is1. Th1urshy. over a lank Hill: :Shot J.;ph, b r r:I. 1 le I we:t the rO r'ough the er. Sdown :u"It ::o :n r - -Vc 'ir 1 Iand case YQ-1. Ai 1MIS1d I uriS ha! j>- pa" Lte reports fron N-t Ame-P n.' -.l 'thmu f'rih i a g :I - ry tee"grae 'nx '''v'e 'a m.r. ' -'. xas, that lera- h at muie it a rtliward as far as "Pananm. The election at i. wa ' r the Democr;as, who t'-I *en - :n to the Republe s lv' I mncil st:inds 19 DemaX( and 1' - ieanls. For ithe i ti- ' i y. teil :iocrats are iml powe-. The new Couneil o i' 11 stand Repu'ile"'i W. .or 5. Tidr'y-two e'io" - ' ted Mayors asf "lo " ' ~' ur ciaters and one inp 'V . Gen. Thomas W. COow. : a State Temperan: : rk. and orgzr i? .. T'mper::ie soeation of Ne Yorx' died lil" turning from the lpit .M ionurh. 1 ar East New Y.:-k. fOm hearI bnoe. The S-m Autonio :mdl e p iih+ . .re changed their mind - reardin th'r < thdrawal from the Na. dI.t ashington next month. Th eL e L. 1 red that if ne-ro cp:ns di 'ted < e drill, they weuid camp :4 be "r.-kd :nrate. Fire -uroke out T1 N e-St. - 11dng i~n Humx slree N 'AsUk. The ore 120 . eopl in heh -es of "l' were thre ei:ed. ' dle by jumrwn rominv wmes !I . escap'es. ~Nineteen '-i""n' Dr. Lewis N wft if .h ..a'. Cefl iy, .. anouce turi:Co l r cOiet prizds o ;-. : f r e . ne d. :net discomrd durinM no~era ;- n-- n : 11 . . 1' i nmedals has been. 'wre -. : The total re. ipn >"' 0rema cordine to theit -re 'ar . seu- d 1. . 757:5 'The rati'mi ;l::tS te~at tin'e ar liw " esi:-tce' lini 'as at 1 nw' thoutiit 'ha the''en al o excceed s\x or . sven*> Herr 'fost's .ife. *'e ' : wasdthe & t o.': I e g n t chin the t-: " ::l 'li -:' to'I aa h ua wanti t 1- ri". t . . Tha mys flou an C inhofsw iia Auut.. -sosn iTuea r h'o'n. we' . ur fau o d uti is ov Ire d the a - i .-e t ? . A. large quatio ci cau.JLu:-y t f?-: outskirt s ove 1 d ti 1 h ( A::: c l wdi'hsc. Intr s ' trn i' 'heno' enen. rt dgar~ ThomUseU-s sne el work at ' -rddopen. Pa.,htedci stV a b.1n T. reuideint in 1 id. 1 (ons. i v of itmen wer ri'htul rred buti is.oped ..they .r 1' ka-I 0 A lare cuat"t of dy:mt ue o udtina stre I"a frue- r t re ouirts of CRead..ig, Pa. exp-d' at forfu in jured .n e. .::in ' is ba art. boeJ d -? . I Thia Peident rIa:tdth 1 eden 't nebr fteUi: al e-:or, histem i::e.eqre:F h mia 31ru I :\.. I iuma.'C-ta Wahi woris a wir~er tf r 'ich. d has tree childrei, on' a'" i'i. wee md with; the excti n e h nat B other it is tgt.b etn~ pr o :used lr. Iens F:tlrsut, i eri~d ofl' Cokcut, . e e imef netr':esdi the eri::: qlu>U! acntosiderhendperuntin s -owete i:s who ied~ onat e. Te - The Right of the French Chambers has sued a protest against the exclusion of :-t party from representation in the Bud C Committee. The charge is made that -mnbers of the Right are cxcided fLon he c nee.. . because the Republicans are k.iroua of concealing the fact that they '0re been sqjuiandering national moneys. 3me. Berniardt recently entertained the r e arsiall Wilder, at lunch. She ines i nd a bout six ewe d he is about two feet wide ! - e ih The talked Fren-h i ;' io ther': entire bewuider , :-:e the same language md frii. It ;s even said that WidMr m eade Bie Bernhardt laugh. Jolt- 31et. ex-convict and apostle (,f an - d re in in Cooper Union, iws the largest Anarchist - lin that city, the hall n ekeI The majority presernt were -.-istv. bu t oc'ilists. and -many rel out of curiosity. A large -I citizes' clot!eF. were 'Ir Puitzer pronounces the story that - n Zcmniw C, a de 6 ec ive to act as a body nvenion of my friend. Mr. Um. r i te mys: "If Ira Shaefer e:.ns t d: ) the threatened killing I trust .::t h V'1l mnteralize soon, as I am con .mp....: aittle tri next month and do : cae to have open and unsettled ac n0't." Places of workmen at Jones & IAugh ,'s ?rnjl, Pittshurg, Pa., who struck few Ovis ::o, have been filled by new nen A. T *ckld out workmen made ap eatic :: to be organizcd into an assembly Knihts of Labor, but were refused on in on a strike. They de t.anded ,n advmiace in warges from $1-05 to 50 pe-r day. Cl '. I. 3tartin, who will suceeed 1 teagan in the House, is as tall t : . le wears long hair and *S a tutt 0n his chin, aud a mustache. i . i td and his gestures are awk r is trousers never fit him and he :~krm teut-colored shirt. He has l is life in the pinewoods of eastern yex:. : -s promised to be the same Bill atin ashington that he is at home. The re(e'nt attacks on the Czar of Rassia ave c hjat putentate to hate every :eA In te shape of democracy. lie has (i t C Fiench Ambassador's inviia n to 1oin 'n the French Exhibition of ?,-.'ig to -'ive eccouragement to a mni ra io~ni organized in honor of a sue .fl e u and ading that he WldU no -' low his subjects to take any pa: i:sc :n afair eilher. 7". r-y ex-member of the 10*, LI e of the 3-nicipal Assemby of :LI cc, an -:e of the judges of elkc Iin th t last Novemlber. who has ore the U ;ied States Cir : C 1 ut f- thrce days last for fr:indu ''V ti-ng voters and with receiving votes while acting as judge of elec Las uld guilty of the latter charge. In...:..:Yh. Circuit Court Judge :min lae his decision on the contest fth whli 4f ihe late Francis Palms bc. uhr -':7. .000 to his two children be beax i b them iu trust for their chil rea. The friendly coutest was begun to .leni decsion on the will. In his Re'Jnui-sn holds that the -I an:rSt courolling fortunes e from generattn to g-nera T. : mi--: the .elieO region of .,. ( n~uck 1 v 1e olut on a strike, and a e uenCLCe 'ensee, Wouldridge, StTl ard :nd oth.r mines : shu- .' .wn, with no prospect of open a- . up :.so-: m-".t. Tcre are about IG3e]n emp:,yed in the mines. The m o -h I 'i te refusal upon the :T" 1r- men to sign a ycarly contract ::-r2.g ~.them to agree not to strike for Th r..1o thle e::pressioni "mfending s -:ee'. ii ued in modern politics, is :tudto.:o Sherman. While Secre I- 'c 1:e rasurye he visited his ho:ne at .iidadvuas followed by a ho--t of -trespnen.ts, one of whom boldly asked ei Sertar '?what he was doing in 3Mans i. It ?.pened that on that day Sher J.LL had corcted with a man to repair r'cenes on his place, so he told the re re h h ha~d come to 31ansfield to okotrhsfences. Thus originated an pr;1esion( which has had wide use in polit 14. .amd ha:s even. found its way into a taHouse of Parliament. The~ lt John~ Roach loved to tell that it -a thr1,>t "ih his connection with the Navy D-tim t of the government that he be swIdev known. lHe used to take s::r in recouting his first interview th President Lincoln, which was also beginning of his labors for the govern .~ When Roach brought a letter of in ul1Ocion, Mir. Lincoln inquired: "What i \ on want?" "Nothing," answered MIr. Ro::ch: "but I thought you might want mehir~g of me" "So I do," replied the rient. -"And if you have brains nugh fat uild engines that will make a ipofatenough to catch up with those 'bel Now-you-have-him-and-now-you onts that are cutting our merchant vessels o chii s you can go home and make me bree lairs of them" Lnte Episode of the halvationits. Sevri itys ago a party of Salvationists -.uh itincumbeLnt upon them to visit hsick. Consequently they proceeded to iae h4Ose o.f 3Mr. Franik Beattie, who has )ca in for over ayear. and in consequence :eof is aervous and excitable. Having nn~ed admission into the house they were .kd2 hein attendance upon the sick iau who had sent them, since they came .hll uniivited by the mnembe)rs of the 14iN They replied that it was by the rd uo Caiptai Yoder that they had come U mixLisrate unto the sick. Captain Yoder -as uinknown . to those present until they ve~ tol'd that she was the leader of the :dvalon ry. The party were prompt rto I d tht their ministrations were not e. i. n.r wnted,. and that they should cae Te id not leave, however, nor r util the bed-ridden man him c..mmto un~derstand that he did v C- ob tambo'urined into heaven, - tid 'he to depalrt; that he was a eofachurch, and had the "bread 4 C dail adinistered to him by his - '-r, -h. administrations were sull o :ybourine music was heard in -s ose o at the sick man's command .-f let-Cl rtte Oi;.acrer. 'Fhe Galme Law'. Th -follow'ng e-xtract from the Gener:l :.tute s of(' inte-rest to sp~ortsmen: "It h0d not be. lawful for any person in this 1:e ea elni th irst day of April and Ie irs day of November, in any year rr to c--:ch, kill or injure, (or to v~t uh intent, or to sell. or expose - 1y il turkey, partridge. dove,. e.or prheas:Wt: ad 'my person or ud;,ilty thereof shall be tined n i 0n lk. or hi:: impriso?.ed. :: d-y.ih ;iue, if imt -n ''?f to teifre * ee-hd thereo4 Lf to the school ut w?hierein the olTene e '.rtof every1 sut1iering he -icl.l cnly perisit in the use of - ree. 's '.v'ite Prceription." It u I h mt escrutciaiting periodical ydrlee vou o4f all irregula'rities * . ne.lt aX:ctionl. It will positively 1rna ? i ntammation and ulceration, S.emen and all kindred disorders. r edcl o n-dollar. By drttggists. Grave injucStice-Thie eulogistic inscrip 'auv)t h aveae tombstone. BRIC-A-URAC. Always give the devil his adieu. Ovil-shaped potaloes .re the best. A hole in your incoie-A Iogei re: Bald persons should be clar-he: o An exchequer--A retird ter. HOW to make a t:i man short.-R iam of his purse. "Even a dark iantCru has:, br. - quoth wit*; Itol.ud. Repeated eartihpuake. h oe Aden. The carpenter' atrike is lii in Chicago. The Atlanta Ritits atv-e v. h th:' nationdim . Insuranc e compaieur de go raks for fe:r oi the Ai: The hmtermut ver d - and excellen: tiniber for fe Yeu (cuno- j 1..g w: : stp by step takes you to h A iman is not a nian wihen he Lr bed. Why is thle am fa 1-on naid J!e'auo it eu:wi tr The Lomrm .s withdraw froa the natiol di It is afct kul- y a March deel r The jackass would not i could. i1c thiuiks thy lo. 1 Both of the militarv cupan c. Antonio, Texas, have withd national drill. The corner-stone of the new i. :a1 Richmn,-'J Va.., washhlin ceremones. AXt StoanonVi.thlcl i e tion resulte-d Ii. a 0:riyo in a total vote of 1. :2. A poetess sings. "I ha fa:. silence is." HeIr friends, it i. undert. are not so fortunate. There are said to , 5-2 vnr-iio in the world-not countin l t lambs. Widows may set their c r ta widowers. but ~iures sLow. hate bag the game. By a singular dispensation of Providenc a ziute canot)t be heard rey fur:he: gun will carry. lie that is farillHar with -ur: in z:: may not advocate stage certainly in favor of tie drop cr.l . The German press war"l the new Italian hinet.whc will be favorable to the tripl la"'ce. An extensivc strike of sto.. m.asn their laborers and l mitar mixcrs t vicinity of Boston lits Ieen' 'i r It has been computed tih e E' l i speaking popul::tion of the worM w' a: hundred years number froim eigh h ed to one thousand millions. Pearl necklaces are down so ce ii year that a tine one can be bought or.* - 0"0. Everythirg seems to favor e man. What is the difference c:ewe .1 trrfmpl) and a featherbed-: There i-s ' mt rial diiference. One is hard up : h other soft down. The Secretary (f the Trasury hAd cided that the ilond dLp required to redeem traide Iol lars ut rec:ent act. Coalshaft N-. -" , totally destroyed by ire. Story. was b:;dly bured x .: caped uninjured. Who was the ost Su :: mentioned in !e 0l1 est1n:-' . because he successfully io.a i .i company when 11he rest of th-. 1:b.i was in iiquidation. Two hundred .i~rr t60.n Iron Works of .Jones & La'ughln.I P't burg, struck for an advance in wages of 40 cnts per day. A south-bound passen.:cr train ron th Mobile and Ohio railw::y v.::s wrecbal:: Carroll station, eight miles from .Ja:kson Tenn. No one was injureU. Tihe steamer Brector arrived at St. .dobi N. F., from the ice fields with i2.000 seal and~ brings no news colnfiring the repen of the loss of tihe sealing steamer Eegle. The Virginia Ihouse has passe-d a hil granting a charter to the Charles:on, Cin cinati and Chicago railroad. Tihe bii: now goes to the Governor. The steamer Spoken. wih 2-i pa:ascrs, capszed on the Couer L'Alentg river. Ore gon, Tuesdany. F'ive men are reported los: Strasburg papers report further exu sions of French sympathizers. The seatrch ig of houses for compromising documents is also being more vigorously prosecuted. Chevalier Schimtron Tavera has deliv ered to President Clevelandl his crede-:tals, as minister from Auistria.Ilungsary to the: United States. A register clerk in the general postrllice of Chicage, who recently conafessed to a theft of about $29,000, and who was re leased on $2,500 bail, has gone to Caaa:. A boy in Pittsburg has swallowed a 'her mometer. and the doctors are unabl~e to ge it out. If he can wait till June th~e mar cury will ran so high that tihe instrun t will come soaring out of his mouth. What a poetess particularly refers to': "warm paleness' is almost identical wih the hue of the man's face who strutglds wildly on tile perilous edge of a ban:a peel, reclining~ at lengthi on the sidewal, and is too pious to swear. Charles 31. Owens, Isaiah Waters. .Jolm' Bradon, John B. Sanner and William J. Birne, judge and clerks of election in th first ward of Baltimore. tried for consir ing to defraud at the last municipal ele tion, were convicted. Notice of ;app~eal was entered. "I know why the doctor b:ought th:: little baby," said a tiveyear-old the other day to her happy mother. "Andi why. id the doutor bring the baby ' was rtse i Cause it cries so much he did ::t 'wat o keep it himself," wa: the repie. An Id1he:-ret P'reacher. Um~ A.:ril -. sncial : Mir ris. Ill.. says The tr' f the :.ed train robbers,~ chwa rtz and Wat w:: given a most unexpectedl turn yesterV::yb an incidient tha;t wilI probably deto the orth of all the wov-rk-~ so r done onsent of cou'nsel and tile Court, the juroi P ere permitted to attend divine service a .r a: the M1ethodist Church.l Dr Axte ' he o liating clereyman, i-am ed of theiir pres - ee, end. taik.ng as-is tet the pJo"Cer f . ittl tirs before the. astonia-hd congI're-( p ton 0r jury cot-hi red.-:e it he'- :s he midst of an addre: um theim en ric tl vieed.'- e i er coi-.''etanu umcanetrial vid - - hea. b t Dr :? ate without disturbance to~ th --an H -' le.or (ccuionIr.i!:1 onua tixMion. impur b.. . Llltmb, lilous' a ttack, p-d -nr kidnes, int-'na lfeer,' bir :-ed feelinag about stom-ach. ru'si of bloed to head,~ taike r. T~nee "Pc-.Uete ?-Re rrmarrei **iV. 0.. , T isr!n :u wme, r).eta ;c' it i-us L ~. jrs .a e .. a uo. an .r '.o m s: o :::7, s -'t t I a c'U I ' i ' r v 1' n ter -,,--; c I C. *1 1 - jon tuibe, and It 'wLs oftni I esn - Cli 0 ea ' ,.t t :. ,theL eCTSl \i'. L12 :V US 2rove W - eodi:nc d f: a e a : rJce t tan ben , I hv-,.: -i: e tO for- s?uch a iie. e Tr. , . , .;.. 4, ,, . ailee ~'h<efesand catarrh. I it; esvr i s you W 1ai'ce oi U :.s 7alue. Suise, den De +luanerH.re DedrGa.,3n i 60 >ps rc: 'd n-.- . oo7i -I-7rw ".ij'. t'" B. B. 13?0o tai L:2n it z'ts 11C i e la t- 7d v.t" 'i.:.t is erld gh, D is,V-L Ot:. n II e suer1swt ',!Iro( 04 w 1 "' Ic - i:o t-lPs.uid tJ( I of t t r'hs L d blD. 1 BlooE. ad YOndUt. act~ ponWrl S 'nit iseie . .: ntiaitpreirn.iaused rit h o. -O NH AecTo ~. 11.oel C:-.11:, 0a.,hoJay'-i, ". :-11 who desr--,'Iirinf r i n 6 1 Puzc - iijrFR O N!11. TONSERIRO 1~~ nyadt h r'l.ry he L oDn rt:.:: la - tRs-r t(1s. AL' t -.V - (Or !IRE of YOUT D:PiS. CueCntpton.Lpi~C. Cndle..tion.das ~ Heda-e S trpe:::::e nd TDrca DooFr-kr;:. nailedon ro ce n,.d eners receposar THE 9.HBTE MEDICIN COMTPANYC' hy om i-tS . :-s.t ittmpsAtZoEL, :M Pr.VARTER' BVR PDLLG I 1 . . a.tF- Z~' PRITATF E 'ARDING icsit iSca --' . r 1a It .2r2 - L - "- ' wn um .: e:.t. .,"":: 'a- ro. e ier Co. Au7.st, Aizu t ay -. s c s. :.d cr5 t no::re-iit an 'r. 'N'av - ed a n-::Oe 20 w -:.- 4' - 2. I t >u h:- s:: ISL. .. ..r d : ' s VA V' M'41 or Eruption, -- a. at- rheumn, scaly or Rough Di.es caused by bad - 1,' this puwerful, puri ta'. dicine. Great T- r I r h1:- under its bi e(in has1. it mlanifested - - der, Rose Rlash, S : les, Sore Eyes, Scroi a:*.~ . s-.v~eclings, Hip :onzie -Wite Swellings, 'oi:.- ~. %t- , .-.c e la:)n Enlarged w-a . a i:. m sanps for a (". s. 1ia c nn.3p: -: n Skin 2- a-.a'1. : , : m :::ra treatise o vdia cry nd good cl i' i> i in,'&I-a)t r whieh I o,?r~ct1f th e! Luiags, is ar 1 remuedy. it i:kf n be S t. dir-case are e:illetd. tluis terribly -:rmg thk now - iv pul'lie, D*. P:F.R~Cn it is "Con c -dtoCd that - nc whieb, r-: ai's v ... ..-. tonc, or 1 proper - is - tied, have yk w11irh-brown spots S - ,'dac e or dizzi ; h. internAl heat or - - - * 5slkws. low spirits egi: ian tippetite, - rrring from -a:md Torpid ." In many n;r. are expe for :v1 su en:sse, - tSpittin~q, of frcat,. ron. C-eu , and - egeinn remeody. 7 -.t-.0, or SIX for Dr. Pierce's ~ i.c 1) ~ ~dca1Asso ;~ ~~~X e rurys,.Y. ree proprictors Catairh iternedy - e .. t e c u- whichl If you -:a tial 'lOSS of -Iull pain . -nh:2 7 '.: C aitanrh. Thou -ur;s theworst c~ ot 1 c1i cn t-e cad,"9 -V-c 5cents. PIANOS and ORGANS Fom the World's Best lakers, AT FACTORY PRICES. Easiest Terms of Payment Eight Grand Makers, and Over Three Hundred tyles to Select From. . PIANOS: Chickering, Mason & HamHn, Mathushek, Bent and Aron. ORGANS: Mason & Hamlin, Orchestral and Bay State. Pianos and Organs delivered, fright paid, to all points South. Fffteen days' trial, and Freight Paid Both Ways, if not satisfactory. Order, and test tho Instruments in your Own Homes. COLUMBA MUSIC HOUSBJ Branch of LUDDEN & BATES* SOUTHERN MUSIC HOUSE. PRICli: ANrD TER TE SAE W. W. ThUMP. Manager. USRADFELD'S UFEMALE EULATOR! Moct hapniy meen Lt d'matid of the rage for :-: a::n's p:ea::u am:.ion-. It i.- a ree-y for WO0.. ,:-.N , 'nt fr cn SE::Ci A L CLASS of :rd :::.it is a specine for ceria~n diseased 3:..1: -:: e x...::, ami so ci:tr-.s the Men V:1-;m st e::ae2 ci'raagemecnts and r~n:d trt C ofhe ' aiy *ican'-.. The pro -r.t-r: r~im c-0: Re 'l :J ozher meiecs .:.:* : c el a \.*er:&bl Compo)und.. v-ae- r~e-::m n a : r-: tnd phys~icias e U:- 1:l cana~e een r of~. .i uccess in he touatt a se:reof female co.:.pia:ints. -rn W.a ,It w:' r"r yo. of aearly all engt?..~r~e orbook, "Mea ' t.4.-:.-.C..Ale1.t, a - p-~e: 5 :enes rK * $y4 c n 37 ea :: a tm do::ar pro ts rapsly disapparr..I o adIue