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0I*l.'T ~~t 7., Tu gold-ill(ed swiord of Prosid Barrios has boon' fotifd broken o 4 battlo-field of Challehnapa, and no cording to the latest intelligonco he was killed. The report was confirimed by a cablekram from the Preldent of Sai Salvador to the minister of Costa RicO at Washington. AI.L of the leading Now York papers appirove the ro-appolitmont (if Mr. Pearson's postiastership IIn that city. The Philadelphia Times, in comment ing upon the appoingment, character Izes It. as a landmark of reform In the fol low ing language: President Cleveland has planted a laindmark of retorm by the re-appoint mfont of Postmastor Pearson, of New Yol-k, so towering in its propoItionls that It can be scn and und erstood fron Maine to Califrlia. It Is a les son that the regulation partisans will not welcome; it is a t ribute to hqtiest g overment that tho whole country will heartily applaud. Thero will be some Democratic disappointment and dis content over Pearson's nomiinatiOtn, but there.will be much greater gratifi cation and conlilialion in ref'orm Itc ublican circles, and the profit will largely overbalance the loss. It is an unmistakable Cleveland landmark o1' perfect faith with the country to which he gave (he Open pledge of businiess administration and honest.goverinment. SoME of the unreconstructed Repub licani iowspapers a11re iiakinig a consid erablo howl over the appointment of so mfany ex-Confederate soldiers to important positions by the President. They forget that there is no North, no South, but that we are all citizens of a comnon country. They seem to delight in resurrecting old issues which were buried twenty years ago. Com innting upon this subject the Philadel phia Telegraph says: President Clovoland, it Is to be as sumned, inl appointing a few Soufhernm men to office, as well as many Northern mIe t.o office, is simply doing what Presidents Grant, Hayes, Gartield and Arthur did, viz., recogni.ing that the war was over; that peace is twenty years old; that the North and South ar simply geographicil terms; that Southeriers 1110 as loyal to the Unilon as Northerners; that it is one country ; that we are all count rynicn, united by stronger bonds of fraternity thmn cver before; that this is a time of' good-will and common interest in North and South, and that the more good feeling and interest are cultivated the bettor it, will be for the whole people. 'The Telegraph recognizes the fact that the war Is over and that we are an undividod peole. 1(ow muclh b~etter would it bo0 for the country if' this wore the sentiment of the whole Northern press. Indiustrial Education. The following appears ini nm edito rial of the News and C]ou'ier' of' Sat iriday, wvhichl shows that other coun, tries are far ahead of our owvn ini the way of industrial education. 1t might be wvell f'or ouri OWn) country to pay a little more attention to this branch of education if it (lees not appear to Interfere with the public school sys tem of the State. We are of thie opini ion flint ini the schools and col leges of' to-day they (10 not giyc that attention to enghneering, physics and1( thle pract I cal arts that the subjects thenmselves demiand: Mir. Thomas Harudeman, of' Geor'gia, lias given much b t-ine and investigation to one branch of' the edncational prob 1em, and has succeeded ini collecting muclh interesting inf'ormiat ion. in his view, the defeet in thle public school system Is the nogleot o1' instruction and1( tral ining for uiseful Occupationis. Mrt. Ilardenman is not aui onomy~ of' thme puLblic school system, and his'array of' statistics anud op)inionis is intenided to display its defects, anmd niot as an im peachnment of' the systemn as a whole. He adivocates industrial or miehanical tuition in the public schools, so that by priactical hanimdi work p)up ils of everyv coniditioni mayv b)0 taught the secrets of' hanidleraft, and obtalin sonic knowledge of engineiring, phlysics and the pra'cticall ar'ls. E'ngland - has eight h)Lundr'ed pilblic schools with thi't y-live thiousanid pupIIils, in Frmainco there are t rade schools, in c.ighty cities, with t hirty thousnid pupipls, besides two hlundred smaller' feeliical schools. Pr'ussia lias two huiindr1ed schools, and Ilavaria one hun dIred and fIfty'. In the United States therio were only sevenity-firo trade schools in 1876 with about seven thou sand five hundred puils. Ther'e is evidIently a grieat room for dlevelop ment, therefore, in the d1ir'ection polit ed out by Mr'. Ilardemnan, but it Is alwaye questionable how far it Is pro 1)er or' necessar'y that the free schools should give moire than a strictly ele meontar'y eduicationi. The inidustr'ial schools wvhiich are advocated ought. not to0 be made an additional chiarge upon the pl)ic, -NOTACN8 FR2OM AJRANHAS, INE 131UFF, ARK., April 1 .--Pine Blufl', the present home of' the wvriter', is the conity seat of ,Jefferson countv'. It is an 01(1 towni, and wvas originally built ina scattorling iimner' right along tho bank of t he Arkanisas River. For a long time it seemed destined ever to remain a p)lace of little limplortance; th~ country arounid was thinly Pettled A d there wvere no imeans of transpor taffe~n Qxcept the irregular' amid ulneor tain~ passing of boats on the river. Buit after awhile the tide of emigration commenced to flow In this direction, settlements wore flest made out. in the EaS; thon. attracted by thie richiness of the soil along the river andz~ its numor ous tributary lbayous, they soon coin menced to bravo tfe gnats, miosquitoes and th'ayoe redu nai anA '00 mad ti ~a h wiil i oopr ApidIt g eltht ilivg pr~prtiu, ad rthelust thiraeor fourt- ar it haronardSr' "bootW, atul na y 'has rapidly In; 0reasig pop~ula11n OJ .over elgit thousand - ', Aor S is Rio longer a Iek of", shi plig facilities hero, as thlre tiro .ow three rairoads coitering hero and a reguhlr liinQ of steamnboat oil the river, connecting with boats on the MISISRIippi gol ig io'th aiId souith. The city is well supplied with gas, and thero are telepholO wires, iot oily connecting all tie rincipal busi iiles lillses 111 th1 city, tilt extenldings to trms ten miles out inl the couitry. Thero is a great deal of manufac turing going on here ; from 12 o'clock on Snnday night uintil 12 o'clock Satur day iilght the blowing of engines and the coitinluous motion of machinery is heard. So nmich for this part of the State; but this is not the only place where imnprovemicits aire being iado; they are going oin all over ti State. As one will sco by a visit to (he Now Orleans Expositi'on, Arkansas Is fast taking her staiid as one of the most enitorlrisigli and progressivo States in tle Union. Now, lest 1. make this article too lenigthy1-, I will say in conclusion that n11ia.NAws AN> I lioiti) in its weekly visits to this ofllco is quite t source or interest an(t pleasure to ime. Long iiiay it prosper, and great be the suc cess and happina3ss of its inanly readers both in old Fairlield and elsewhere. E. J. CAMAK. FROM .LUXURY TO A CELL. A Trio of Bank Cashiers In State Prison. IIARTFORD, CONN., April 4.-The three Norwiclh bank cashiers, Meccli, Roath and Webb, woo lived in luxury on the proceeds of their crimes, noV Sleep in drcqry cells and labor daily in the prison workshop, forbidden to con verso with any one, or even to raiso their eyes whcn visitors are present. Mocch is haggai-d anitd hollow-oyed and his cleani-shaven faee and close-crop ped hair give hin tihe a pearanco of a mail many vars beyon is age. Hie works ait at bencht cutting out thie Chinl leather gussets used to line the heels of shoes. Roath is in the same shop, confhied to the irksome task of bur nishing the soles of shocs. Ilis itixu riant black hair anld heavv black ins tacho have disappeardd an-d few would recognize in the tall thin, whilo-faced inani, with large (lark eyos strangely cont rast ing Ivith the pallor, the pre possessing Willian Itoatlh, cashier of tle Shetucket National Bank. Webb, portly muid with some lingcring traces cof dignity even inl his rough prison suit, has for his daily work the setting or nails into shoe heels preparatory to placinig themr under the iailing ma chine. Hlis white hair an(d mustache are no more. Many old friends call oi them from time to time, but the trio receive no favors beyond those ac cord(ed other wellbehaved prisoiiers. The wile ( and family of Mecchce have re moved froin Norwich to a rcsidence near the prisoni that tihey may see him m1ore0 frequent1ly. The prisoners are periited to smoke in their cells, and the three cashiers are kept well sup plied with cigars. Tak& lng care or the Body. Th'le Chr-istion hulex, the leadiing organi of the Baptist Church in the South, puliishled in Atlaiita, Ga., in its Issue of' Dec. 4, 188, has the fol-s lowing editorial; Tnn mnany' peoplo seem to thinuk that a religious niewspapler. 8shouk1 be coin, fined to thie <llscui5on of moral and religious subjects only, forirettLinig that religioii has to (do hoth wiiitE the bodies and~ souls of mina. "'Prove all thiings, hold faust that wh lich is good,'' has as iiuch to do wIth the practical side of life as it has wvit h thie moral side. Onei readers iiI hear testi monvy that in all quei(stions5 discuissedi in I lie *Indexr, the p~ractical has been duly set forth. In t his paragraph, theref'ore, we onl seek 1(1 presenQt ani article worthyi of commeiRspRlat ion. After subjecthiw it to the abov'e te!st we have tried Sw ift's Spieci tic andit foundiu it, good -gcood as a bilooid puritier, good as a hecalthI tonic. lIn this opinion we are suistainied by some ohf thle best mien in thle chuircli. liv. Jesse II. Caminpholl, the Nestor of the llptist denomniat Ion in Georgin, says: "It is my dieliberate judgment hat Swi ft's Specille is the granidest blood puri tier ever dliscoveredl. Its etleets aire wionderfii u ad I consider heni almiost niraculous. Theire is nie mic'l~iO ein l omarablo to It..'' Dr. 11. (X. I ornady, one of' thle best' knowna imilunsterIs iniOii ourichurch, says : "'Silt's Spciltie is onie of thie best blood pui fiers ini existenice."' Th'lese brethiren Speak advisedly, Htut fewv preparations cani brIng for' deshr only to eindorse t hese state iments. We have wiitnessed the beine liia l eflects of this mnedici ne1 uot 01113 mi our1 owni househiolds, but. lin seve'ral ot her cases whehro seemin gly all ogieir remnedlica had failedl. It is' piurely3 a ve(getab1le '01 compound, scienititieally3 inr'pared, antd perf~ctly3 hiarmless in it's comphosit ion.- It. renews the 1b100( aind Itihls up broken down systems-gives tone anud v'igor' to t he constitti on, ats wvell as restories ihe bloom of' health to lie sul'rinig. 'Thiereforec, we do not den) it inconlsisteiut with the duties of ia religious journal to say this mueh In its behihl.' Treatise on Blood aind Skini Diseases mm111led free. Tline SwIFwT SP'acwFI Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.* A Fi're in Nashino. CmxcuxNA-rr, Apr'il 4.-A special f'romx Nasihicl, 'I cnn., says that five buisiness houses on the public square were burned this morninig. The occu panits woro liollins, Sons & Co., whole sale shoes, loss $75,000, instured for $63,000; J. W. Lindsey & Co., wvhole sale hats, $30,000 Insurance $26,000. 'hol loss on the bauilding is $12,000, insurance $26,000. The Ootton supply. Nuew YoIIK, April 4.-T1he total pisible 8uplyl of cotton for the world is 2,637,783 bales, of whIch 2,097,383 bales arc American, a rainst 2,944,201 bales, and 2,235,,001 bates respectivelv last year'. The stock at all interio'r towns at-e 13,855 bales; receipts from planitationis 14,934 bales. The cr'op in sight Is 6,480,252 bales. -When a cold or other cause cheeks the operatIon of the secretive organs, their nlatural healthy action should be restored by the use of Aiver's Pills, and inflammatory material thereby remov' ed from the system. Much serious siokniess andt suffering might be pro vented by thus prompthy correcting those slight derangemnts that other wvise, o ften develop into settled dis case, and to' tiwgir o o t4 oio l 'di-resond6OR.of 14 l'4vork u4n, Wlo1h for soe h" boen vjting hdtivater odt '-of 'ompe stri spout, and )uro-cold Ia tor ana ua it of Its Clureh st'eet notle, and o tar thero has boonl no satisfactory explanation of the phenom 0non. The Now Haven town pump is famous principally' for the quality of the water and for the ituiuberof times it has boon stolen by skylarking students. It stands fifty yards from the college campAts, on the lower corner of the greon, and is a tal and ponderous wooden structure of the seventeenth century, with two handles, two spouts, and two iron drinking cups. The city does not to placo it with a modern style iron pump bcoiso those freeze up" in winter and are too cumbersome for the students to* lug away. And so Now Haven people reach up for the long hickory pump brakes, by the thousands in summer and by tho hundreds in winter. Some of the old business men of the place al ways stop there to drink on their way down town from dinner. Originally the site of the pump was a col and limpid spring, fringed with a ders. and in the center of the nine squarcs orig.na Iy laid out. The alder grove was a famous trysting-placeo, and existed for years. The spring was wall. ed up in two sections, and the pump was set about the time Yale college was located here. The students have been stoa Ing it semi-occasionally ever since. Prof. Daniel C. Eaton, of Yale, was at a loss to account for the aqueous freak of the old pump. Never before in his recollection had there been any such complaint. He was loath to be. lieve the story of his old friend at first, but stepping up .to the shackly Temple street brake he applied his right hand to it with vigor, while with his left he extended the iron tankard under the nozzle. A stream of topid water shot into the ci p, smoking with heat in the colil air. It was nauseatingly warm, and strongly imprognatod with minor als. Then the pro:essor went arouid to the Church street side and yanked at the brake. Here he procured a cup of ice-cold water sparkling in the sun light. "I can't account for the phenome. non," saidl he. "I do not think, how ever, that it may be attributed to any volcanic or subterranean action," 'i'io professor indicated that hot and cold springs side by side were not to be lookedi for In this part of the country, At t:ines the Templo street spout yields water that is sQ hot as to be scalding. Both streams come from the same source, though the spring Is divi ded by a wall from the bottom. Why the water should be hot is a mystery, But why such a marked difference should exist in the samples drawn from tihe same weoll through two puip sot ovor it is a much greater one. There is a theory that the water may be heat od from one of the Chapel street steam hont pipes, but this is h If a blook away A leak in the ipo might CAUse the heat, but this is hdi4 to be ipprobable and the town fithieoks will be asked to dig ump the well to see what is the mnatter. TheoII Blthiplaoo of Groat Southerners, A nicely worded p)aragriaph is going the rouinds of the p ross under the tit'e of "Henry Clay's Biirthmplace." It calls It Asiland, Ky., and treats It with pa thios :.nd feeling. The fact ii Henry Clay wvas not born in Kentucky at all, He was a Virginia boy who first saw the light in Hianover County, and did not come to Kentucky until lie was over 19, Tihme greatest mien of both Kentucky and Toeinosseo have been born in other States. Ben H~ardon, the great orator of Kentucky, was born in Pennsylva nila; George M. Bill, Tyler's Secretary of tihe Tireasury, was born in Virginiaj and Henry WVaterson, of the Courie, Journal1, Iirst sawy light ini Washington, D). C. As to Tennessee, tha matter is still worse. Before the war it had hardly a man of national p~rominence who had been born within its borders, P. esidents Jackson and Johnson were borni ini North Caroljina, as was, also, J. K. Polk and Hi. L. White, who, it will be rempembored, was a Presidential canididato in the campaign of 1830, Parson Brownvilowv was born in Virginia, and canuo to Tennessee as a circuit rid img et hiodist precachcr. Felx Grun dy, a Virgin'an by birth, had made a reputation and become Chief Justice of lintmiekr befo lie movedl to Tennes see, anId'Ilorace Maynard, a Massachu.. setts collog;o g rad~uato, emigrated to .l'mnnecssee, anti started in lifui as a tu, tor. Aaron: V. th-ron the Izii pu'rtner cfiJtms IC, Polk, and Postmaster-Gog-. , rl unde~lr 141j hauanm, 'namo into T1en nessec fromi Virginia' at the age of 20, and Sam IHouston, Gove nor of the or* of thme Te'cxas lLkpubli.-, was a Vir giniannby b rth.---"urp'' in Cleveland Manual Doxtorlt.y and thme Letter. It ia weoll known thait in its develop ment each new borun being passes through very much the same stages that his ancestors have been through before him. Even after birth the growth of the child's Intelligence simnu lates time progress of the human race from the sava'no condition of that of civilization, Yt has been shown by IProyer, ami others; who have studied infant doelopmon t, that afaculty which has boeon acquired by thu race at a late stage, is late ini mak'ng its appearance inm the child. Now, reading and writ ii n rc arts of comparatively recent achievement. Saivago n'an could reap andu sow, and~ weave, and build houses, long before lhe could comnmnicate his thoumghts to a person at a distance by monas of written speech. There is, then, reason to beliere that a child's general mntelligence would be best train, ed1 by making him skIllful in many kinds of manual labor before beginning to torture him with lottors; and the moral to be derh'ved is, that primary in.. structionm shmouhl be instruction in man ual dlexterity, and that readinig and writing coul1d be learned with p.leasure an ih ease by a child who had been fitted for taking them up by the right kmnd of preparation. A Texas doctori lir. Blister is one of those physiciains who do not take any nonsense from their patients. One day last week he presented his bill to Moso Sehaumburg. "One hundred and fifty tollarsi" exclaimed Moso. "Vr mine Gott, two funerals in dot faml vould not hat cost me so much as dot. r "It's not too late to have a funeral in1 the houso yet," replied Dr. Blister, drawing an army-sizo revolver. Thme physician heels himself whenever a pa tient feels indisposed to settl.--7'.e Bifttings. lit MOn ged o ho )-0 loved any h Iol okhnecud attend to ith Ever school hj~e ,to, seoro thei sor vice$ of attohtkdy before It ona uo oa'ed, and so Our 19ohool had ono. -When ,etredteschool.1 en ao agia that the boaird -had n33eglected topro 9ide Itself with aboy wnoso duty It was to -neirly kill hisolf 6tory few days'In ordoi' to keey:Sq4pthe Interest, so Iau-. plied for thposition. .I socuredt without ay-trrowhatever. 'The board undelato'd at onc from my bearing that I W6'1d succeed. And I did not betrity ;the trust they had re posed In me. Before thefirst term was over I had tried to ollmb two trees at once and bden carried hor 6 on a strtchar; been pulled out of, thervoi' with i y lungs full of watitr a& ariflbal respirtaon resorted to eo . jerked' around over the north het of ithe outy by a frac btous horse whoso halter I ad tied to my log, and whichi log Is now three inches longer than the' other, together with varlowiother little early iccen-, triolties Wkll hi lfot at this moment call toMi ey ,ronts at - lastgot so- that,alo gd' 2 o'clock p. m. ticy would look nni ously out of the window and wh ay tut timo for the boys to got here with William's re mainsP They gnerally got here before 2 o'clock. " i* --I One day flye or six of us wore play'ng "I py" oe round our barn. Everybody knows how to play "I1 spy." One shuts his eyes and counts 100, for Instance, while the others hido. Thn he mut find the rest and say tI spy" so-and-so and touchto thegoal before they do. If anybody boats i al to the goal tho victim ha to "bliit" over again. Well, I know the ground prya well, and could drop twentty fo.-.t out of the barn window and strike onl a pile of straw so as to lad ear thd tietoh it, and lot the crowd in oe without getting found cut, I did this several times andgot thn thtder, Jaets Ban rtt alu fter italboy has counted 50tr 600, and worked hard to gather in the crowd, otly to lo jeored and laughed at by the bov'-, he loses his temper. It was so withi Jamecs Cicero llang,. I know that hie almnost hated s 0andoyt I en t 2n Finally, in the fif th ballot. I saw a good chatnce to slide down aind lot theo crowd in againl as I had done onl formeor occasions. I slipped out of the winvow and down the sid of tho - barn about two fot, when I Was detained unavoidably. I'hore was a kbat ton"l onl tho barn that was loose at the uppwr id. I tlihik I was wearing y father's vest o that day, as hie wats away from home and I frequently wor hisi lothes when he was obsnowt. Anyow th vest was too largo, and when I sifi down that loose board ran p betwoon thevest and my person im such a way as to susd mn e lout lighteen feet rom the ground in promment, but very uncomfortablo, positonde. sta resor euto disrt~ otnctly Itandet than cam ronndre whruth gettin eon mle. H said: tIs severly ymes and tc thebn goJa er Bang, Noony camo ter r'oy han coune me0 orseenmekdad to gymather u oi lintthe od Jpyt igYlerd comd laouhd abythe berYnny "O, loI s Ban. Yo new' thtnk ylo'r hutedf dglan uptee I aent oe. youiralin. ift bot com sawn and chinc. to .lowne (horn and letk Jmes row i asi >lipeo ut ftee.dwe~ddw whIt was etyin ie. unanidbly 1emer how I~ 'btriedo to b n k thpaet waose ut thie Swom'et.s I thinld kiak weo arnm asvies oI wouad kick as heg hwle awn fth hozond FI, reuntlly wreeid cbyhe weneieho who large dd' wn Ito oee a looser kbokrd anuo chaos jus te sve a myn pon in boy ta waystort o'~er snx Ibot ei'ghteno fetgro the ro ~ to ad k promient by t very onet dofor note nome , Jaame. Ran ishebrevhe Presidse oma e.ue lie aidnks taigla loney brda tou thbya himefor inurp nd swaitinor sythesits to dino old gratgo. rwadI eain iTte mhils ofar thogdsg i slowrv bu'ey os geenrygt thre oth bygh pmissio.)Icnseyu elpa Eomittevr coloe on Mar ind. 1ie Th e adpion ofh heenumoabo" int tiery rao tof chvet.anget cowono thr a-d liJs, baliy mal itwacs arawy ton bie. fon on the yougberdan Itrndso toho' plantl inhie by oald.r rowni animls. kithe e tem ar ofntie wnould with the whtesi he oryzoa,. and saidrepodin'g wait tosei wo( barur toinkd wIto chaos jus te bro arorg loted oys The eiisi otherimal Itafrdeny oat ol-gren groundd wth brwhi I spots, ~ec p0tivmiy like the lnened-leaveys01( that ar(~ ot jus bein nig to turnisth brevetn plan(ts on th drmetc, an , itin ak f on-w biatfor by huser in twoan thn waiok tougl t feotcrs toto sTurbillg o ithe gods rind ver yr bulthug mot my :boi et there arita buate ofe (al hutded fof thm threc byd esif on.)ste asaivl hk Im illafind aCuriousI assemlge ofh Inoe vadpaots f tubliguof rbhobuh whotso behvr grvll o cange in hey Woloreo'stheow;a-weediistheallyemarvel ous e yorunger, lther wilel all s tackano are a-woodt afnd o tahewl young veant fd of the plant ik ti whlre tieodter prot fory ar Inhabtmesd yevler brwn alialos yrab olertten aare-bowtn ior. To. withsthean khitp sto hofroo, and e brwnp ones wil with tam are sred tom aind ieasvos ton the drksn armor ofthe cab findhero the nils ae fbeuenton.--Dr. ov-Wihlree gr-n witah, brish Popotr ecepMothy lfkn lutRenniynth topi tof Edrward IIL on wei rbey as ul oented lage plnsj he ( Lnghaks," ti as heas saflBd,-wase forn in aii romrkably and tatn loo hrouservatn. Theafbsh wthe tstherparg in he harssill th erer modisthe three ndth form of the niady 'ealt ie ayt .e red the hasd was unartr of abur baod, of hemch see. fraved hoiste Thss ealiel wlaee laced to the tomaweedad aho.il Av its A; Vor *0o3stipation, or CoesUu, no remedy Is so effective as Ams's 'arLs. They inpsro regular daily action, Ad to store the bpels'to a healthy condition. Wor UdigesUon, or Dyspepsia,' Aia's PrAs are invaluable, and a sure oure. Reart-barn, Loss of Appetite, Wout Stomach, latwlenoy, Disainess, Head' ^cho, 19untbuess, Nausea, are all relieved and cured by Aria's PZZAU. In Liver Complaint, BiliousDisorders, bud eJaundlos, Aran's PILLs should. be given In doses large enough to exalte the liver and bowel, and remove constipation. As a cleansing medicine In the Spring, these PIAS are unequalled. Worms, caused by a morbid condition of the bowels, are expelled by these Prra. Eruptions, Skin DIseaseep and Wles, the result of Indigestion or Constipation, are cured by the use of Aria's P.. For Colds, take 'Avun's PIaS to open the pores, remove inbmmatory secretions, and allay the fever. For Dirrhesa and Dysentery, caused by suddent colds, indigestible tod, etc., Alsa's PILLS are the true remedy. Dtheumatism, _Gout, Neuralgia, and SclstIca,often result from digestive derange. =ent, or colds, and disappear om remoting the cause by the use of Aran's PrraS. Tumors, Dropsy, Eidney Complaints, and other disorders caused by debility or obstruction, are cured by Ava's PrLL. Suppression, and Painful Menstruo. ton, have a 'afe and ready remedy in AYER'S PILLS. Pull directions, In various languages, ao. company each package. PREPABED BY Dr.J.O.Ayer&Co.,Lowell, Mass. Sold by aU Druggists. IT IS A FA CT. SPRING is GMNHTG I 8SPRINGt D10RES8 fOODS. Lupin's Black Tanise and Gazelie cloth, Cashuncre, Etc. Gglgh'im, Chambray, Foulard, Percale, Seersucker, Etc. The landsomest line we have ever bought. MUSLIN AND CJALICOES. ASK TO SEE OURt 5w. LAWN. ASK TO SEE~ OURl 5e. CA 1.100. EMI!MBEBOUR SHOES. TOP QU.ALITpY, BIOTTOM PRICES ATr TI'IE COlIN.ER STVOlE. J. M. BEATY & BRO. JUST1 ICECEIVED A COMPLETE stock of FRENHI G.ROCERIES, consisting of' FLOUR, NE A L,. SUGAR, COFFEE, TEA, H AMS, BACON, And C';crythbig usually kept ini a FIRSTL CLASS GRJOCERY. 4A USAG E. FR'E.sl P011K SAUSAGE. ulways on hand at FIFTEEN (CENTLS per piound. McCARLEY & (CO. J UST A RRIVED JK FRtESII ST1OCK 01F GRO)CERLIES, cor msisting of SUIGARIS, CIOFFiiES, TEAS, &C. A. 'FINE L~OT E A RLY ROSE P'OTATOEI CANNED GOODS. iSalimn, Sardines, TJ.oma toes, Peaches Oc 'rn, Pears, Phncappmle, etc. We have just recelived a nice lino o0 Ci:gars and Tobacco--Chewing and Smok, Inc. (Call anid tity them. Ini these, as wel as .all othor goods, we guarantee to givi satl .sfactlon, both In quality and price. PROPST BR OS. WINNBORO IIOTEL mH EUN DERSIGNED) TAKES PLEAS 1.1r Inhforming the peole ofFarel Coun ty and the travcing public11 that hi has ti ilken charge of the WVINNSBORCl HOT] CL,, and la nowv prepared to receivt both p ermanent and transient boardeors. VTe buildilng has just beon repalnted and pu t in first-rate condition throughout. The table will be sulppliedl with the best that theo local and neighboring maurketb afford, and no pamns wihll bn -spared to in, 8sur0 th~l Ccomfort of guests. A Sat n1)10 Room Is provided, e-onvenient ,1y rra nged for tlie use of Commerola: - TERMS R~EASON~ABLE. A sh1ar9 of tbo unblic patronage .is re specOtfull iYsQUeite( A. F. GOODKNG, S~p~fitfProprietor. Make a Little of.it Buy -LOTS O)F GOO0DS1 OUR STOCK.13 OPEN AND REAUY for "a111. comers." EVER1Y DEPARTMENT FULL, AND Goorts C11lEAPER1 than they have been for years. OUR GOODS HAVE BEE N BOUGHT as LOW as anybody can buy them and we INTEND TO SELL TIH EM. COMEB AND EXAMINE OUR STocKc before you buy; and we guarantee you will LOSE NO MONEY BY IT. McMASTER. BRICE & KETCHIN. SPRING AfNNUNCEMENT GOODS CMLT OI HAVECA FLL OCK OFI STIAPLE ANRYDEFANC RCERIES.AN OANNEGOODS IN OREET BOUGTY as inviW a tayboder con bmy pahend Rwo bn efghitrhe you buyit and urne you Awifll Ospl NOf NE in ten. s ILA-inE eA irgLinOkset., e AND ml GrANCdes.RS Sugar. suell yoms any qaniyd o Gr ait adWehet ra, ae n~ yo eedsi, aeed yous doA shae o p o the trd e p aull solIted. T'o Aw s o ct Sthes Raest, 'rate Purcs B~~andsrer Ol, des hves F-ks INe,WNEt, Brs andI hae, .ri Cradle , sBes elC. es HAFNuEd &as MEand ris. Proprteter. Wt. E9. AIKEN. ISevou T woTPLAC haon Alays gait the Estathe of JOHNt Fairflid Cou tS O,,e rqusedt GIN. W.IENOES, Exeentor~, *Columbia, 8.LC., Expetor. JanaryW4 18.LongtoN . Tha A tot-rs ~e l ahbt IAI . t -rj .0L ocon ~- - t o Oe 0 e s t4i: 1 ',Il I N l t M'rh F tGI solwi rc q alt n ok a si puchsig lohin wilfida uti rso Dh ONsT coreisy[J adTHIatSt ed.. The's wel-dsseid youngri~ manthiho ad. mano lomethingic (qit01 accordnce wihIs ownidereas rimnt, can lwat~ify hettin ofs (lin dn th laer d mosiith correct sn styWlOsiof garmens il ( at thi tbismnt. tI makeasp la fretue oftuits for youn ,ts moelinefour-buttoncutaways,1 t in forte N)Cor othir, r 1us e l h y tclt a sock of Geants'Vt Undewa jst I am rfeprent. th ~it os usfl uiple thn shlopers ingi~ owhere they in th~ei best wereh not and newiu tl an ote tha my( prittci e t stylest0 ay re. iTtht prpe ytliIo find tisik oua soecial lad se fort yorev Nto otf Shos a lin or Danc loing Pumps and Gts' SJ1ilper. 1 Iam1 alpepared t mto whlesa~le1 od to mhadnt noth tati . It lO~ ga tiecle ricle, thd yhoupcan (aveo go youd rohtsiby mrchsaig from the Emlcrte iuI ctnhe b whepe t antitjobl >teig ouse a. II ury from Morantfactresta ysok slr MANNING- hvjuTIMdE om onhle$sleroSt anmrht in te.e St. Magunye arieLad y a nais beauiful, ll byut heriasinfo and noorid.. has nevoher tld aherb hi ho es it is to ptchsetr beautyothreskn.Beu. oreth sTa Mgnli MANNNGMFs